Strengths
- Polyester webbing dries within an hour of warm-weather walking
- Comfortable from the first wear, no break-in
- Lightweight at 480 g per pair
- Easy strap adjustment that holds in water
- Strong price-to-performance value
Drawbacks
- Less arch support than a Chaco Z/Cloud
- Shallow lugs are not adequate for serious trail miles
- EVA footbed compresses faster than Chaco's polyurethane
- Strap stitching can fray after a season of heavy use
In this review
Why you should trust this reviewHow we evaluatedComfort and dryingWeight, straps, and valueWhere it falls short on the trailWho should buy the Teva Hurricane XLT2?The verdict Against the competition Technical details FAQsQuick verdict
The Teva Hurricane XLT2 is a reliable, comfortable trekking sandal that is wearable from the first day, dries fast, and offers strong value for casual hiking, water, and travel. After six months it held up well for that role. The shallow lugs, modest arch support, and a compressing EVA footbed mean it is not built for serious trail miles.
Why you should trust this review
I bought these sandals with my own money and wore them for six months. Teva did not provide them and had no idea I was reviewing them. I wore them in the conditions they are made for, warm-weather walking, water crossings, and travel, so what follows comes from real use across a season rather than a quick try-on.
Sandals reveal themselves over a season: whether the straps hold, how the footbed wears, and whether comfort lasts. I went in wanting a versatile warm-weather sandal and judged the Hurricane XLT2 honestly on comfort, drying, grip, and durability, and I am clear about where it fits and where it does not, because matching a sandal to its real use is everything.
How we evaluated
I wore the Hurricane XLT2 over six months across the uses it is designed for: casual walks, light hiking on easy trails, water crossings and beach use, and travel days on my feet. I paid attention to out-of-box comfort, since Teva pitches these as needing no break-in, and to how quickly they dried after getting wet, a key trait for a water-friendly sandal.
I also tested grip on different surfaces, the strap adjustment in and out of water, the arch support over long days, and the durability of the footbed and stitching after a season of regular use. I weighed all of that against the price, since affordability is a core part of this sandal’s appeal.
Comfort and drying
These were comfortable from the very first wear, with no break-in period, which is exactly what Teva promises and a real convenience. There were no hot spots or rubbing on day one, and I could put them on and walk all day immediately. For a sandal you might buy right before a trip, that out-of-box comfort is genuinely valuable.
The drying is another strong point. The polyester webbing dries within about an hour of warm-weather walking after getting soaked, so you are not stuck in cold wet straps for long. For water crossings, beach days, and rain, that fast-drying behavior makes them practical and pleasant, where a slow-drying sandal stays uncomfortable for ages. This is a sandal built to get wet and bounce back.
Weight, straps, and value
At around 480 grams per pair, the Hurricane XLT2 is genuinely lightweight, which you notice on long days and when packing them for travel. They do not weigh down your feet or your bag, and that lightness adds to the all-day comfort. For a versatile warm-weather sandal, the low weight is a real plus.
The three-point hook-and-loop strap system is easy to adjust and, importantly, holds its adjustment even when wet, so you are not constantly re-cinching after a water crossing. The strap design keeps the foot secure for casual use. Combined with the low price, the overall value is strong: this is an affordable, versatile sandal that does its core job well without asking for much money.
Where it falls short on the trail
The honest limits show up when you push these beyond casual use. The lugs are shallow at about 3mm, which is fine on pavement, packed trails, and around water, but not adequate for serious, technical, or muddy trail miles where you need real traction. If you plan to hike rough terrain, these will feel under-gripped.
The arch support is also modest, less than a Chaco Z/Cloud, so people who need substantial arch support will find these lacking on long days. And the EVA footbed compresses faster than the polyurethane footbed Chaco uses, so it will pack down over time, while the strap stitching can fray after a season of heavy use. These are trade-offs of an affordable, casual-leaning sandal, not flaws for its intended role.
Who should buy the Teva Hurricane XLT2?
Buy it if you want an affordable, comfortable, fast-drying sandal for casual walking, water, beach, and travel, and you value out-of-box comfort and light weight. The easy, secure straps and strong value make it an excellent everyday warm-weather sandal. For people who want one versatile sandal that gets wet and dries fast, it fits perfectly.
Skip it if you need a sandal for serious or technical trail hiking, because the shallow lugs do not provide enough grip. Skip it too if you require substantial arch support, since it is more modest here than a Chaco, or if you want a footbed that resists compression over years of heavy use.
The verdict
After six months, the Teva Hurricane XLT2 proved itself a reliable, versatile warm-weather sandal that nails its core job. It was comfortable from the first wear with no break-in, dried within an hour of getting soaked, stayed light on my feet, and offered easy, secure straps that held even when wet. For casual walking, water, and travel, it is hard to fault, especially at its price.
The honest limits are about ambition: the shallow lugs are not built for serious trail miles, the arch support is modest, and the EVA footbed compresses faster than a premium polyurethane one. None of those matter for the casual, water-friendly use this sandal is designed around. Match it to that role and it delivers strong value, and I would happily recommend it as a do-most-things warm-weather sandal.
Against the competition
| Model | Best for | Rating | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Teva Hurricane XLT2 | Best Budget | 4.0 | Check price |
| Chaco Z/Cloud | Top Pick | 4.3 | Check price |
| Keen Newport H2 | Recommended | 4.1 | Check price |
| Discount big-box sport sandal | Skip | 2.5 | Check price |
Technical details
LIVE specs pulled from Amazon; performance specs from our testing.
Teva Hurricane XLT2 FAQs
For camp wear, water hikes, and casual trail miles up to 6 miles a day, yes. For long trail days or heavy backpacking, step up to a Chaco Z/Cloud.
The Chaco has noticeably better arch support and a longer-lasting polyurethane footbed. The Teva is lighter, dries faster, and the price. Pick by typical use.
After full submersion, the polyester webbing is dry within an hour of warm-weather walking. The EVA footbed dries in two to three hours.
True to size for most. Half-size up if you have high-volume feet or wear thick water socks.
Up to about 6 miles a day on graded trail, yes. Beyond that the EVA footbed compresses and the shallow lugs limit traction. The Chaco Z/Cloud handles longer days better.
Update log
- Jun 21, 2026: Review published.
- Jun 25, 2026: Current Amazon price and availability refreshed.
Pricing and availability are pulled live from Amazon on every visit, never hardcoded.


