By sport · Swimming
Race-info tattoos for swimming
Swimming is where EHLStat started — on a pool deck, watching families squint at smeared marker. Event, heat, lane, and stroke, in waterproof ink, right where a swimmer can read it.
Key takeaways
- Built for the four things a swimmer needs: event, heat, lane, stroke.
- Waterproof and legible through a full session in and out of the water.
- Ink stays on the tattoo, not repeatedly on skin.
- Removes cleanly between sessions and multi-day meets.
Why swimming swimmers use EHLStat
A swim meet is a long, loud day with dozens of races. The information a swimmer needs is simple — which event, which heat, which lane, which stroke — but keeping it with them, legible and dry, is the hard part. EHLStat was designed for exactly this moment.
Where it helps
Age-group meets
Young swimmers read their own arm and report to the block on time — building independence one session at a time.
Multi-day championships
Apply a fresh tattoo each day so the lineup always matches the current heat sheet.
Relays
Note the relay and leg right in the grid so there is no confusion about order on deck.
How it works
- 1
Read the heat sheet
Pull each event, heat, lane, and stroke from the meet program or app.
- 2
Fill in the grid
Write the races into the pre-formatted, waterproof grid with a permanent marker.
- 3
Race
The swimmer reads their own arm, walks to the right lane, and swims. The info stays put — even wet.
Frequently asked
Will it survive warm-ups and the race?
Yes — EHLStat tattoos are waterproof and built to stay legible through a full session in and out of the water.
What do I write on it?
The four things a swimmer needs at the block: event, heat, lane, and stroke. There is space for relays and notes too.
Can I reuse one across a multi-day meet?
Apply a fresh tattoo for each day’s session so the lineup always matches that day’s heat sheet.
Race-ready for swimming
Event, heat, lane, and stroke — waterproof, legible, and right where your swimmer can read it.
Keep reading
For track & field
Event, heat, and lane or section — the assignments a sprinter needs at a big invitational.
For rowing
Event, heat, and lane — plus bow number and boat — for a long, wet regatta day.
For triathlon
Wave start, bib number, transition rack, and split goals — the details a chaotic start demands.
For dragon boat
Race, heat, and lane for every crew — kept legible through a wet, team-packed festival day.