

Try Before you buy


Durable Leathers




By Horse Owners


Unique Gullet System
Try Before you buy
Durable Leathers
By Horse Owners
Gullet System

You're tacking up before a schooling session. Saddle, check. Girth, check. And then there's the jump saddle pad shoved at the back of the locker, a bit fluffy from last week's hack, and you think: does it actually matter which one I use?
It does. More than most riders realise.
The pad sitting between your saddle and your horse's back influences pressure distribution, sweat management, and how freely your horse can move through the shoulder. Get it right and you'll barely notice it's there. Get it wrong and your horse might start telling you about it in ways that are harder to read.
This guide walks through what actually matters when you're choosing jumping pads, whether you're shopping for competition day or everyday schooling. For a broader look at saddle pads across disciplines, our complete saddle pad guide for horses and ponies covers the full picture.
Before fabric, brand, or colour, fit is what matters most in a jump pad. A pad that bunches up under the saddle, sits too close to the withers, or pulls back across the loins creates pressure exactly where you don't want it.
Look for a pad cut specifically for jumping saddles. The forward-cut flap of a jump saddle needs a pad shaped to match it, so the flap sits cleanly without the pad folding underneath. A shaped jump pad follows the natural curve of the saddle rather than fighting against it.
When you fit the pad, you should be able to pull it up into the gullet channel with ease. If it's dragging flat across your horse's spine, it will press down rather than bridge the channel. That matters enormously for spinal clearance, especially over a fence.
This is where riders often get unstuck. The jump pad that looked brilliant on course might not be the one your horse needs six days a week during training.
During regular flatwork and jump training, your horse is working consistently and building up heat and sweat. A jump pad for schooling should prioritise:
On competition day, your priorities shift. You want something that looks clean and sits correctly, but still does the job properly.
Browse our saddle pad range to see the options we carry for both schooling and competition use.
A GP saddle pad is designed to work with a general purpose saddle, which sits somewhere between a jump and a dressage cut. If you're riding in a GP saddle, a GP pad will usually be the right match.
If you're using a dedicated jump saddle, a jump-cut pad is the better choice. The forward-swept flap of a jump saddle extends further than a GP, so a standard GP pad can sometimes sit too far back, leaving the front of the saddle flap uncovered or allowing the pad to pull under pressure.
That said, some riders do use a GP pad under a jump saddle without issue, particularly on horses with broader, flatter backs where the flap contact is less extreme. The key is checking that the pad sits square, stays in place, and doesn't interfere with the gullet clearance. If you're not sure, it's always worth asking a fitter.
Image credit: appyelf
You can find a local saddle fitter using our locator tool if you'd like in-person guidance on what's working for your horse.
The fabric choice in jumping pads isn't just about feel. It affects how heat moves, how sweat is managed, and how long the pad holds its shape.
Whichever material you choose, the most important thing is that it stays consistent after washing. A pad that mats, shrinks, or loses its shape changes the fit underneath your saddle, often without you noticing straight away.
Horses don't always make it obvious. Some will object loudly. Others go quiet and just get tighter. Here are the signs worth watching for:
If you notice any of these signs consistently, it's worth looking at the whole picture: your saddle fit, the pad, and how everything is sitting together. Small signs matter, and your horse is usually right.
Run through these before you commit:
Take a look at our full accessories range for jump pads, GP pads, and everything else your horse might need.
A good jump saddle pad does its job quietly. It protects your horse's back, works alongside your saddle, and lets you get on with the riding.
Browse our full tack range at cavaletticollection.co.uk/accessories or speak to the team if you need help choosing. We're based in Aldridge and always happy to talk tack. Call us on 01922 263600 or drop a message to contact@cavaletticollection.co.uk.
And if you're looking at your whole saddle setup, our 14-day free saddle trial means you can try before you commit. No rush, no pressure. Just the right saddle for your horse.