Ropes NZ — Complete Buying Guide: Which Rope for Which Job? (2026)
Ropes NZ — Complete Buying Guide: Which Rope for Which Job? (2026)
With dozens of rope types available, choosing the right one matters. The wrong rope in the wrong application can fail, stretch too much, or degrade in weeks. Here's your guide to buying rope in New Zealand.
Rope Materials Compared
Nylon Rope
The strongest conventional synthetic rope. Excellent shock absorption makes it the #1 choice for anchor ropes and mooring lines.
- Strength: ★★★★★ — Highest breaking strain of any common rope
- Stretch: 15-25% — Absorbs shock loads (ideal for anchoring)
- UV resistance: ★★★☆☆ — Good, but degrades over years in direct sun
- Water: Absorbs water (gets heavier when wet, loses ~10% strength)
- Best for: Anchor lines, mooring, towing, tie-downs
Browse: Braided Nylon Ropes | Nylon by Size
Polyester Rope
The best all-rounder. Low stretch, excellent UV resistance, and doesn't absorb water.
- Strength: ★★★★☆ — Very strong, slightly less than nylon
- Stretch: 3-5% — Low stretch (great for halyards, sheets, guy ropes)
- UV resistance: ★★★★★ — Best UV resistance of any common synthetic
- Water: Doesn't absorb water — maintains strength when wet
- Best for: Sailing, rigging, general marine, clotheslines, tent guy ropes
Browse: Polyester Ropes
Polypropylene Rope
The lightest rope — it floats. Affordable and water-resistant but lower strength.
- Strength: ★★★☆☆ — Adequate for light to medium loads
- Stretch: 10-15%
- UV resistance: ★★☆☆☆ — Degrades faster in sunlight
- Water: Floats! Doesn't absorb water
- Best for: Ski ropes, pool lanes, cray pot lines, temporary use, any application where floating matters
Browse: Polypropylene Ropes
Dyneema / HMPE Rope
The superstar. Stronger than steel wire at a fraction of the weight. Zero stretch.
- Strength: ★★★★★+ — 15x stronger than steel by weight
- Stretch: <1% — Virtually zero
- UV resistance: ★★★★☆ — Very good
- Water: Floats, no absorption
- Best for: Winch lines, rigging, racing yachts, soft shackles, anywhere weight and strength matter
- Downside: Expensive. Doesn't absorb shock (not ideal as anchor rope alone)
Browse: Dynamica Dyneema Ropes | Winchlines & Soft Shackles
Manila Rope (Natural Fibre)
The traditional rope. Made from abaca plant fibres. Beautiful appearance and good grip.
- Strength: ★★☆☆☆ — Weaker than synthetics
- Best for: Decorative, barrier ropes, garden, playgrounds, gym climbing ropes
- Note: Rots when wet. Not suitable for permanent marine use
Browse: Manila Rope | Pro Manila (Synthetic)
Quick Reference: Which Rope for Which Job?
| Application | Best Rope | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Boat anchor | Nylon (3-strand or 8-plait) | Shock absorption |
| Mooring lines | Nylon double braid | Strength + stretch |
| Sailing halyards | Polyester or Dyneema | Low stretch |
| Ski/tow rope | Polypropylene | Floats |
| Winch rope | Dyneema | Strongest, lightest |
| Cray pot line | Polypropylene | Floats, cheap |
| Decorative | Manila or Pro Manila | Looks great |
| Rescue/abseil | Kernmantle (static) | Certified, low stretch |
| General tie-down | Polyester | Low stretch, UV tough |
NZ Rope Brands We Stock
Shop all ropes at actionoutdoors.kiwi or call 09 820 8023.
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