Family wearing Caden Lane matching swimsuits

How to Choose Matching Family Swimsuits (+ What to Look for in Baby-Safe Swim Fabric)

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Time to read 7 min

Matching family swimsuits turn a regular beach day into the kind of memory you'll print and frame. But before you fall in love with a print, there's real homework to do — especially when that fabric is going straight against your baby's brand-new skin. This guide covers both: the coordinated looks you're already dreaming about and the baby-safe swim fabric checklist you didn't know you needed. Whether you're shopping for a newborn's first splash or outfitting the whole crew, here's how to get it right.

Why Matching Family Swimsuits Are Having a Major Moment

It's not just a trend — it's a whole vibe shift. Families are leaning into coordinated looks because they make photos feel intentional and vacations feel cohesive. There's something deeply satisfying about a beach day where everyone looks like they belong together, even if they're off doing completely different things. Mom's reading her book, dad's chasing toddlers into the surf, and somehow — thanks to a shared colorway — the whole thing looks like a styled shoot.


Social media has accelerated the appeal, but the staying power comes from something more personal. Coordinated family swimwear creates a visual record of a season, a trip, or a phase of life that passes faster than anyone warns you it will. When your kids are grown, those photos won't just show faces — they'll show that you showed up on purpose.


The good news: pulling off matching family swimsuits doesn't require a stylist or a big budget. It requires knowing what to look for — and where to find it.


Caden Lane
Featured: Matching family swimsuits in Sandy Stripes

What "Baby-Safe Swim Fabric" Actually Means (And Why It Matters)

Not all swimwear is created equal, and the difference matters most when you're buying for babies and toddlers. Baby skin is thinner, more absorbent, and significantly more reactive than adult skin — which means the fabric they're swimming in all day is worth scrutinizing before it hits the cart.


Here's what to look for in baby-safe swim fabric:


  • UPF 50+ rating — Blocks 98% of UV rays and is the gold standard for sun-protective swimwear. Look for this on every piece your baby or toddler wears in the water.
  • Chlorine and saltwater resistance — Fabric that holds its shape and color after repeated exposure, because one trip to the pool shouldn't ruin a swimsuit.
  • Quick-dry construction — Minimizes time spent in wet fabric, which reduces skin irritation and keeps babies comfortable between dips.
  • Stretchy, soft composition — Nylon-spandex or polyester-spandex blends tend to be the gentlest on sensitive skin while holding their shape through active play.
  • No harsh dyes or chemical finishes — Look for OEKO-TEX certification or a brand that's transparent about what goes into their fabric production.
  • Flat or minimal seams — Less rubbing, less redness, especially around thighs and underarms where babies move constantly.

If a swimsuit checks all six boxes, you're looking at something genuinely built for baby skin — not just labeled as such.

Shop Caden Lane's Matching Family Swimsuits

UPF 50+ vs. SPF Sunscreen — Do You Still Need Both?

Yes. Full stop. But here's what that actually means in practice.


UPF (Ultraviolet Protection Factor) measures how much UV radiation a fabric blocks. A UPF 50+ swimsuit blocks 98% of both UVA and UVB rays through the covered areas. It's consistent, it doesn't wear off, and it doesn't require reapplication. For babies under six months, who shouldn't use sunscreen at all according to most pediatric guidelines, a UPF 50+ swimsuit is their primary sun defense — not a nice-to-have.


SPF sunscreen covers everything the fabric doesn't: face, hands, feet, shoulders, the back of the neck. It works differently (it absorbs or reflects UV radiation at the skin surface) and needs to be reapplied every one to two hours, especially after water exposure.


Think of UPF swimwear as your foundation layer and SPF sunscreen as your finishing step. One does not replace the other, but together they give your baby the most complete sun protection available for a day at the beach or pool.

Parents and baby girl wearing matching family swimsuits with UPF 50+
Featured: Matching Family Swimsuits in Blue Lagoon

How to Choose the Right Fit for Every Family Member (Baby to Parent)

Coordinated doesn't mean identical. The goal is a look that works for every body and every age — which means thinking about fit as much as pattern.

Babies (0-12 months)

Look for snap closures at the crotch for easy diaper changes, swim diaper compatibility, and maximum UPF coverage. One-pieces with short sleeves or rash guard coverage are ideal. Avoid anything with loose ties or decorative hardware near the face.

