Most parents have stood awkwardly on the pool deck wondering what “Level 4 Sea Turtle” actually means and whether their child should be in it yet. Here’s the demystified version of how learn-to-swim progression actually works.
Why do swim school levels feel so confusing?
Because every swim school in Australia uses slightly different naming. One school calls Level 3 “Pufferfish”, another calls it “Stage 2 Plus”, another just calls it “Level 3”. The animal names are marketing — what matters is the underlying skill progression, which is broadly similar everywhere.
Most quality programs follow a five-stage progression that aligns with national benchmarks from AUSTSWIM and Royal Life Saving Australia.
The five stages, plainly explained
Stage 1: Water Confidence
Babies and toddlers, with a parent in the water. The aim is positive associations — splashing, blowing bubbles, brief cued submersions, supported floating. There is no “swimming” yet and that’s completely fine.
Stage 2: Floating & Gliding
The first stage of independent swimming. Children float front and back unaided, glide off the wall, kick with a board. This is where parents start to see the magic happening.
Stage 3: First Strokes
Recognisable freestyle and backstroke begin to appear, usually 5–10 metres at a time. Side breathing — the trickiest skill in early swimming — is the focus. Expect this stage to take a while.
Stage 4: Stroke Development
Refining freestyle and backstroke, introducing breaststroke and butterfly. Distances increase to 25 m and beyond. Some children at this stage start considering club swimming.
Stage 5: Swim & Survive
Beyond technique into water survival. 50+ metre swims, treading water for extended periods, surface dives, basic rescue skills, and open water awareness. This stage aligns with the Royal Life Saving Swim and Survive program.
How long does each stage take?
There is no fixed timeline and any swim school promising one is being unrealistic. Here’s a rough guide based on weekly lessons:
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Stage 1: Often 6–12 months (it’s gentle and gradual)
Stage 2: 6–12 months
Stage 3: 9–15 months (side breathing takes time)
Stage 4: 12–24 months
Stage 5: 12+ months
Some children move much faster, some slower. Both are completely normal.
Should I worry if my child is “behind”?
Almost certainly not. Children progress on their own timelines, and what matters is steady forward motion — not matching a friend’s child or a Facebook post. If your teacher seems happy and your child is enjoying it, you’re on track.
The one thing to watch for: if a child has been stuck on the same level for more than 18 months without obvious progress, it’s worth a chat with the teacher to understand why. Sometimes a small adjustment — a different teacher, more frequent lessons, or focused practice on one skill — unlocks rapid progress.
The benchmark to aim for
Royal Life Saving Australia’s national benchmark is that every child should be able to swim 50 metres and tread water by age 12. This is the threshold below which a child is considered to be at significant water-safety risk. Setting this as a family goal makes everything else click into place — it gives you a target, a timeline, and a clear measure of success.
Want a deeper dive on each stage? Read our full swimming milestones guide, or find a swim school that’s right for your child’s stage.