Swimly

What Is the Most Inefficient Swimming Stroke?

If you’ve ever felt exhausted after one lap and thought,
“Why is this so hard?”
you’re not alone.

Some strokes demand far more energy than others.

So what is the most inefficient swimming stroke?

For most swimmers — especially adults — the answer is:

Butterfly.

But that’s only part of the story.

Let’s break it down properly.


Why Butterfly Is the Most Inefficient Stroke

Butterfly is powerful. It’s explosive. It looks impressive.

But it’s extremely demanding.

Here’s why it’s considered the least efficient stroke:

  • Both arms recover over the water at the same time
  • You lift your upper body forward every stroke
  • The kick requires full-body coordination
  • There’s very little margin for error

It burns huge amounts of energy per metre.

That’s why even elite swimmers don’t swim butterfly for long distances outside competition.

For most adults, 25 metres of butterfly feels like a sprint — because it is.


What Makes a Stroke “Inefficient”?

Efficiency in swimming means:

How much speed you get for the energy you use.

An inefficient stroke:

  • Creates excess drag
  • Lifts the body too much
  • Breaks body alignment
  • Wastes oxygen
  • Requires constant power output

Butterfly ticks most of those boxes.

That doesn’t mean it’s bad.
It just means it’s costly.


What About Breaststroke?

Now here’s where it gets interesting.

At an elite level, breaststroke is efficient within its own category.

But for recreational swimmers?

Breaststroke is often the most inefficient stroke they swim.

Why?

Because most adults:

  • Lift their head too high
  • Drop their hips
  • Pause too long between strokes
  • Kick wide with no propulsion

It turns into a stop-start survival stroke.

Technically freestyle is the most efficient stroke for distance —
but poorly executed breaststroke can feel far worse.


Freestyle: The Most Efficient Stroke

Freestyle (front crawl) is the most energy-efficient stroke overall.

That’s why:

  • Open water swimmers use it
  • Triathletes use it
  • Distance swimmers rely on it

It allows:

  • Continuous propulsion
  • Better body alignment
  • Controlled breathing
  • Lower energy cost per metre

When done properly, freestyle feels smoother — not harder.


The Real Answer Most Adults Need

The most inefficient stroke isn’t always butterfly.

It’s the one you swim badly.

A technically poor freestyle can be more exhausting than a clean butterfly.

Most adult swimmers waste energy because of:

  • Poor breathing timing
  • Sinking legs
  • Tension in the shoulders
  • Fighting the water instead of balancing on it

Fix the technique — and any stroke becomes more efficient.


So, What Is the Most Inefficient Swimming Stroke?

At a technical level:

Butterfly is the least energy-efficient stroke.

At a recreational level:

Poorly executed breaststroke is often the most inefficient.

But the real problem isn’t the stroke.

It’s how you swim it.


Want to Swim With Less Effort?

If you feel exhausted after short distances, you don’t need more fitness.

You need better efficiency.

At Swimly, we focus on:

  • Body position
  • Breathing control
  • Stroke mechanics
  • Reducing drag

Small corrections. Big energy savings.

Book a session today and start swimming smarter — not harder.



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