Toddlers (1–4 years)

One-pieces remain the most practical — they stay put, don't shift during active play, and provide better coverage. Rash guard sets (top + bottoms) are a great option for extra sun protection and easy potty training access. Snug but not restrictive fits are key; toddlers move hard.

Big kids (4+)

Two-piece sets become more viable and are often preferred by kids themselves. Rash guards with board shorts or bikini bottoms coordinate easily with the rest of the family without looking costume-y.

Parents

The best adult pieces in a coordinated set work with the color or print story without requiring an identical cut. A matching swim cover-up, a coordinating one-piece, or even a beach tote in the same print can tie everything together without anyone feeling like they're wearing a uniform.

How to Coordinate Without Being Too Matchy-Matchy

There's a sweet spot between "accidentally wearing the same shirt" and "obviously planned this for six months." Here's how to land there.


The easiest approach: choose one print and one coordinating solid. Put the babies in the print (because baby in a cute print is non-negotiable) and let adults anchor in the complementary solid. Or flip it — adults in the print, kids in the coordinating color. Both work.


Coordinating colorways are another strong move. Everyone in the same color family — navy, coral, sage — but in different patterns or silhouettes. Cohesive, intentional, and significantly less costume-y than head-to-toe matching.


If you want to go full matching, go full matching. There's no wrong answer when the photo is that cute.

Caden Lane's matching family swimsuits is designed with exactly this flexibility in mind — prints that translate across baby sizes, toddler sizes, and adult silhouettes so you can mix and match within a collection without the guesswork.

Family wearing matching family seersucker swimsuits | Caden Lane
Featured: Matching Family Swimsuits in Seersucker Blue

Shop the Look: Caden Lane Matching Family Swimsuits

A great beach day starts before you leave the driveway. Here's how we'd build it:


Start with the babies — choose a print from the collection that makes you genuinely happy every time you look at it. Then build outward: coordinate toddler pieces in the matching colorway, pull adult pieces in the complementary solid or print, and add a UV cover-up or beach bag in the same family to finish the look.


Caden Lane's matching family swimsuits are made with baby-safe fabrics, UPF 50+ protection, and the kind of prints that look as good in real life as they do in photos — which is exactly the point.


Pack sunscreen. Bring extra snacks. The rest is already handled.

Frequently Asked Questions

Are matching family swimsuits worth it?

Genuinely, yes — especially for families with young kids. Matching family swimsuits makes beach and pool photos significantly more cohesive and intentional, and many brands (including Caden Lane) design their collections so pieces work across age groups without requiring an exact match. The investment is low; the photo payoff is high.

What fabric is safe for baby swimsuits?

The safest baby swimsuit fabrics are soft nylon-spandex or polyester-spandex blends that are free of harsh dyes and chemical finishes. Look for OEKO-TEX certification, UPF 50+ ratings, chlorine resistance, and quick-dry construction. Flat seams and gentle elastic reduce skin irritation on babies with sensitive skin.

Do babies need UPF swimsuits?

Yes — especially babies under six months, who should not wear sunscreen according to most pediatric guidelines. A UPF 50+ swimsuit is their primary line of defense against UV exposure. For older babies and toddlers, UPF swimwear combined with broad-spectrum sunscreen on exposed skin provides the most complete sun protection.

What's the difference between UPF and SPF?

UPF measures how much UV radiation a fabric blocks; SPF measures how well a sunscreen protects skin. A UPF 50+ swimsuit blocks 98% of UV rays through the fabric and doesn't wear off or require reapplication. SPF sunscreen covers skin the fabric doesn't reach and must be reapplied every one to two hours. Use both.

How do I coordinate family swimsuits without everyone matching exactly?

Choose one print and one coordinating solid, or put the whole family in the same color family in different silhouettes. Babies and toddlers look great in the hero print; adults can anchor in the coordinating solid or a complementary pattern. The goal is cohesion, not uniformity — and the best coordinating family swimwear collections are designed with that range built in.

AUTHOR

Katy Mimari, Caden Lane Founder & CEO

Katy Mimari

Katy Mimari is the mom boss behind Caden Lane—your go-to for stylish baby must-haves. CEO, designer, and founder, she’s been shaking up the baby world since 2005 with trend-forward gear that makes parenting easier (and cuter!).

📹WATCH: Baby, Toddler & Family Swimsuits 2026

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