2025 Reedin SuperModel Review: The Do-It-All Kite You’ve Been Waiting For

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If there’s one kite that’s managed to bridge every riding style, from big air andfreeride to wave and foil, it’s the Reedin SuperModel. For 2025, designer DamienGirardin teamed up with Ralf Groesel to push the limits of their Hybrid Torsion Frame(HTF 3) and pulley-less bridle

Whether you ride powered up in the gusty winds of Tampa Bay, chase clean kickersin St. Petersburg, or foil through glassy morning sessions in Cocoa Beach, the 2025SuperModel feels like an extension of your body. This review breaks down what’s new,how it performs across disciplines, and whether it truly earns the title of “one-kitequiver.”

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What’s New in the 2025 Reedin SuperModel HTF?

The 2025 SuperModel isn’t a small update, it’s a major refinement of Reedin’s“do-it-all” design. Damien Girardin and Ralf Groesel rebuilt the frame, bridle, andcanopy from the inside out, bringing the SuperModel closer to a truly universalfreeride platform. Riders will immediately notice the lighter bar feel, smoother powerdelivery, and faster response through turns.

Hybrid Torsion Frame 3 (HTF 3): More Twist, Less Weight

Reedin’s third-generation Hybrid Torsion Frame (HTF 3) introduces variable stiffnessacross the leading edge. Stiffer Dacron runs through the center for structure andboost power, while flexible FLEXLITE sections in the tips let the kite twist and steerwith minimal delay. The result is a kite that feels locked in overhead, but alive in thehands, faster loops, more precise control, and less fatigue over long sessions.

Pulley-less Bridle System: Direct, Predictable, and Smooth

The old pulley bridle is gone. The 2025 SuperModel runs a fully fixed bridle geometry, giving riders a more connected bar feel and a huge improvement in depower range. You can load the kite, edge hard, and release without the lag that pulleys sometimes create. It’s a more intuitive feel, especially for big air and surf riders who rely on exact timing and feedback.

Trailing Edge Stiffeners & Canopy Refinements

Reedin added fiberglass battens along the trailing edge to cut flutter and hold canopy shape during tight turns. Combined with the weight savings in the struts and leading edge, this makes the kite loop and recover more cleanly. The updated panel layout also reduces canopy distortion under load, helping the kite maintain its profile through gusts and rotations.

The Net Effect: A Lighter, Faster, Easier SuperModel

Every small change adds up to a kite that feels more fluid, stable, and forgiving. You’ll notice it in how easily it climbs through loops, how calm it sits in gusts, and how much smoother the catch feels after a jump. It’s not just better performance, it’s better usability for every discipline.If you want a deeper understanding of how kite design translates to control and progression, read Elite’s beginner-to-intermediate kite guide. It breaks down bar pressure, wind range, and stability in real-world terms, perfect context before deciding which kite suits your style.

2025 Reedin SuperModel Specifications & Build Features

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The 2025 SuperModel is built around precision. Every material, stitch, and strut choice reflects Reedin’s goal of creating a kite that feels light in the sky but solid under load. It’s a rare balance, strong enough for powered loops, yet agile enough for foil sessions.

Size Range and Recommended Setup

The SuperModel comes in sizes from 5m to 12m, covering everything from 30-knot storm sessions to light-wind foiling days. Each size is tuned individually for bar pressure and feedback rather than scaled uniformly, giving every kite a consistent “Reedin feel.”

✔️ Recommended bar width: 43cm for 5–7m sizes, 49cm for 8–12m.
✔️Line length: 24m for all sizes, optimized for consistent timing in loops and jumps.
✔️Approximate weights: 1.9 kg (5m) to 3.15 kg (12m).

Riders switching between disciplines can keep a single bar setup across all sizes without losing response or comfort, a practical win for anyone chasing simplicity in their quiver.

Canopy and Frame Materials

Reedin uses a triple-ripstop canopy for superior shape retention and longevity. The Hybrid Torsion Frame 3 (HTF 3) combines stiff central Dacron for stability with FLEXLITE zones in the tips to enhance twist and turning agility. This gives the SuperModel its signature mix of explosive lift and forgiving drift.

New FlexStrut Lite material reduces strut weight by up to 15%, creating a smoother power delivery through turns while improving light-wind drift for foilers and surf riders.

Bridle Geometry and Attachment Points

The fixed pulley-less bridle brings a direct feel to the bar, a hallmark of the 2025 model. Reedin fine-tuned the tow-points and added repositioned rear connectors, which allow for more leverage when steering. The result is improved depower travel, faster response, and a larger usable wind range.

Built for Real-World Conditions

This kite isn’t just light for the sake of marketing numbers. It’s reinforced only where needed, meaning fewer failure points and better handling in both flatwater and ocean chop. The frame holds its shape even under heavy load, making it ideal for riders pushing big air in St. Petersburg, chasing sessions across Tampa Bay, or testing Atlantic wind swell near Cocoa Beach.

