We've spent the last 12 months building a wetsuit range that actually performs in Australian conditions. Not rebranded generic neoprene. Not one-size-fits-all shapes borrowed from surf. Purpose-built for boat riders, wake park sessions, and everything in between.
The 2027 ProWake wetsuits are now live. Here's what's in the range and how to pick the right one.
Start Simple: The Neo Short & 1.5MM Wetsuit Top
For early autumn and late spring when the water is cold but you don't want to run a full suit — this is your combo.
The 2027 ProWake Ladies Neo Short ($74.99) is a stand-alone piece that pairs with our 1.5MM top or works over the top of a swimsuit when the water temp drops. Flat-seam construction, full stretch, no bulk. It does exactly what it needs to do.
The 2027 ProWake 1.5MM LS Wetsuit Top (from $149.99) gives you just enough warmth for the shoulder seasons without overheating on a warm day. Long-sleeve, flexible chest panel, easy to get in and out of at the dock.
Between the two, you've got a layering system that covers water temps from about 18°C upward. If you're still reaching for a spring suit when you could be in one of these, you're overdressed.
The Spring Suits: 2/2MM for Warmer Days
A good spring suit is the most-used wetsuit in any quiver. Long arms, short legs, 2MM neoprene — enough warmth for morning sessions without cooking you by midday.
The 2027 ProWake Ladies Spring Suit 2/2 ($279.99) and 2027 ProWake Mens Spring Suit 2/2 ($299.99) are cut for movement, not just warmth. Flatlock seams, stretch panels across the back and shoulders, and a chest zip entry that's actually easy to operate solo.
These suit late October through to March for most of Queensland and NSW. If you're in Victoria or WA, you'll lean on the steamer more — but a spring suit still earns its place in the rotation.
The Steamers: Full Coverage for Cold Water
When the water drops below 16°C, you need a proper steamer. These are 2/3MM — 3MM on the body, 2MM on the limbs for mobility. Full-length arms and legs. Zero excuses to stay out of the water in June.
The 2027 ProWake Youth Steamer 2/3 ($299.99) is built for kids who push hard and don't know when to quit. Reinforced knees, flat-seam construction, and enough stretch that it won't slow them down when they're trying to throw their first heelside.
The 2027 ProWake Mens Steamer 2/3 ($499.99) is the flagship. This is where we put the most R&D — thermal lining in the chest and core, glued and blind-stitched seams, and a cut designed for wake riders specifically. You don't spend half a session pulling your suit up at the dock.
At $499.99 it's priced at the premium end — and it earns it. If you're riding boats in winter, this is the suit you want.
Third-Party Picks Worth Knowing About
We also stock a small selection of non-ProWake wetsuits where there's a specific gap the private label doesn't fill yet.
The 2024 Jetpilot Venture Mens Long Tour Coat ($159.99) is a robe-style change coat — not a wetsuit, but it belongs in the same conversation. If you're riding in winter, getting in and out of your steamer at the water's edge without one of these is painful. Jetpilot makes a good product here and it fills a real need.
The Follow Mens Zipperless Pro 3/2MM ($319.99) is Follow's top-of-range steamer — zipperless entry, 3/2MM neoprene, serious cold water performance. If you're a Follow loyalist or want a different fit profile to the ProWake steamer, this is worth looking at.
How to Pick the Right Suit
Use this as your guide based on water temperature:
- 22°C+ — Neo Short + 1.5MM Top, or nothing at all
- 18–22°C — Spring Suit 2/2
- 14–18°C — Steamer 2/3
- Below 14°C — Steamer 2/3 + Tour Coat for between sets
If you're unsure on sizing or need help picking between suits for your specific conditions, reach out directly. We'd rather you get the right suit once than return it twice.
Shop the full wetsuit range at prowake.com.au
