Updated
Updated · BBC.com · Jun 20
UK Water Experts Urge Lifeguarded Swimming After 18 Deaths in Hot Weather
Updated
Updated · BBC.com · Jun 20

UK Water Experts Urge Lifeguarded Swimming After 18 Deaths in Hot Weather

3 articles · Updated · BBC.com · Jun 20

Summary

  • At least 18 people died during last month's hot weather after getting into difficulty in the water, prompting UK safety experts to stress supervised open-water swimming.
  • 202 accidental water-related deaths were recorded across the UK in 2025, and experts warned that rivers, reservoirs and canals can hide currents, debris, drop-offs and machinery.
  • RNLI and rescue workers said swimmers should avoid going alone or after drinking, enter water slowly to reduce cold-water shock, and treat inflatables as pool toys rather than seaside gear.
  • Rip currents and cold water remain key risks even in good weather; if caught out, swimmers are advised to float, control breathing, signal with one hand and call 999 using What3words if needed.
  • For people spotting someone in trouble, the guidance is to phone for help, tell them to float and throw an object from shore rather than jumping in and risking a second casualty.

Insights

Can new rescue drones and stricter international safety rules finally curb the UK's rising tide of drowning tragedies?
With teen drownings up 67%, why is mandatory water safety education failing to reach UK students?
As UK drowning deaths rise, why do children in deprived areas face more than double the risk?