To see how these design elements compare across brands, check out Elite’s kite review archive. It’s the best place to see how Reedin stacks up against other performance kites like North, CORE, and Cabrinha.

Explore more Reedin kites and gear.

Discover Reedin kites built for performance, style, and versatility — from big air to foil and wave sessions. Designed by Kevin Langeree and Damien Girardin for riders who want it all.

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How Does the 2025 Reedin SuperModel Perform in Big Air and Jump Conditions?

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The SuperModel has always been known for its raw lift and smooth hangtime, but the 2025 version feels like a new level of control in the chaos. The lighter frame, cleaner bridle, and refined canopy give it a rare combination of power on demand and instant forgiveness when you need it most.

Lift, Hangtime, and Boost Power

Pull the trigger and it rockets. The HTF 3 frame holds its shape perfectly through the load phase, storing and releasing energy with precision. You feel it the moment you edge, a predictable, linear pull that lifts hard without that “slingshot jerk” some kites produce.

Once airborne, the glide is slow and smooth. The SuperModel keeps pulling even at the apex, giving you those long, floaty jumps that feel suspended in slow motion. The improved bridle geometry pushes the kite slightly forward in the window, which extends hangtime while keeping your descent under full control.

Looping and Kiteloop Behavior

For loop lovers, this kite’s speed and catch are where things get addictive. The 2025 bridle and trailing edge stiffeners let the SuperModel carve a clean arc through the sky without stalling or losing lift. Loops are tight, fast, and catch high, a perfect balance for intermediate riders learning their first megaloops or advanced riders pushing full rotations.

It’s not a brute-force kite. The power is progressive, not punchy, which builds confidence as you push higher and loop harder.

Stability and Predictability Under Load

In heavy wind or gusty Florida sea breezes, the SuperModel stays composed. The frame doesn’t flex or deform, so there’s no nervous flutter or unwanted twitch. You can load up fully, commit to your edge, and know exactly how the kite will respond.

That predictability is what gives it such high confidence in big air sessions, whether you’re boosting in Tampa Bay, looping clean ramps in Clearwater, or sending during a Cocoa Beach cold front.

Comparison to Previous SuperModel

Compared to the 2023 and 2024 models, the new SuperModel delivers smoother acceleration, a more forward-flying feel, and easier bar input. It loops faster, catches sooner, and requires less bar pressure, meaning you can fly longer sessions without arm fatigue.

Wave and Surf Riding Performance

The SuperModel’s surf DNA is unmistakable. Designed to stay with you down the line instead of yanking you off your board, the 2025 version feels perfectly tuned for riders who split time between twintip and surfboard.

Edge Hold and Power Control Through Turns

When you carve into a bottom turn, the SuperModel holds just enough tension in the lines to stay connected without overpowering your rail. The lighter bar pressure and pulley-less bridle let you fine-tune power instantly, push out, and the kite drifts effortlessly downwind; pull in, and it accelerates cleanly out of the pocket.

This balance of pull and release gives wave riders the freedom to surf with flow, not fight the kite.

Drift and Downwind Flow

Drift performance is where the 2025 SuperModel quietly flexes its evolution. The HTF 3 frame and FlexStrut Lite system keep the kite stable even when the lines go slack. That means fewer stalls, cleaner top turns, and more time actually surfing the wave.

We tested similar setups in varied Florida conditions, from the clean breaks at Pass-a-Grille to the rolling Atlantic surf of Cocoa Beach and New Smyrna. In every case, the kite stayed balanced and predictable, never back-stalling or racing too far forward.

No Reconfiguration Needed Between Disciplines

One of Reedin’s core promises is simplicity: no switching bridles or re-rigging when you change from surfboard to twintip or foil. The SuperModel delivers. You can come straight off a wave session and go back to freeride or foil without touching the setup.

For riders who live by versatility, that’s gold, one kite, one setup, all conditions.

Curious how to match your kite setup to your favorite Florida spots? Read Elite’s kiteboarding location guide for regional wind patterns and spot-specific riding tips.

Foiling and Low-Wind Performance

Few kites manage to balance low-end grunt with featherlight handling. The 2025 SuperModel nails it. While it’s not a dedicated foil kite, it performs far beyond what most three-strut freeride designs can do in marginal winds.

Early Water Starts and Low-End Power

Thanks to its lightweight HTF 3 frame and efficient canopy profile, the SuperModel 2025 generates lift even in sub-12-knot conditions. It sits slightly forward in the window, making it easier to keep tension in the lines for smooth water starts. The power delivery feels progressive, enough pull to get on foil without sudden surges that throw your balance off.

