Is there any maximum time for staying in a belt in BJJ?











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Last week, I started to go to a new BJJ academy after a while without any training. When we started rolling, I asked to the guy that was rolling against me for how much time he was training. Since he is a white-belt with no stripes, I was expecting an answer like 3, 6 or 9 months.



So, the guy answered 3 years!



I was a bit surprised with this answer! Then I asked why he was training for so much time as a white belt and he answered that he is training to compete in tournaments.



I think this is a bit unfair.



Obviously it is going to be much easier for a guy that has the knowledge of a blue belt to win against a real white belt.



I always read about the minimum time to stay training in a belt, but what about the maximum time? Is there a maximum time one can be training in a belt?










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    Last week, I started to go to a new BJJ academy after a while without any training. When we started rolling, I asked to the guy that was rolling against me for how much time he was training. Since he is a white-belt with no stripes, I was expecting an answer like 3, 6 or 9 months.



    So, the guy answered 3 years!



    I was a bit surprised with this answer! Then I asked why he was training for so much time as a white belt and he answered that he is training to compete in tournaments.



    I think this is a bit unfair.



    Obviously it is going to be much easier for a guy that has the knowledge of a blue belt to win against a real white belt.



    I always read about the minimum time to stay training in a belt, but what about the maximum time? Is there a maximum time one can be training in a belt?










    share|improve this question


























      up vote
      3
      down vote

      favorite









      up vote
      3
      down vote

      favorite











      Last week, I started to go to a new BJJ academy after a while without any training. When we started rolling, I asked to the guy that was rolling against me for how much time he was training. Since he is a white-belt with no stripes, I was expecting an answer like 3, 6 or 9 months.



      So, the guy answered 3 years!



      I was a bit surprised with this answer! Then I asked why he was training for so much time as a white belt and he answered that he is training to compete in tournaments.



      I think this is a bit unfair.



      Obviously it is going to be much easier for a guy that has the knowledge of a blue belt to win against a real white belt.



      I always read about the minimum time to stay training in a belt, but what about the maximum time? Is there a maximum time one can be training in a belt?










      share|improve this question















      Last week, I started to go to a new BJJ academy after a while without any training. When we started rolling, I asked to the guy that was rolling against me for how much time he was training. Since he is a white-belt with no stripes, I was expecting an answer like 3, 6 or 9 months.



      So, the guy answered 3 years!



      I was a bit surprised with this answer! Then I asked why he was training for so much time as a white belt and he answered that he is training to compete in tournaments.



      I think this is a bit unfair.



      Obviously it is going to be much easier for a guy that has the knowledge of a blue belt to win against a real white belt.



      I always read about the minimum time to stay training in a belt, but what about the maximum time? Is there a maximum time one can be training in a belt?







      brazilian-jiu-jitsu competition grading






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      edited 2 days ago









      coinbird

      1,410122




      1,410122










      asked Nov 19 at 20:21









      El Mynx

      1341110




      1341110






















          3 Answers
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          accepted










          No, there is no maximum or minimum time limit.



          There are several organizations that claim to be the governing body of BJJ, but none of them are official. (One overbearing organization, the IBJJF, actually tries to force people to pay them for belt registration!) There are countless tournaments and pro invitationals with different rule sets (legal submissions, points, round time, etc.) Many have their own belt time and age requirements, but few of these "official requirements" are actually respected by BJJ or MMA gyms. The decision to promote someone is 100% up to the coach, regardless of time. One of my favorite examples of this is when BJ Penn was promoted from white belt to black belt in 3 years. The IBJJF threw a huge fit because it didn't fit their criteria. BJ Penn went on to win a world championship.



          Someone that claims they are purposely staying at white belt is likely making excuses for their lack of training. Their coach probably just doesn't think they're ready to be promoted. I would immediately question his "training to do tournaments" reason. White belts can start competing almost immediately. Since YOU PAY to enter the tournament, and don't win any money at white belt, there is no incentive to "sandbag" at white belt. Not to mention the fact that crushing people at a white belt tournament makes everyone roll their eyes. You pretty much get to do that once, and your coach needs to make a decision about promoting you. Every BJJ coach I know would be embarrassed to have one of their white belts continue to win gold medals for an extended period of time.



