Helping divers make informed choices about training, skills, safety, and gear.

Light Use for Communication

A dive light is more than a way to see; it is a powerful communication tool. Even in daylight, a primary light can sharpen team coordination, especially in low visibility or overhead environments. This page focuses on intentional light use as part of team communication, not just illumination.

Why Use Lights for Communication?

Unlike hand signals, which require eye contact, a light beam can:

Used intentionally, your light becomes part of your body language and another way to speak underwater.

In many dive locations, lights are used even in daylight. In the Chicagoland area, for example, divers often bring a primary light on every dive due to lower visibility in quarries and local lakes. Unlike tropical destinations with clear water, Midwestern sites often have reduced contrast, ambient haze, or dark bottom layers, making lights a practical communication tool. Not just a backup.

Beam Discipline Matters

Poor light use creates confusion. Good light discipline ensures your teammates understand your intentions.

Best practices:

If you plan to hold your light throughout the dive, a Goodman handle makes a significant difference. It lets you keep the light secured on your hand while maintaining dexterity and minimizing hand fatigue. This is especially helpful when you need to signal, adjust gear, or handle a spool or camera.

Standard Signals With Lights

While not every team uses the same light language, many technical training agencies use a few common standards:

Light SignalMeaning
Circular motionOK or “I’m good”
Rapid side-to-side motionEmergency or problem
Beam directed at diverCalling that diver’s attention
Beam directed at objectLook at this or go this way

You should agree on signal meanings during the pre-dive briefing. Do not assume everyone interprets signals the same way.

Light Positioning and Team Awareness

Your teammates should always be able to see your beam, even if they are not looking directly at you. This helps them know you are nearby and in control.

Recommended approach:

This allows the lead diver to confirm everyone’s presence without turning around.

When to Use Light Instead of Hand Signals

Light signals do not replace hand signals; they complement them.

A Note on Light Compatibility

For effective communication, everyone in the team should be using primary lights with similar beam strength and focus. If one diver has a narrow beam and another has a wide flood, the signals may not be readable.


Written by Tyler Allison • Last updated September 7, 2025