How Tight Should a Bandage Be? — Safe Compression ...
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  • June 08, 2026

How Tight Should a Bandage Be? — Safe Compression Guide

Bandage tightness is a critical safety parameter. Too loose and the bandage is ineffective; too tight and it can cause ischemia, nerve damage, or compartment syndrome. The correct tightness depends on the clinical purpose.

Compression Levels by Clinical Purpose

ApplicationTarget Pressure (Ankle)Bandage TypeStretch Level
Light Retention (dressing fixation)<15 mmHgCotton crepe, conforming bandageMinimal stretch — just enough to stay in place
Mild Support (sprain, strain)14-17 mmHgCrepe bandage, cohesive bandage50% stretch, firm but comfortable
Moderate Compression (varicose veins)18-24 mmHgClass 1-2 compression bandage50-70% stretch, graduated pressure
High Compression (venous leg ulcer)25-40 mmHgClass 3 compression, multi-layer systemFull stretch — requires training to apply safely
Very High Compression40-50 mmHgClass 4 compression bandageSpecialist application only — lymphoedema therapy

The "Two-Finger Rule" (Basic Check)

For general bandaging (not compression therapy): After application, you should be able to easily slide two fingers under the bandage edge at any point. If you cannot, the bandage is too tight.

Warning Signs — Bandage Is TOO TIGHT

Remove or loosen the bandage immediately and seek medical assessment if:

  • Pain increasing (not from the injury itself — bandage-induced pain worsens over time)
  • Numbness or tingling in fingers/toes — nerve compression sign
  • Skin color changes: Pale/white (arterial insufficiency) or blue/purple (venous congestion) in the extremity beyond the bandage
  • Coolness: The skin beyond the bandage feels significantly colder than the other limb
  • Inability to move fingers or toes — motor nerve compression is a medical emergency
  • Swelling BEYOND the bandage (distal edema) — indicates venous return obstruction
  • Capillary refill >3 seconds: Press on a fingernail/toenail beyond the bandage — it should return to pink within 2 seconds

Graduated Compression Principle

For compression bandaging (venous disease, edema control), pressure should be highest at the ankle and gradually decrease toward the knee. This gradient (typically 40% reduction from ankle to knee) assists venous return by "milking" blood upward against gravity. This is achieved by:

  • Starting with higher tension at the ankle
  • Gradually reducing stretch as you wrap upward
  • Using a spiral or figure-8 technique that overlaps 50% of the previous layer
  • The ankle circumference-to-pressure relationship follows LaPlace Law: Pressure = Tension / (Radius x Number of Layers)

Special Populations — Extra Caution Required

  • Arterial disease patients: Ankle-Brachial Pressure Index (ABPI) MUST be checked before applying compression >20 mmHg. ABPI <0.8 = reduced compression only (14-25 mmHg). ABPI <0.5 = NO compression — refer to vascular specialist. Applying high compression to arterial insufficiency can cause critical limb ischemia and amputation (NICE CG168, 2019).
  • Diabetic patients: Peripheral neuropathy masks pain — they cannot feel if bandage is too tight. Use only light retention bandaging unless under specialist direction. Check feet every 2-4 hours.
  • Heart failure patients: Compression bandaging increases venous return to the heart, potentially causing fluid overload. Requires medical clearance before applying >20 mmHg.

References: NICE Guideline CG168, Venous Leg Ulcer Management, 2019. Wounds International, Principles of Compression, 2020. Partsch H, et al. "Compression Therapy: International Consensus." International Angiology, 2008.

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