If you're serious about hitting, your equipment matters. The right gear won't replace good mechanics or hard work, but it can optimize every rep in practice and every at-bat in a game. Here's a complete checklist of what every competitive baseball hitter should have.
Game Day Gear
✅ Batting Helmet
Non-negotiable. Make sure it fits correctly and is rated for your level of play. A helmet that moves around on your head is a distraction at the plate.
✅ Batting Gloves
Good batting gloves improve grip and protect your hands from vibration. If you want a premium option, the Vettex Elite Batting Gloves give hitters a premium Cabretta palm, short-cuff feel, and the kind of clean control serious players notice immediately. Replace any pair when the palm starts to thin out — worn gloves cost you grip.
✅ Bat Grip
This one gets overlooked. An old, worn grip is slippery under pressure — exactly when you need it most. The Vettex x Varo Silicone Bat Grip gives you consistent control in any conditions and holds up through a full season.
✅ Arm Sleeve
Keeps your lead arm warm between at-bats and protects against turf burn. The Vettex Dry Sleeve is lightweight and moisture-wicking — you won't notice it's there until you realize your arm stayed warm through a cold night game.
Training Gear
✅ Bat Training Weight
One of the highest-value investments a hitter can make. Whether you go with the Arc for bat speed or the Cor for power, overload training should be a regular part of your offseason and in-season routine.
✅ Batting Training Sleeve
The Vettex x Varo Batting Training Sleeve reinforces proper swing mechanics by training your arm to follow the correct path to the ball. Use it during tee work and soft toss sessions.
✅ Tee and Balls
You can do more reps off a tee in 20 minutes than you'll get in a week of batting practice. A quality tee and a bucket of balls should be part of every serious hitter's setup.
✅ Batting Practice Pitcher or Machine
Timing is a skill you can only develop against moving pitches. Whether it's a teammate, a parent, or a pitching machine — live reps are irreplaceable.
Recovery
✅ Compression Sleeve
Wear it post-practice to help your arm recover between sessions. The Vettex Dry Compression Shirt works for full upper-body recovery after heavy hitting sessions.
The Bottom Line
You don't need to buy everything at once. Start with the bat grip (instant upgrade, low cost) and add training tools as your offseason routine develops. The hitters who improve fastest are the ones who combine smart training with the right tools.
See everything Vettex makes for baseball players in the baseball collection.
Why Equipment Quality Compounds Over a Season
A worn bat grip, a sleeve that slides down, a bat weight you don't use consistently — these things compound across a 60-game season. The hitters who improve fastest are the ones who build habits around quality equipment and stick with them. The checklist above isn't about spending money for its own sake — it's about removing the friction points that interrupt good habits.
A fresh bat grip takes 10 minutes to replace and immediately improves your feel at the plate. A bat training weight used three times a week for a full offseason can measurably add miles per hour to your exit velocity. Small investments, consistent use, real results.
Building Your Offseason vs In-Season Kit
Not everything on the checklist is used year-round. Here's how to think about it by phase:
- Offseason — prioritize the bat training weight and batting sleeve. These are your improvement tools. Use them 3-4x per week on a structured schedule.
- In-season — game-day gear takes priority. Fresh bat grip, clean arm sleeve, properly sized mouthguard if your sport requires one. Training tools move to 1-2x per week maintenance work.
- Year-round — recovery gear (compression sleeve) and grip maintenance (bat grip replacement every season).
Browse the complete Vettex baseball lineup →
Keep Reading
- How to Improve Bat Speed: 5 Training Tips That Actually Work — the training to go with the gear
- How to Choose a Baseball Bat Training Weight — Arc vs Cor, which is right for you
- Do Baseball Arm Sleeves Actually Help? — the complete answer on compression sleeves for hitters
- Best Batting Gloves for Baseball? Why the Vettex Elite Is Built for Grip, Comfort, and Control — the premium batting glove guide for serious hitters



