The Full Journey
A typical learn-to-swim journey moves through five recognisable stages. Here’s what each one looks like, what skills are taught, and how to know when your learner is ready to progress.
Stage 1 · Water Confidence
Typical age: 6 months to 3 years (with a parent in the water)
The foundation. Stage 1 is all about positive associations with water. Lessons involve splashing, songs, gentle submersions (always cued), and lots of cuddles. There is no expectation of “swimming” — the goal is comfort and trust.
Skills mastered:
-
Comfortable having water poured over the head and face
Blowing bubbles on the surface
Brief, cued underwater submersions
Front and back floating with full parent support
Stage 2 · Floating & Gliding
Typical age: 3 to 5 years (independent classes begin around age 3)
The first stage of independent swimming. Children move from parent-supported skills to short, unaided movements through water. Goggles often come in around now.
Skills mastered:
-
Front and back floats unaided for 5+ seconds
Streamlined glides off the wall
Kicking with a kickboard
Submerging confidently to retrieve toys
Treading water with help
Stage 3 · First Strokes
Typical age: 5 to 7 years
The “I can swim!” stage. Children combine kicking and arms into recognisable freestyle and backstroke. Side breathing — the trickiest skill in early swimming — is the focus.
Skills mastered:
-
Freestyle 5–10 metres with side breathing
Backstroke 5–10 metres
Treading water for 30+ seconds
Sculling and basic rotations
Safe pool entry and exit
Stage 4 · Stroke Development
Typical age: 7 to 10 years
Refining freestyle and backstroke, introducing breaststroke and butterfly. Distances increase, technique becomes more efficient. Some children start considering club swimming around this stage.
Skills mastered:
-
Freestyle and backstroke 25 metres with good technique
Breaststroke kick and arms introduced
Butterfly basics introduced
Diving from the side or block
Treading water for 1+ minute
Stage 5 · Swim & Survive
Typical age: 10+ years
Beyond technique into water survival and open-water awareness. This stage aligns with the Royal Life Saving Australia Swim and Survive program and includes scenarios like rescuing a friend with a flotation device.
Skills mastered:
-
50+ metres of continuous swimming
Treading water for 2+ minutes fully clothed
Surface dives and underwater swimming
Reach and throw rescues
Open water awareness — rips, currents, marine stingers
Beyond Stage 5
Many swimmers continue with stroke correction, squad swimming, or move to other water sports — surf life saving nippers, water polo, triathlon, or open water swimming clubs. The skills built in learn-to-swim form the foundation for a lifetime of confidence in the water.
Find a swim school for your stage
Browse our directory to find centres offering classes at every stage — from baby splash to stroke correction.