22/04/2026
Choosing a good swimming coach—especially in a new country where you don’t know the standards—comes down to observing how they teach, not just what they claim. A bad coach can absolutely slow progress or even create fear of water, so it’s worth being selective.
Here’s how to approach it in a practical, no-nonsense way:
1. Watch before you commit
Don’t sign up immediately. Sit and observe a few sessions.
A good coach:
Gives individual feedback, not just group instructions
Spends time correcting technique (body position, breathing, kicking)
Is engaged (not scrolling on their phone or chatting constantly)
Keeps kids active, not waiting around too long
A bad coach:
Just tells kids to “swim laps”
Doesn’t correct mistakes
Pays attention only to the best swimmers
Lets chaos happen or runs overly rigid, joyless sessions
2. Look at how they interact with children
This is one of the biggest indicators.
Good signs:
Adjusts tone depending on the child (encouraging, patient)
Builds confidence, especially with beginners
Gives clear, simple instructions
Kids seem focused but not afraid
Red flags:
Yelling, shaming, or sarcasm
Ignoring anxious kids
Overly harsh or overly indifferent behavior
A great coach balances discipline with psychological safety.
3. Technique over “just swimming”
Anyone can make a child tired. Not everyone can teach proper technique.
Ask yourself:
Are they teaching breathing properly?
Are they correcting body alignment?
Do they break skills into steps?
If the coach only focuses on distance or speed early on, that’s a problem. Bad habits in swimming are hard to fix later.
4. Ask a few direct questions
You don’t need a long interview—just a couple of smart questions:
“How do you handle beginners who are afraid of water?”
“What’s your progression plan for a new child?”
“How do you correct technique?”
A good coach gives clear, structured answers.
A weak coach gives vague responses like “they just learn by doing.”
5. Check credentials—but don’t rely only on them
Certifications matter, but they’re not everything.
Look for:
Lifeguard or coaching certification
Experience with children (not just adults or athletes)
But remember: some certified coaches are still poor teachers. Observation > paperwork.
6. Watch the kids’ progress and attitude
After a few sessions, ask:
Is your child more confident in water?
Are they learning specific skills?
Do they want to come back?
If your child is:
Getting more anxious → bad sign
Plateauing with no feedback → bad sign
Enjoying and improving → good sign
7. Avoid extremes
Two types to be cautious about:
“Too soft” coach: just plays games, little real learning
“Too hard” coach: treats kids like elite athletes, kills motivation
The best coach sits in the middle: structured, but human.
8. Trust patterns, not first impressions
One great session means nothing. Look for consistency over 2–3 weeks.
Simple rule of thumb
If the coach:
Watches closely
Corrects specifically
Encourages appropriately
Has a clear plan
→ You likely have a good one.
If they:
Ignore technique
Treat all kids the same
Don’t engage
→ Move on early. Time lost here is hard to recover.