          In the case you're talking about, 3 years isn't at all uncommon. 2 years is a normal time from white to blue when you're training about 3 days per week.






          share|improve this answer























          • Thanks for the answer! I agree that is a shame to keep winning gold medals as a white belt for a long time. But, unfortunately, some people prefer to win this way rather than evolve as a fighter.
            – El Mynx
            2 days ago






          • 1




            @ElMynx Fortunately that doesn't really happen much. Anyone that trains enough to crush white belt tournaments probably craves a challenge. And anyone sticking around too long and beating up white belts would start to get noticed by other coaches, and banned from tournaments. Many tournaments even have a "you can only win one gold at white belt" rule. Some tournaments give you two.
            – coinbird
            2 days ago




















          up vote
          1
          down vote













          We train Royce Gracie style BJJ (non-competitive, self-defense oriented, with a mix of MMA), and out of respect to him the organization heads decided to only hold promotions when he comes to the country to hold a training seminar once a year. The flip side is, if you don't go (and it is expensive and a couple hours' drive away), you don't get promoted.



          We have plenty of 2, 3, or even 4 year white belts because of this. It's a decision I personally disagree with, and I think eventually the organizers will have to move to promoting at different points, but it does take the focus off of belts and stripes and means that people are really evaluated on their skill and experience alone.



          So at least in our organization, the answer is there is no time limit at all.






          share|improve this answer










          New contributor




          BIU is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
          Check out our Code of Conduct.

























            up vote
            0
            down vote













            According to the US Grappling rules, the only time "time in belt" counts is in No-Gi competitions.




            Adult and 30+ No Gi Skill Levels
            Skill levels are determined by time spent training in any comparable grappling art. Any wrestler with extensive experience (3 or more years in high school, or any collegiate experience) must enter at least intermediate no-gi. Judo, Sambo, and MMA experience count the same as BJJ.



            Adult Divisions (Men and Women)

            Novice: Up to 9 months (white belts only).

            Beginner: Up to 2 years (white belts only).

            Intermediate: 2 – 5 years, or blue belt.

            Advanced: Over 5 years, or purple belt and above.



            30+ Men

            Beginner: Up to 2 years (white belts only).

            Intermediate: 2 – 5 years, or blue belt.

            Advanced: Over 5 years, or purple belt and above.



            Juvenile (ages 4-17) Weight Classes

            Brackets for competitors aged 4-17 are made using the Madison Bracketing System. There are no preset weight classes for children and teens. At the end of weigh ins, the children and teens will be sorted by weight. Brackets will then be made by grouping them into sets of 4 or 8 (depending on turnout). Juveniles will be divided by weight, experience, and age (whenever possible). Using the Madison system means children and teens will no longer cut weight since they won’t know the weight classes in advance.



            Juvenile (ages 4-17) Skill Levels

            Beginners: Up to one year of training any grappling art.

            Intermediate: Up to three years of training any grappling art.

            Advanced: Over three years training any grappling art.



            Any Juvenile that has been awarded a blue belt (adult level) must compete in the Juvenile Advanced skill level, regardless of time training. Juvenile blue belts can also compete in the adult blue belt and adult intermediate or advanced no gi divisions.



            Juvenile division skill levels are commonly combined. US Grappling manually creates juvenile divisions, and sorts competitors by age and weight, and then by skill to ensure that matches are safe for all competitors.




            That said, the techniques that can be used are limited by belt. For example, for BJJ Gi competition:





            1. The only submission below the waist that is legal for white, blue, and purple belts are straight ankle locks (AKA straight footlock).

            2. Kneebars, figure-four toeholds, and compression locks (AKA “slicers”, “crushers”) are legal in brown and black belt divisions only.







            share|improve this answer

















            • 1




              These are the rules for a small organization called "US Grappling." They are not the governing body of BJJ, as one does not exist.
              – coinbird
              Nov 19 at 21:59













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            3 Answers
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            3 Answers
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            up vote
            4
            down vote



            accepted










            No, there is no maximum or minimum time limit.



            There are several organizations that claim to be the governing body of BJJ, but none of them are official. (One overbearing organization, the IBJJF, actually tries to force people to pay them for belt registration!) There are countless tournaments and pro invitationals with different rule sets (legal submissions, points, round time, etc.) Many have their own belt time and age requirements, but few of these "official requirements" are actually respected by BJJ or MMA gyms. The decision to promote someone is 100% up to the coach, regardless of time. One of my favorite examples of this is when BJ Penn was promoted from white belt to black belt in 3 years. The IBJJF threw a huge fit because it didn't fit their criteria. BJ Penn went on to win a world championship.



