A Parent's Guide
Kids Jiu-Jitsu in Dallas
Not a ranking — a guide to finding where your child will thrive. 3 Dallas academies with dedicated kids programs, 15 weekly classes, scored for what parents actually care about.
Find My Child's Gym
Two questions. We'll match your child to the Dallas program that fits them — not just the highest rating.
Find Your Child Here
Every kid is different. Jump to the program built for yours.
Dallas Kids BJJ Snapshot
Kids Classes Monday
Nothing left today — here's the next Monday.
- 5:00 PMMarcelo Garcia JiuAges 7–10 · Teens · Youth Gi (7-10 Years)
- 5:00 PMMarcelo Garcia JiuAges 11–14 · Teens · Youth Gi (11-16 Years)
Every Kids Program, by Age
Filter to your child's school stage. Ranked by Kids Roll Score™.
What Your Child Builds Over Time
- 1White BeltDay one. Learning to fall, move, and listen.
- 2ConfidenceHandling pressure calmly — on and off the mat.
- 3DisciplineShowing up, drilling, earning each stripe.
- 4LeadershipHelping newer kids, setting the example.
- 5Teen ProgramCarrying it into the toughest years with a crew.
Parent Questions, Answered
- Is BJJ good for kids?
- For many kids, yes. Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu teaches problem-solving, body awareness, and self-control, and because it's grappling-based there's no striking — kids learn to stay calm and work out of tough positions rather than hit. Most parents notice gains in confidence and focus. As with any sport, look for a school with a dedicated kids curriculum and coaches who are good with children.
- What age should kids start BJJ?
- Many Dallas academies start children as young as 3–4 in "little kids" classes that are mostly games, coordination, and listening skills. Structured technique usually begins around 6–7. The most common starting age we see in Dallas is 3. There's no wrong time to start — pick a class built for your child's age.
- How often should kids train?
- One to two classes a week is plenty for most beginners and builds a routine without burnout. Kids who fall in love with it often move to 2–3 times a week. Consistency matters more than volume — a child who shows up once a week for a year will progress steadily.
- Gi or no-gi for children?
- Most kids programs start in the gi (the traditional uniform). The gi slows the pace down, which helps kids learn control and technique, and the belt system gives clear goals to work toward. No-gi is great too and many schools mix both — for a first-timer, either is fine.
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How the Kids Roll Score™ works
Unlike the adult Roll Score, the Kids Roll Score (0–99) is built for parents. It weighs the academy's reputation (25%), how established and busy it is (20%), the size of the kids program — how many weekly classes (20%), how many age groups it covers (15%), whether it has a true beginner class (10%), and how consistently it runs kids classes through the week (10%). Age groups are read from each gym's class schedule. As verified parent reviews grow on Let's Roll, they'll factor in too.
