Collar & Body-Link Restraints
What to consider when buying a collar & body-link restraint
Back-wear vs front-wear
Back-wear sets hold the wrists behind the back. Front-wear sets hold them in front, at chest or waist height. The choice determines what's exposed and what's accessible — worth deciding that before anything else.
How much adjustment do you actually need
Some sets connect the collar to the wrists at one fixed point. Others have multiple attachment positions along the tether, so the wrist height can be changed. More attachment points means more possible positions — useful if different people are wearing it, or if you want to vary the intensity without buying a second piece.
For multi-limb restraint that goes further, hogties and connectors take a different approach.
Collar-to-thigh
Collar-to-thigh sets restrict leg movement, not arm movement. The chains connecting the neck to the thighs limit how far the legs can extend — the tighter the chain, the less movement is possible. Completely different use case to a collar-to-wrist set, and worth being clear on which one you're actually after before buying.
Modular vs fixed
On modular sets, the collar, strap, and cuffs detach from each other and work independently. A fixed set is one piece — simpler, but less adaptable over time. If you're building a broader setup, a modular system pairs naturally with bondage kits and other standalone restraints.
The leather cuff harness
One piece here doubles as a strap-on harness — a waist belt with wrist cuffs on the sides and a central O-ring mount. For anyone who needs both wrist restraint and a strap-on mount in a single piece, it's worth knowing that option exists. Compatible strap-ons are listed separately.
Why collar & body-link restraints work differently
The key difference from cuffs alone is that the wearer's movement does part of the work. Pull against the restraint and the collar feels it. That self-enforcing quality means less adjustment is needed from whoever is in control — the position maintains itself.
Spare D-rings on most sets also give extra attachment points for rope and shibari if the setup calls for more.
Collar restraints vs other options
Spreader bars and hogties both create positional control, but neither uses the collar as an anchor. A spreader bar holds limbs apart; a hogtie draws them together behind the back. Collar and body-link sets use the neck as the fixed point — any movement feeds back through it. That's a distinct mechanic, and for some scenes it's exactly what makes them the right choice.
Genuine products, plain packaging
Sets here come from Rimba, Rouge Garments, Sportsheets, and other established bondage brands. Leather pieces are built to last. Neoprene and nylon sets are easy to clean and soft against the skin.
Orders leave in plain boxes with no external branding. Same-day dispatch before 14:00 Monday to Friday. Free UK delivery over £50.
FAQs
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