            Someone that claims they are purposely staying at white belt is likely making excuses for their lack of training. Their coach probably just doesn't think they're ready to be promoted. I would immediately question his "training to do tournaments" reason. White belts can start competing almost immediately. Since YOU PAY to enter the tournament, and don't win any money at white belt, there is no incentive to "sandbag" at white belt. Not to mention the fact that crushing people at a white belt tournament makes everyone roll their eyes. You pretty much get to do that once, and your coach needs to make a decision about promoting you. Every BJJ coach I know would be embarrassed to have one of their white belts continue to win gold medals for an extended period of time.



            In the case you're talking about, 3 years isn't at all uncommon. 2 years is a normal time from white to blue when you're training about 3 days per week.






            share|improve this answer























            • Thanks for the answer! I agree that is a shame to keep winning gold medals as a white belt for a long time. But, unfortunately, some people prefer to win this way rather than evolve as a fighter.
              – El Mynx
              2 days ago






            • 1




              @ElMynx Fortunately that doesn't really happen much. Anyone that trains enough to crush white belt tournaments probably craves a challenge. And anyone sticking around too long and beating up white belts would start to get noticed by other coaches, and banned from tournaments. Many tournaments even have a "you can only win one gold at white belt" rule. Some tournaments give you two.
              – coinbird
              2 days ago

















            up vote
            4
            down vote



            accepted










            No, there is no maximum or minimum time limit.



            There are several organizations that claim to be the governing body of BJJ, but none of them are official. (One overbearing organization, the IBJJF, actually tries to force people to pay them for belt registration!) There are countless tournaments and pro invitationals with different rule sets (legal submissions, points, round time, etc.) Many have their own belt time and age requirements, but few of these "official requirements" are actually respected by BJJ or MMA gyms. The decision to promote someone is 100% up to the coach, regardless of time. One of my favorite examples of this is when BJ Penn was promoted from white belt to black belt in 3 years. The IBJJF threw a huge fit because it didn't fit their criteria. BJ Penn went on to win a world championship.



            Someone that claims they are purposely staying at white belt is likely making excuses for their lack of training. Their coach probably just doesn't think they're ready to be promoted. I would immediately question his "training to do tournaments" reason. White belts can start competing almost immediately. Since YOU PAY to enter the tournament, and don't win any money at white belt, there is no incentive to "sandbag" at white belt. Not to mention the fact that crushing people at a white belt tournament makes everyone roll their eyes. You pretty much get to do that once, and your coach needs to make a decision about promoting you. Every BJJ coach I know would be embarrassed to have one of their white belts continue to win gold medals for an extended period of time.



            In the case you're talking about, 3 years isn't at all uncommon. 2 years is a normal time from white to blue when you're training about 3 days per week.






            share|improve this answer























            • Thanks for the answer! I agree that is a shame to keep winning gold medals as a white belt for a long time. But, unfortunately, some people prefer to win this way rather than evolve as a fighter.
              – El Mynx
              2 days ago






            • 1




              @ElMynx Fortunately that doesn't really happen much. Anyone that trains enough to crush white belt tournaments probably craves a challenge. And anyone sticking around too long and beating up white belts would start to get noticed by other coaches, and banned from tournaments. Many tournaments even have a "you can only win one gold at white belt" rule. Some tournaments give you two.
              – coinbird
              2 days ago















            up vote
            4
            down vote



            accepted







            up vote
            4
            down vote



            accepted






            No, there is no maximum or minimum time limit.



            There are several organizations that claim to be the governing body of BJJ, but none of them are official. (One overbearing organization, the IBJJF, actually tries to force people to pay them for belt registration!) There are countless tournaments and pro invitationals with different rule sets (legal submissions, points, round time, etc.) Many have their own belt time and age requirements, but few of these "official requirements" are actually respected by BJJ or MMA gyms. The decision to promote someone is 100% up to the coach, regardless of time. One of my favorite examples of this is when BJ Penn was promoted from white belt to black belt in 3 years. The IBJJF threw a huge fit because it didn't fit their criteria. BJ Penn went on to win a world championship.



