Halters
A halter is the first piece of tack your horse wears and the last thing you take off. It is on during feeding, grooming, loading, and turnout — making fit, durability, and safety more important than almost any other piece of gear in your barn.
What Riders Are Actually Asking About Halters
What type of halter is safest for turnout?
This is the single most debated halter question on every horse forum. The consensus among experienced horse owners: breakaway halters for unsupervised turnout. A halter that cannot release under pressure is a serious safety risk if your horse catches it on a fence, feeder, or branch. Look for leather crown pieces or purpose-built breakaway hardware — the Shires Bungee Breakaway design and leather crown halters are the most recommended options for horses left in paddocks or pastures without constant supervision.
Rope halter or nylon — which is better for training?
Rope halters apply pressure to specific pressure points on the nose and poll, making them more communicative for groundwork and natural horsemanship. They are not safe for unattended turnout because they do not break. Nylon halters are adjustable, padded, and appropriate for daily handling and trailering. Most experienced handlers keep both — rope for training sessions, nylon for everyday barn use and travel.
How do I know if a halter fits correctly?
You should be able to fit two fingers flat under the noseband and two fingers under the throatlatch. The noseband should sit two finger-widths below the cheekbone — too high causes discomfort; too low reduces control. A poorly fitted halter rubs, causes sores, and gives you less control in a pressure situation. Always measure your horse before buying — most quality halters come in weanling through draft sizes.
What makes a good trailering halter?
For hauling, you want a well-fitted nylon or leather halter with solid hardware — not a rope halter, which gives you no padding and no breakaway safety in a trailer accident. Many riders use a purpose-built shipping halter with extra padding on the poll and noseband for long hauls. Bright or reflective colors help with visibility during night loading.
How to Choose the Right Halter
- Use for determines type: Breakaway for turnout, rope for groundwork training, padded nylon for daily handling and trailering.
- Fit precisely: Loose halters slip and rub; tight halters cause pressure sores and restrict breathing. Measure before you buy.
- Hardware quality matters: Cheap snaps and buckles fail at the worst times. Look for solid brass or stainless steel hardware on any halter that goes into a high-stress situation.
- Have a spare: Keep at least one spare halter per horse — for emergencies, vet visits, and when the primary halter needs repair or washing.
Brands Riders Trust
Weaver Leather makes some of the most consistently praised rope halters and leather halters in the market — their quality control and hardware selection are a step above discount alternatives. Shires offers a wide range of padded nylon and breakaway styles at accessible prices, well-regarded for fit and finish. Classic Equine rounds out the performance end with show-quality halters built for the barn and the pen.
At Hooves and Paws, halters are one of our highest-turnover categories for a reason — every horse needs one and most barns need several. Shop our full selection with fast shipping and sizes from weanling to draft.