Once you’re up, the kite holds steady through slow transitions and quick pumps. That steady pressure helps beginners dial in board control while giving experienced riders freedom to play with body position and speed.

Drift, Depower, and Turning Radius

Depower travel is generous. You can fully sheet out and the kite will hover in place instead of dropping back or stalling. This is ideal for downwind foiling or carving light-wind surf where drift and responsiveness are everything.

The tight turning radius also helps, even large sizes like the 12m react fast, which keeps the kite lively when you need to redirect in a lull. The lack of pulleys in the bridle means direct feedback, so every micro-movement at the bar translates immediately into canopy motion.

Bar Pressure and Handling Feel

Bar pressure is lighter than in past SuperModel generations, but it still provides enough feedback to know exactly where the kite is without looking. That tactile awareness makes it forgiving for riders progressing into foiling, where stability and balance matter more than brute power.

If you’re exploring foil setups or curious how kite design influences stability on foil boards, check out Elite’s beginner information blog. It breaks down real-world handling tips for lighter winds and Florida’s typical summer foiling conditions.

Handling, Usability, and User-Friendliness

One of the most impressive things about the 2025 SuperModel is how easy it feels for such a high-performance kite. It’s not intimidating. The refined bridle and lighter frame make the kite incredibly stable in the sky, while the reduced bar pressure gives it an intuitive, almost “telepathic” control.

Relaunch and Recovery

Water relaunch is near effortless. The combination of the three-strut frame and canopy tension keeps the kite sitting correctly on the surface, waiting for light input. Even in lighter winds or surf zones, a small bar pull brings it back up quickly without collapsing or inverting. That’s a huge advantage for riders still building confidence in variable Gulf or Atlantic conditions.

Bar Feel and Response

The new pulley-less bridle brings direct, consistent feedback through the bar. You always know where the kite sits in the window, which allows more focus on the ride itself. There’s no guessing, no surprise surges, just clean, connected response. The lighter pressure reduces fatigue, especially during long freeride or surf sessions.

Stability and Forgiveness

The updated frame holds rock solid in gusts and still drifts smoothly when depowered. That balance means fewer front-stalls or wingtips folding mid-loop, even in turbulent air. For progressing riders, this stability speeds up learning dramatically. You can focus on edging, transitions, and timing instead of managing kite instability.

Target Rider Level

While designed for intermediate to advanced riders, the SuperModel is friendly enough for newcomers who plan to grow fast. It’s forgiving, predictable, and doesn’t punish small mistakes. The only area where beginners might outgrow its comfort zone early is unhooked freestyle, everything else, from freeride to foil, stays accessible.

If you’re deciding whether to start on a freeride or progression-ready kite, read Elite’s beginner-to-intermediate kite guide. It explains how features like bar feedback, depower travel, and relaunch ability affect your first 50 sessions.

Pros & Cons, Is the 2025 SuperModel a True One-Kite Quiver?

Reedin’s design goal was clear: one kite that can handle every condition and every board in your quiver. The 2025 SuperModel comes closer to that goal than any version before it. But while it does nearly everything well, it still has a few nuances worth understanding before you buy.

Where the SuperModel Shines:

✔️ Big Air Confidence: Explosive lift and clean catch make it one of the easiest kites to jump high without unpredictable yank.
✔️Drift and Surf Balance: Exceptional stability and downwind drift give wave riders full freedom in Florida’s Atlantic surf or Gulf rollers.
✔️Foil-Friendly Lightness: The lighter HTF 3 frame and FlexStrut Lite materials keep it efficient and reactive in 10–12 knot foiling winds.
✔️Durability Meets Precision: Reinforced only where it matters, no excess bulk, no wasted weight.
✔️Rider Versatility: Handles twintip, surfboard, or foil without needing reconfiguration or tuning.

Where a Specialized Kite Might Win

✔️Unhooked Freestyle: The Super Model’s continuous pull isn’t ideal for riders focused on slack-line tricks.
✔️Pure Race or Freerace: Dedicated foil or race kites still offer better upwind efficiency and glide for competitive riders.
✔️Ultra-Gusty Spots: While very stable, kites with more segmented frames (like the Reedin HyperModel) may handle extreme turbulence slightly better.

The Verdict

For 95% of riders, this is the kite that simplifies your setup and expands your range. You can freeride the bay, chase small surf, foil flatwater mornings, and still loop huge during a cold front, all with one kite. The 2025 SuperModel isn’t just a “jack of all trades.” It’s the first do-it-all kite that truly performs across them.

Before you buy, check out Elite’s Kite Buying Guide for size and wind-range recommendations based on your weight and local Florida conditions.


2025 Reedin SuperModel vs. Competitor Kites

How does it stack up against the rest of the field? The SuperModel 2025 competes directly with do-it-all kites like the North Reach, CORE Nexus 3, Cabrinha Switchblade, and Naish Pivot. Each has a slightly different personality, but the Reedin stands out for its blend of intuitive control and all-discipline balance.