            Someone that claims they are purposely staying at white belt is likely making excuses for their lack of training. Their coach probably just doesn't think they're ready to be promoted. I would immediately question his "training to do tournaments" reason. White belts can start competing almost immediately. Since YOU PAY to enter the tournament, and don't win any money at white belt, there is no incentive to "sandbag" at white belt. Not to mention the fact that crushing people at a white belt tournament makes everyone roll their eyes. You pretty much get to do that once, and your coach needs to make a decision about promoting you. Every BJJ coach I know would be embarrassed to have one of their white belts continue to win gold medals for an extended period of time.



            In the case you're talking about, 3 years isn't at all uncommon. 2 years is a normal time from white to blue when you're training about 3 days per week.






            share|improve this answer














            No, there is no maximum or minimum time limit.



            There are several organizations that claim to be the governing body of BJJ, but none of them are official. (One overbearing organization, the IBJJF, actually tries to force people to pay them for belt registration!) There are countless tournaments and pro invitationals with different rule sets (legal submissions, points, round time, etc.) Many have their own belt time and age requirements, but few of these "official requirements" are actually respected by BJJ or MMA gyms. The decision to promote someone is 100% up to the coach, regardless of time. One of my favorite examples of this is when BJ Penn was promoted from white belt to black belt in 3 years. The IBJJF threw a huge fit because it didn't fit their criteria. BJ Penn went on to win a world championship.



            Someone that claims they are purposely staying at white belt is likely making excuses for their lack of training. Their coach probably just doesn't think they're ready to be promoted. I would immediately question his "training to do tournaments" reason. White belts can start competing almost immediately. Since YOU PAY to enter the tournament, and don't win any money at white belt, there is no incentive to "sandbag" at white belt. Not to mention the fact that crushing people at a white belt tournament makes everyone roll their eyes. You pretty much get to do that once, and your coach needs to make a decision about promoting you. Every BJJ coach I know would be embarrassed to have one of their white belts continue to win gold medals for an extended period of time.



            In the case you're talking about, 3 years isn't at all uncommon. 2 years is a normal time from white to blue when you're training about 3 days per week.







            share|improve this answer














            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer








            edited 2 days ago

























            answered Nov 19 at 21:58









            coinbird

            1,410122




            1,410122












            • Thanks for the answer! I agree that is a shame to keep winning gold medals as a white belt for a long time. But, unfortunately, some people prefer to win this way rather than evolve as a fighter.
              – El Mynx
              2 days ago






            • 1




              @ElMynx Fortunately that doesn't really happen much. Anyone that trains enough to crush white belt tournaments probably craves a challenge. And anyone sticking around too long and beating up white belts would start to get noticed by other coaches, and banned from tournaments. Many tournaments even have a "you can only win one gold at white belt" rule. Some tournaments give you two.
              – coinbird
              2 days ago




















            • Thanks for the answer! I agree that is a shame to keep winning gold medals as a white belt for a long time. But, unfortunately, some people prefer to win this way rather than evolve as a fighter.
              – El Mynx
              2 days ago






            • 1




              @ElMynx Fortunately that doesn't really happen much. Anyone that trains enough to crush white belt tournaments probably craves a challenge. And anyone sticking around too long and beating up white belts would start to get noticed by other coaches, and banned from tournaments. Many tournaments even have a "you can only win one gold at white belt" rule. Some tournaments give you two.
              – coinbird
              2 days ago


















            Thanks for the answer! I agree that is a shame to keep winning gold medals as a white belt for a long time. But, unfortunately, some people prefer to win this way rather than evolve as a fighter.
            – El Mynx
            2 days ago




            Thanks for the answer! I agree that is a shame to keep winning gold medals as a white belt for a long time. But, unfortunately, some people prefer to win this way rather than evolve as a fighter.
            – El Mynx
            2 days ago




            1




            1




            @ElMynx Fortunately that doesn't really happen much. Anyone that trains enough to crush white belt tournaments probably craves a challenge. And anyone sticking around too long and beating up white belts would start to get noticed by other coaches, and banned from tournaments. Many tournaments even have a "you can only win one gold at white belt" rule. Some tournaments give you two.
            – coinbird
            2 days ago






            @ElMynx Fortunately that doesn't really happen much. Anyone that trains enough to crush white belt tournaments probably craves a challenge. And anyone sticking around too long and beating up white belts would start to get noticed by other coaches, and banned from tournaments. Many tournaments even have a "you can only win one gold at white belt" rule. Some tournaments give you two.
            – coinbird
            2 days ago












            up vote
            1
            down vote













            We train Royce Gracie style BJJ (non-competitive, self-defense oriented, with a mix of MMA), and out of respect to him the organization heads decided to only hold promotions when he comes to the country to hold a training seminar once a year. The flip side is, if you don't go (and it is expensive and a couple hours' drive away), you don't get promoted.



