Wings & Planes
Wings are where foil performance lives. Front wing size sets your speed range and lift threshold — bigger wings get you flying earlier and cruise efficiently in lighter conditions, smaller wings unlock higher speeds and reward precision at the cost of forgiveness. Rear stabilizers and tail wings shape pitch stability and how the foil responds through turns and transitions. Swapping wings is one of the most effective ways to tailor an existing setup to a new discipline or a different set of conditions without replacing everything. If you're building from scratch or dialing in what you already have, give us a shout and we'll help you find the right combo.
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North Sonar S215 Stabilizer
North
$239.002023 North Sonar S215 Stabilizer The S215 Surf stabilizer has a lower stall to complement the SF Front Wings. Its moderate span creates an aspect ratio high enough for efficient pumping, while remaining compact for responsiveness in turns?. The minimal...$239.00 -
North Sonar SF Front Wing
North
$739.00 - $839.002023 North Sonar SF Front Wing SONAR SURF FOILS Where effortless pumping and surf-style carving meet. Sizes: SF530 / SF680 / SF830 / SF930 / SF1080 / SF1230 SONAR SF930 Description: We’ve engineered our Sonar Surf Series for super low stall...$739.00 - $839.00 -
On Sale
SABFOIL 670 Race Front Wing
SabFoil
Now: $425.00Was: $702.00Moses 570 Race Front Wing More glide and forgiveness without sacrificing top speeds and race angles. What Moses says.... Pure racing performances from the Moses Racing Division! This wing requires the Kite Race 604 Fuselage. Please contact us...Now: $425.00Was: $702.00 -
North Sonar HA Front Wing
North
$649.00 - $735.002023 North Sonar HA Front Wing Sizes: 550 / 650 / 750 / 850 / 950 / 1050 / 1150 / 1250 / 1450 Includes: Front Wing Cover Wing Screw Pack Features HA550 Incredibly efficient kite and advanced wing foiling Zero ventilation...$649.00 - $735.00 -
On Sale
2023 Slingshot G Front Wing V1
Slingshot Sports
Now: $350.00Was: $589.992023 Slingshot G Front Wing V1 Glide / Speed / Control Sizes: 700 / 800 / 900 / 1000 / 1007 Includes: Phantasm G Front Wing Hardware (316 Stainless Steel Torx) Featuring a medium-to high-aspect shape that offers rock-solid stability and plenty...Now: $350.00Was: $589.99
| <140 lbs | 140 - 170 | 170 - 200 | 200+ | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kite Racing | <600 | <600 | <600 | <600 |
| Kite Powered Freeriding | 400 - 650 | 500 - 700 | 550 - 800 | 550 - 800 |
| Kite Freeriding | 500 - 1100 | 600 - 1400 | 700 - 1600 | 900 - 1900 |
| Surfing Powerful Waves | 700 - 1110 | 775 - 1200 | 800 - 1250 | 850 - 1300 |
| Surfing Weak Waves | 800 - 1300 | 850 - 1550 | 900 - 1600 | 1400 - 2000 |
| Downwind SUP | 1500 - 2000 | 1525 - 2400 | 1550 - 2800 | 2400+ |
Surface area measurements in centimeters squared.
If the mast is the backbone of your foil setup, the wings are the personality. Front wings and rear stabilizers — sometimes called planes — shape how your foil lifts, how it glides, how it turns, and how forgiving or demanding it feels underneath you on any given day. Swapping wings is the most effective way to tune an existing setup for a new discipline, a different set of conditions, or a new stage in your riding without replacing everything from scratch.
Understanding what hydrofoil wings actually do — and what the specs on a product page actually mean for your riding — is the difference between building a setup that works and collecting components that almost work. This is where foil performance lives, and it's worth understanding well.
Lift, Speed, and Everything In Between
The front wing does the primary work of generating lift and is the component that shapes your foiling experience more directly than anything else in the setup. Every variable in front wing design — size, aspect ratio, profile, and outline — represents a tradeoff between competing performance characteristics, and understanding those tradeoffs is what makes wing selection feel navigable rather than overwhelming.
Wing area, measured in square centimeters, is the starting point for most comparisons. Larger wings generate lift at lower speeds, which makes them accessible for newer riders, effective in lighter wind or smaller wave conditions, and efficient for disciplines where glide matters more than outright speed. A higher wing area number means the foil gets you flying earlier and keeps you there with less active input — which is exactly what most riders need when they're building their foil feel for the first time. Smaller wings need more speed to generate lift but reward that speed with efficiency, maneuverability, and a higher performance ceiling that experienced riders actively chase.
