Mask Clearing and Regain Control Without Panic

(Fix Flooded Masks While Staying Calm, Neutral, and in Control)

Mask clearing is one of the first skills divers learn—but for many, it never becomes truly comfortable. A flooded mask can trigger stress, rapid breathing, and even full-blown panic. Worse, most divers don’t practice it enough after certification to stay sharp.

This guide walks through how to clear your mask smoothly, stay calm while doing it, and regain control even if your mask gets fully kicked off. It also covers why this skill breaks down for many divers—including my own experience struggling with it, even after 100 dives.


Why Mask Clearing is a Critical Underwater Skill


The Physiology: Why It Feels So Uncomfortable


Proper Mask Clearing Technique

This technique relies on air pressure, not brute force. Pulling the skirt or pressing the bottom often makes it worse by breaking the seal too early.


My Struggle: The Mouth-Nose Breathing Problem

Even after 100 dives, I still struggle with mask clearing—because I subconsciously blow out through both my mouth and nose at the same time. That means I don’t build enough pressure inside the mask to fully force water out.

The worst part is I often don’t realize I’m doing it wrong until the water is still sloshing around and I feel frustrated mid-dive. It’s one of those “simple” skills that reveals whether you’re really in control—or just going through the motions.


Staying in Trim and Buoyancy While Clearing

Mask clearing becomes much harder when your body is moving or your attention is split. Practicing while hovering helps it become second nature.


Full Flood and Mask Removal

Sometimes your mask gets kicked off or floods completely. Here’s how to handle that calmly:

Don’t rush. The key is staying calm while “blind” and trusting your breathing until you can see again.


Practice Strategies