20 of the most common western saddle problems — each with a complete diagnosis guide, symptom checklist, and step-by-step correction. If your horse or your riding isn't right, the saddle is often the first place to look.
Permanent pressure damage to hair follicles — the visible record of a fit problem that has been occurring for weeks or months.
Saddle contacts front and back of the bars but floats in the middle — creating intense focal pressure at both ends and no load distribution in between.
Wither pinching and shoulder restriction — the most common and most consequential saddle fit mistake, routinely misread as a training problem.
The saddle sinks, the pommel drops, and the gullet may contact the spine under load. Harder to spot than a narrow tree — equally serious.
The most serious saddle problem — invisible from the outside, creates unpredictable pressure, and is a safety risk. Every used saddle purchase should begin with a tree test.
Lateral instability has three causes — wide tree, worn panels, or asymmetric horse muscle — each requiring a completely different correction.
Pinned ears, moving away, biting during saddling. Most cases have a legitimate physical cause — rule out every physical factor before treating as behavior.
Cold-back behavior versus genuine pain — how to tell them apart, and why the distinction matters for rider safety and horse welfare.
Dropping away from the saddle is almost always a pain response before it becomes a training problem. Saddle fit is the first thing to evaluate.
Saddle-caused soreness is localized and location-specific. Muscular soreness is diffuse. The location of the soreness points to the cause.
Among the most preventable injuries in western horses — and the most frequently recurrent when the underlying cause is not corrected.
Backward migration shifts the rider behind the motion and concentrates rear bar pressure. A breast collar is not always the answer — identify the cause first.
Forward migration puts the front bars directly onto the shoulder blade with every stride — more immediately damaging than backward migration.
Pommel down, cantle up — the rider is tipped onto the horse's forehand, loading the front end and restricting the shoulder with every stride.
Cantle lower than the pommel on roach-backed or high-crouped horses drives the rider into a chair seat regardless of how correctly they try to sit.
Perching on the cantle, restricted hips, weight driven backward — a too-small seat undermines every communication the rider tries to make.
Swimming in the seat — every positional correction the rider makes to stay centered registers as an unintended cue to the horse below.
The maneuver most affected by saddle fit. Before adjusting training, evaluate seat size, cantle height, stirrup position, and tree width against the NRHA standard.
A horse that stumbles under saddle but moves balanced on the lunge has a rider balance problem — and saddle fit is the first variable to investigate.
The sweat pattern is the most reliable free diagnostic tool available. Reading it correctly reveals exactly where pressure is concentrating before damage occurs.
David Solum has been evaluating saddle fit problems for 40+ years. Call, text, or email him directly — he can advise on whether it's a fit issue, a tree problem, or a saddle you need to replace.
See also: Free Saddle Tools · How to Fit a Western Saddle · Parts of a Western Saddle · How to Buy a Certified Used Saddle · Western Saddle FAQ