Aspect ratio refines those characteristics in ways that wing area alone doesn't capture. High aspect wings are long and narrow — think albatross rather than sparrow — and are optimized for glide efficiency and speed. They stay in the air between pump strokes longer, track cleanly upwind, and reward riders who've developed the technique to manage them. Low aspect wings are shorter and wider, prioritizing early lift, maneuverability, and a more forgiving ride character that suits wave riding and riders who are still developing their foil technique. Mid aspect wings split the difference and cover the most ground across varied conditions, which is why they show up so often in complete sets designed for a broad range of riders.
Wing profile — the cross-sectional shape of the wing — determines lift-to-drag ratio and how the wing behaves through its speed range. Thicker profiles generate lift more aggressively at low speeds but create more drag at higher speeds. Thinner profiles reduce drag and favor higher speed ranges at the cost of low-speed lift. Most riders don't need to get deep into profile geometry, but understanding that a wing optimized for light wind efficiency is making different profile decisions than one optimized for wave riding helps contextualize why two wings with similar area numbers can feel very different on the water.
The Unsung Guide in Your Setup
Rear stabilizers — rear wings, back planes, tail wings — get significantly less attention than front wings in most foil conversations, which is a shame because they shape pitch behavior and overall ride character in ways that compound everything the front wing is doing. A stabilizer change on an existing setup can transform how a foil feels without touching the front wing, and experienced riders use stabilizer swaps strategically to tune their setup for specific conditions or disciplines.
Stabilizer size works in relationship with the front wing rather than independently. A larger rear stabilizer increases pitch stability and makes the foil more forgiving through the nose-up and nose-down range — useful for newer riders developing their feel and for choppy conditions where pitch disturbances are frequent. A smaller stabilizer reduces drag and increases pitch sensitivity, giving experienced riders more active control over their foil height and response through turns and transitions. Most complete sets pair front and rear wings with complementary characteristics that balance these variables for a specific rider profile, which is one of the strongest arguments for starting with a complete setup rather than building from individual components.
Stabilizer span and aspect ratio follow similar logic to front wings. Wider, lower aspect stabilizers add stability and control. Narrower, higher aspect options reduce drag and suit performance-oriented riding where efficiency matters more than forgiveness. For riders who've been on the same complete setup for a while and feel like something is slightly off in their pitch behavior, a stabilizer swap is often the most surgical and cost-effective adjustment available before committing to a full wing change.
Matching Wings to Your Discipline
Wing selection looks different depending on what kind of foiling you're doing, and a wing that's genuinely excellent for one discipline can be a poor fit for another. Knowing where your riding falls helps you evaluate options against criteria that actually matter for your sessions.
Wing foiling and kite foiling favor medium to high aspect front wings that balance early lift with upwind efficiency — you need a wing that gets you flying in the conditions you actually ride in, stays efficient through long tacks and jibes, and handles the range of wind strength a typical session involves. Riders in lighter wind regions or on the Great Lakes in marginal conditions tend to favor larger wing areas that keep sessions productive when the forecast is borderline.
Prone surf foiling and SUP foiling put a premium on low-speed lift and glide efficiency above everything else. You're generating momentum manually, which means every bit of glide between pump strokes translates directly to more time connected to a wave or more distance covered. High aspect wings earn their keep here more than in almost any other discipline — the efficiency gains are real and noticeable in a way that powered disciplines partially mask. Wave shape and size factor into wing selection too. Smaller, weaker waves favor larger, more efficient wings that stay connected to marginal energy. Bigger, more powerful surf rewards smaller, more maneuverable wings that turn quickly and respond to rapid changes in wave face angle.
Wake foiling and tow foiling work with consistent generated pull, which shifts the performance priorities toward stability and smooth lift rather than efficiency in variable conditions. Medium aspect wings in moderate size ranges tend to work well behind a boat — forgiving enough to suit the learning curve, responsive enough to reward riders who've developed their technique. Speed range matters less here than in wind-powered disciplines because boat speed is a controlled variable, which opens up wing choices that would be limiting in less predictable conditions.
How We Look at Wings and Planes
Wings are where our team gets genuinely nerdy, and we make no apologies for it. We ride across multiple disciplines — kite foiling, wing foiling, prone, SUP — which means the opinions we have on wing selection come from actual time on the water across the conditions that test different designs in different ways. We stay current on what manufacturers are developing because we're curious about it, not just because it's our job.
The wing market moves fast. New shapes, new aspect ratios, and new construction methods hit the market regularly, and not everything that gets hyped delivers on the promise in real riding conditions. We're honest about what we've ridden and what we'd recommend, and equally honest about what we haven't tested enough to have a strong opinion on.
If you're trying to cut through the noise on a wing decision — whether that's your first setup or a targeted upgrade to an existing quiver — reach out and we'll tell you what we actually think.
Ready to Find Your Wings?
Browse our full selection of hydrofoil front wings and rear stabilizers by discipline, aspect ratio, and size range. If you want a recommendation dialed into your riding, your conditions, and your existing setup, reach out before you buy — give us a call, hit the live chat, or send us a message.