Drowning Prevention Week – learning a life skill

May 28, 2025 | Blog
Drowning Prevention Week takes place this month on 14th - 21st June 2025. The Royal Life Saving Society (RLSS UK) deliberately times the Drowning Prevention Week campaign ahead of the school summer holidays, when children spend more time outdoors and when vital water safety skills can help keep children safe.
In the article below we examine the importance of learning to swim and how it can save lives.

Why learn to swim? 

We currently teach close to 40,000 children a week nationally in our More Swimming Academy, with the demand for lessons increasing in the lead up to the summer holidays. We have a huge responsibility to ensure these children get all the skills they need to be safe in and around water.

Being able to swim is an important skill that could one day save your life or the life of someone you are with. According to research by the RLSS UK, 49% of UK accidental drownings occur between May and August. When UK average maximum air temperatures reach or exceed 25°C, there is a fivefold increase in accidental drowning risk, when compared to days with an average temperature of 10°C. Many of these accidental drowning happen in inland waters, such as rivers, lakes and canals. 

No child should drown, and with the right water safety education – such as knowledge of the Water Safety Code – accidental drownings are preventable. 

We are here to help 

Many adults in the UK won’t have received any drowning prevention education and so our role is so much bigger than just teaching the children. In a survey carried out by RLSS UK, more than 55% of parents said they would not be confident their child would know what to do if they fell into open water.  

We all have a part to play in delivering drowning prevention education. Drowning is preventable, yet over 300 lives are lost to drowning across the UK and Ireland each year. Water safety education is vital and, in some instances, could be a child’s only opportunity to learn about the water.  

Check out the Free Water Safety Resources on the Royal Life Saving Society's website, here, which are a great way of having the water safety conversation with your children.