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GUE-EDGE Pre-Dive Planning

GUE Divers conducting a GUE-EDGE check

The most effective pre-dive sequence I have seen in action is GUE-EDGE, the dive planning checklist taught by Global Underwater Explorers (GUE). It is a structured pre-dive process designed to enhance safety, communication, and dive efficiency.

At a Glance

  • Purpose: structured pre-dive planning to align goals, roles, and safety
  • Framework: Goals, Unified Team, Equipment, Exposure, Decompression, Gas, Environment
  • Reality: use GUE-EDGE if you can, otherwise use a simpler check — just don’t skip
  • Stage 3 — Control of Dive

    Most divers who did not certify with GUE in their Open Water training first encounter it in a GUE Fundamentals class. If you do not have a regular dive buddy who will agree to something this comprehensive, at least do something. GUE-EDGE is far superior to BWARF, but if you are not going to actually use it, then at least do BWARF. (See our Pre-Dive Checks guide for more on BWARF.)

    Diagram showing the GUE EDGE sequence for pre dive planning

    GUE-EDGE Breakdown

    Goals

    What are we trying to accomplish?

    Are we just getting in the water for a fun dive, taking a class, exploring a wreck, or doing a limited penetration into the wheelhouse? Are we planning to take photos?

    Notice the we statements. This discussion can start with I want to... but should ultimately land on what we want as a team.

    Unified Team

    Equipment

    Make this a routine by always following the same order.

    Example checklist: working top down and then right to left

    Final step: Perform a Bubble Check before descending.

    Exposure

    Agreed Gas Plan

    Environment


    GUE-EDGE is designed to be structured yet efficient, ensuring everyone is on the same page before the dive. It builds habits that improve safety and teamwork, especially when conditions become more challenging.

    If you’re not diving with a team that follows this process, consider at least adopting the core principles for better pre-dive planning.


    Keep building your dive knowledge with these next steps:

    Written by Tyler Allison • Last updated March 22, 2026