| What it is | Hollow, 8-fin insulating yarn |
| How it warms | Traps air around the fins |
| Strengths | Ultralight, breathable, fast-drying |
| Used in | Active insulation, grid mid layers |
Octa is a lightweight Japanese insulating yarn with a hollow core and eight fin-like projections that trap air to create warmth at very low weight, while remaining highly breathable. Knitted into lofted, airy fabrics, it’s used in active insulation and grid-style mid layers prized for being exceptionally light, quick-drying, and breathable for high-output use.
For active warmth
A fiber used in active insulation and breathable mid layers, competing with Polartec Alpha.
Frequently asked questions
What is Octa yarn?
Octa is a specialty insulating yarn, developed in Japan, built around a hollow core with eight radiating fins. That structure traps a lot of air for warmth while using very little material, so fabrics knitted from Octa are extremely light, lofty, breathable, and quick-drying — ideal for active warmth.
How is Octa different from regular insulation?
Rather than a sheet of insulation sewn between fabrics, Octa is a yarn knitted directly into airy, lofted fabrics, often in open or grid structures. This makes garments lighter and far more breathable than typical synthetic-fill pieces, suiting them to high-output, stop-and-go activity where dumping heat matters.
Where is Octa used?
In active insulation pieces and breathable mid layers designed for aerobic use — fast hiking, ski touring, running, and climbing — where you want warmth without overheating. It competes with active-insulation fabrics like Polartec Alpha for the lightweight, breathable mid-layer role.
Sources
- Active insulation fibers — The Mountaineers
- Lightweight insulation — American Hiking Society