Kite Best For SuperModel Advantage
North Reach 2025 Freeride + lightwind foil Lighter bar pressure, quicker steering
CORE Nexus 3 Surf + big air Smoother power delivery, more forgiving loops
Cabrinha Switchblade Boost + stability Faster turning, lighter build
Naish Pivot All-around freeride Broader depower range, easier relaunch

While each kite has loyal fans, the 2025 SuperModel feels the most natural for riders who mix disciplines. It’s fast, connected, and easy to trust, especially in Florida’s variable conditions where consistency is everything.

For direct comparisons, explore Elite’s review archive, where you’ll find full breakdowns of the latest models from North, CORE, and Cabrinha tested in real Florida wind.

Price, Availability, and Buying Tips

As of fall 2025, the Reedin SuperModel HTF 2025 retails for around €1,729 / $1,849 USD, depending on size. Elite Watersports offers both in-store and online ordering with global shipping and full warranty support.

Buying Tips

✔️ Try Before You Buy: Book a demo through Elite Watersports to feel the difference firsthand. Florida’s mix of flatwater and open ocean makes it ideal for side-by-side kite testing.

✔️ Size for Your Conditions: Most Florida riders pair a 9m or 10m with a 12m for light wind coverage. If you foil often, a 7m can handle anything above 15 knots.

✔️ Maintenance Tip: Rinse the kite after saltwater sessions and check bridle connections regularly, Reedin’s lightweight materials are tough, but precision gear deserves care.

For live inventory and current promos, visit Elite Watersports’ Reedin Collection or call the shop directly to confirm size availability.


Final Verdict and Rider Recommendation

If you want one kite that simplifies your setup and keeps up with your progression, the 2025 SuperModel is it. It’s built for riders who do everything, foil at sunrise, freeride after lunch, and chase air when the seabreeze kicks in.

Who It’s For:

✔️ Riders in Florida or warm coastal zones who want one kite for all conditions
✔️ Intermediate to advanced kiters chasing consistent big air, wave, and freeride performance
✔️ Progressing foilers who want stability and feedback without switching gear

Who It’s Not For: 

X
 Dedicated unhooked freestyle purists
X Competitive racers chasing maximum upwind angles

The Reedin SuperModel HTF 2025 sets a new standard for intuitive control and smooth power delivery across every discipline. It’s not just a kite, it’s a system built to remove friction from your session.

Ready to see how it feels in Florida wind? Book a demo or check availability now, and find out why this might be the last kite you’ll ever need.

Learn more, check availability, or book a demo at Elite Watersports.

FAQ – 2025 Reedin SuperModel HTF Kite

Is the 2025 Reedin SuperModel good for beginner kiteboarders?

The SuperModel is forgiving enough for motivated beginners, but it truly shines for riders progressing fast through intermediate to advanced levels. It has easy relaunch, predictable power delivery, and stable drift, all of which help new riders build confidence in Florida’s mixed conditions.

What size Reedin SuperModel should I choose for my weight and local wind?

Most Florida riders between 150–190 lbs pair a 9m or 10m for average 15–25 knot days with a 12m for lighter winds. Lighter riders (under 150 lbs) often go 8m + 11m, while heavier riders may step up to 10m + 13m. You can find more sizing tips in Elite’s Kite Buying Guide.

Can the SuperModel replace multiple kites in my quiver?

Yes. The 2025 model was built as a true one-kite quiver, performing equally well for freeride, big air, surf, and foiling. Unless you’re focused exclusively on racing or unhooked freestyle, this kite can easily cover 90% of your sessions.

How does the 2025 SuperModel compare to the 2023 or 2024 versions?

The 2025 update adds Hybrid Torsion Frame 3 (HTF-3), a pulley-less bridle, and FlexStrut Lite materials. These make it lighter, faster, and smoother in gusts, with noticeably lighter bar pressure and improved looping performance.

How well does the SuperModel handle Florida wind and water conditions?

Exceptional. The kite stays composed in Tampa Bay’s gusty thermals and performs cleanly in Atlantic surf zones like Cocoa Beach and New Smyrna. It’s equally happy in flatwater freeride or side-onshore wave setups.

What bar setup works best with the Reedin SuperModel 2025?

Reedin recommends a 43cm bar for 5–7m sizes and a 49cm bar for 8–12m sizes, all with 24m lines. That setup ensures consistent turning speed and predictable lift across every size.

Where can I demo or buy the 2025 Reedin SuperModel in Florida?

You can test or purchase the full Reedin lineup directly through Elite Watersports in St. Petersburg, FL. Demo sessions are available year-round — just call or stop by the shop to match the right size to your local conditions via the Contact page.

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