Horse Tack Accessories UK: A Practical Buying Guide

Table of Contents

  1. What counts as horse tack accessories?
  2. How to shop for tack in the UK
  3. The difference between cheap and well-made
  4. A quick note on saddle fit and the wider picture
  5. Caring for leather tack so it lasts
  6. Ready to start building your kit?

Buying new tack is one of those things that should be straightforward, and somehow never quite is. Too many options, too many brands, not enough honest advice about what actually matters for your horse. Whether you are starting from scratch or replacing worn-out kit, this guide cuts through the noise. Here is what you actually need to know about finding the right horse accessories UK riders can rely on.

What counts as horse tack accessories?

The term gets used loosely, but when most riders say 'accessories for horses' they mean everything that goes on the horse beyond the saddle itself. That is a wider category than people expect.

Cavaletti Collection bridle and leatherwork display with a rider wearing a branded jacket in front of the tack wall.

At the core, you have your contact and control equipment: bridles, headcollars, bits, and reins. These are not optional extras. They are the foundation of safe, clear communication between horse and rider. The quality of your bridle leather, the fit of your headcollar, the weight of your reins in your hands, it all matters.

Then there is your saddle support kit. Stirrup irons and leathers, saddle pads, numnahs, and girth straps all play a direct role in how the saddle sits and how comfortable your horse is underneath it. A well-fitted saddle on a poor-quality pad can still cause pressure problems. These items deserve the same care and attention as the saddle itself.

Finally, there are the schooling and support accessories: breastplates, martingales, and lungeing equipment. Used correctly, these help with training and safety. Used as shortcuts, they mask problems rather than solve them. Good tack supports honest work. It does not replace it.

Why quality matters for welfare, not just aesthetics

This is the part that does not get said enough. Horse stuff is not just about looking the part at a show. Poorly made tack can cause real harm. A bridle that pinches, a headcollar that rubs, reins that are too stiff to give a soft contact, these are welfare issues as much as training ones.

Your horse tells you when something is wrong. Resistance, tension, reluctance to be tacked up, teeth grinding, a tight back, these are not 'naughty' behaviours. They are feedback. Good quality, properly fitted accessories for horses reduce that friction so that what you see in training is the horse, not the discomfort.

How to shop for tack in the UK

The UK tack market is well served, but easy to navigate badly. Here is what experienced riders keep in mind before spending.

Leather quality and UK sizing

Fine, full-grain leather is still the benchmark. It softens with use, lasts for years with proper care, and tends to be kinder on sensitive horses than synthetic alternatives. UK-made or European-tanned leather generally holds up better in our wet climate than cheaper imported versions. Look at the cut edges as well as the surface. Roughly finished edges and uneven stitching are signs of shortcuts you will regret later.

UK sizing conventions differ slightly from European and American standards, particularly for bridles and stirrup leathers. When buying online, always check the sizing guide. If the retailer does not provide one, that tells you something about how much they actually know their products.

Buying online vs in person

Shopping in person has obvious advantages for fit items like bridles and headcollars. You can check the leather, test the buckle action, and see the stitching detail before you commit. But a good online retailer with accurate descriptions, clear measurements, and a responsive team comes close. Read the product details properly. If it is vague, move on.

For saddles, the same principle applies. Cavaletti Collection offers a 14-day free saddle trial so you can try before you commit. That matters far more than any marketing description, because a saddle that feels right in your arena, over several rides, with your horse, is the only real test. There is no substitute for that.

Free delivery and what to watch for

Most reputable UK tack retailers offer free delivery above a spend threshold. At Cavaletti Collection, orders over £250 qualify for free delivery. Worth factoring in if you are building up a kit gradually. Buying two or three items together often makes more sense than splitting across separate orders.

Browse the full range at Cavaletti Collection, where you will find saddles, leatherwork, and accessories across every discipline.

The difference between cheap and well-made

This is not about brand names. It is about knowing what to look for. Once you know, it becomes second nature.

Leather

Quality leather feels substantial in your hands without being stiff. It has a consistent surface, not a papery or plasticky finish. Bend it gently: it should flex without creasing sharply. Cheap leather cracks along stress points within a season or two. Good leather, kept clean and conditioned, outlasts most horses' working lives.

  •       Look for tight, even stitching with no loose threads at stress points (cheek pieces, girth attachment points, rein joins)
  •       Cut edges should be smoothed and finished, not left raw
  •       Avoid anything described as 'leather look' or 'bonded leather' for critical contact points
  •       Check the backs of straps, not just the display side

Hardware

Buckles, bit rings, and clips get used in all weathers and often under pressure. Nickel plating corrodes faster than solid brass or stainless steel. Stiff buckles that require force to undo are a safety problem as well as an annoyance. Good hardware should operate smoothly, release cleanly, and show no signs of pitting or discolouration when new.

Stitching

Count the stitches per inch. Well-made tack uses a fine, tight stitch. Widely spaced or uneven stitching means the seam will pull apart under strain. On reins, particularly, check where the leather meets any webbing or rubber grip. That joint sees a lot of repetitive stress, and cheap stitching shows up fast.

A quick note on saddle fit and the wider picture

Accessories matter, but nothing in your horse riding equipment list has as much impact on your horse's comfort as the saddle. Everything else builds around it. A saddle that does not fit correctly affects the whole picture: way of going, topline development, behaviour under tack, and willingness. All the good accessories in the world will not compensate for a poor saddle fit.

The right saddle fits your horse today, and has room to adapt as fitness and condition change. Cavaletti Collection saddles come with an interchangeable gullet system, which means six width options in one saddle. That is a significant practical advantage, especially for young horses or those in heavy work whose shape shifts across a season.

If you are not sure where your horse stands, use the saddle fitter locator to find a qualified fitter near you. A proper saddle fit check is one of the kindest things you can do for a working horse.

Caring for leather tack so it lasts

Good horse accessories that UK riders rely on are worth taking care of. Leather is a natural material. It needs basic attention to stay supple, safe, and working correctly. Here is the honest short version.

After every ride

Wipe down the contact areas with a damp cloth. Sweat is mildly acidic and breaks down leather faster than almost anything else. It takes thirty seconds. Run a finger under the girth straps and along the billets to check for sweat build-up. This is also your chance to notice any early signs of wear before they become a problem.

Weekly cleaning

Use a proper leather cleaner, not saddle soap, on everything by default. Some soaps leave a residue that gunk up buckle holes over time. Work gently into the grain, paying attention to the undersides of straps. Once clean, condition with a good quality leather conditioner. Neatsfoot oil or a balm-based product works well in the UK climate, where tack tends to live in damp conditions more often than dry.

Storage

Leather should be stored somewhere reasonably dry, away from direct heat. Radiators and tack dryers dry it out too fast and cause cracking. A bridle stand keeps the leather hanging correctly so the cheek pieces do not develop creases. If you are storing a saddle for any length of time, a breathable cover and a lightly conditioned surface is better than plastic wrapping, which traps moisture.

The basics are simple. They just need to be done consistently. Horse stuff that is looked after lasts decades. The kit that is left damp and dirty after every ride lasts months.

Ready to start building your kit?

Buying tack should not be a gamble. The right horse accessories UK riders rely on are built to last, kind to the horse, and straightforward to maintain. Start with what your horse actually needs right now, buy the best quality you can afford, and take your time with anything that sits on your horse's back.

Browse the full range of saddles and tack at Cavaletti Collection, or speak to the team if you need help choosing. And if you are looking at a new saddle, remember the 14-day free trial is always there. No commitment, no pressure. Just time to make the right decision for your horse.