7 Steps to Stop Your Goggles Or Sunglasses From Fogging
At Good Day Optics, we’re more than just goggles — we’re riders, skiers, and weekend warriors who know what it’s like to fight fog. That’s why we put together these 7 steps to help you ride clearer, longer… and why we built gear that makes every day a Good Day.
How to be FOG FREE
Step 1: Always Dry Your Gear
Don’t just toss your goggles into your bag after a ride. When foam sits in a dark, wet bag, it soaks up moisture — the perfect recipe for fog the next time you use them.
Your goggles are like your skis or boots — they need care at the end of every session. The solution is simple: air them out.
Take your goggles out of the case, set them somewhere warm and dry, and let the foam and lenses breathe overnight.
Dry goggles are happy goggles — and clear vision starts long before you hit the chairlift.
Goggles aren’t magic; they rely on airflow. Those little vents around the frame are your goggles’ lungs. If you cover them with a beanie, a face mask, or let snow pack in, you cut off circulation and trap humid air inside. Without ventilation, condensation builds fast.
The fix: check your vents. Brush off snow, make sure your helmet and goggles fit properly, and let the system work the way it was designed.
Step 3: Manage Your Body Heat
Fogging isn’t random — it’s science. Warm, humid air inside your goggles meets the cold lens surface, and the result is condensation. That’s why riders who overheat fog up fastest.
Managing your body heat is key: open your jacket vents, remove a layer, or crack your zippers before you sweat through. The cooler you stay, the less warm vapor rises into your goggles, and the clearer your lenses stay.
Fog still winning?
Steps 1–3 are just the start. Enter your email and unlock the complete 7-step system to keep your goggles clear. Or if you just want the anti-fog kit to save your current goggles or sunglasses, scroll down