Renting vs Buying Kitesurfing Equipment After Getting Certified

Short answer: if you ride only a few times a year or just while traveling, renting makes more sense. If you already know you'll be riding regularly at the same home spot, buying your own gear pays for itself quickly and gives you more freedom. Independent certification is what qualifies you for either option.
When renting makes sense
- You travel to different spots and don't want to carry gear on the plane
- You ride only a few times a year — the cost of owning gear that sits idle most of the time isn't justified
- You're still figuring out your style (freestyle, waves, foil) and don't know what gear suits you
When buying makes sense
- You ride regularly at a fixed spot — your own gear pays for itself within a few months of frequent use
- You already know your size and style — buying with judgment avoids spending on something that doesn't suit you
- You value the freedom of heading out whenever you want, without depending on rental availability
What a first setup costs
A new mid-range kite runs around €1,000-1,800, a board €300-600, and a harness €150-300. Well-inspected used gear can bring those numbers down considerably without sacrificing safety, as long as someone with the right judgment checks it over.
Our post-course guidance
Students who finish their course with us get free advice on deciding: we help you figure out what size and model suits you, and we have access to school pricing across several brands (new and inspected used) so your first purchase makes real sense.
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