            We have plenty of 2, 3, or even 4 year white belts because of this. It's a decision I personally disagree with, and I think eventually the organizers will have to move to promoting at different points, but it does take the focus off of belts and stripes and means that people are really evaluated on their skill and experience alone.



            So at least in our organization, the answer is there is no time limit at all.






            share|improve this answer










            New contributor




            BIU is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
            Check out our Code of Conduct.






















              up vote
              1
              down vote













              We train Royce Gracie style BJJ (non-competitive, self-defense oriented, with a mix of MMA), and out of respect to him the organization heads decided to only hold promotions when he comes to the country to hold a training seminar once a year. The flip side is, if you don't go (and it is expensive and a couple hours' drive away), you don't get promoted.



              We have plenty of 2, 3, or even 4 year white belts because of this. It's a decision I personally disagree with, and I think eventually the organizers will have to move to promoting at different points, but it does take the focus off of belts and stripes and means that people are really evaluated on their skill and experience alone.



              So at least in our organization, the answer is there is no time limit at all.






              share|improve this answer










              New contributor




              BIU is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
              Check out our Code of Conduct.




















                up vote
                1
                down vote










                up vote
                1
                down vote









                We train Royce Gracie style BJJ (non-competitive, self-defense oriented, with a mix of MMA), and out of respect to him the organization heads decided to only hold promotions when he comes to the country to hold a training seminar once a year. The flip side is, if you don't go (and it is expensive and a couple hours' drive away), you don't get promoted.



                We have plenty of 2, 3, or even 4 year white belts because of this. It's a decision I personally disagree with, and I think eventually the organizers will have to move to promoting at different points, but it does take the focus off of belts and stripes and means that people are really evaluated on their skill and experience alone.



                So at least in our organization, the answer is there is no time limit at all.






                share|improve this answer










                New contributor




                BIU is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                Check out our Code of Conduct.









                We train Royce Gracie style BJJ (non-competitive, self-defense oriented, with a mix of MMA), and out of respect to him the organization heads decided to only hold promotions when he comes to the country to hold a training seminar once a year. The flip side is, if you don't go (and it is expensive and a couple hours' drive away), you don't get promoted.



                We have plenty of 2, 3, or even 4 year white belts because of this. It's a decision I personally disagree with, and I think eventually the organizers will have to move to promoting at different points, but it does take the focus off of belts and stripes and means that people are really evaluated on their skill and experience alone.



                So at least in our organization, the answer is there is no time limit at all.







                share|improve this answer










                New contributor




                BIU is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                Check out our Code of Conduct.









                share|improve this answer



                share|improve this answer








                edited yesterday





















                New contributor




                BIU is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                Check out our Code of Conduct.









                answered yesterday









                BIU

                1113




                1113




                New contributor




                BIU is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                Check out our Code of Conduct.





                New contributor





                BIU is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                Check out our Code of Conduct.






                BIU is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                Check out our Code of Conduct.






















                    up vote
                    0
                    down vote













                    According to the US Grappling rules, the only time "time in belt" counts is in No-Gi competitions.




                    Adult and 30+ No Gi Skill Levels
                    Skill levels are determined by time spent training in any comparable grappling art. Any wrestler with extensive experience (3 or more years in high school, or any collegiate experience) must enter at least intermediate no-gi. Judo, Sambo, and MMA experience count the same as BJJ.



                    Adult Divisions (Men and Women)

                    Novice: Up to 9 months (white belts only).

                    Beginner: Up to 2 years (white belts only).

                    Intermediate: 2 – 5 years, or blue belt.

                    Advanced: Over 5 years, or purple belt and above.



                    30+ Men

                    Beginner: Up to 2 years (white belts only).

                    Intermediate: 2 – 5 years, or blue belt.

                    Advanced: Over 5 years, or purple belt and above.



                    Juvenile (ages 4-17) Weight Classes

                    Brackets for competitors aged 4-17 are made using the Madison Bracketing System. There are no preset weight classes for children and teens. At the end of weigh ins, the children and teens will be sorted by weight. Brackets will then be made by grouping them into sets of 4 or 8 (depending on turnout). Juveniles will be divided by weight, experience, and age (whenever possible). Using the Madison system means children and teens will no longer cut weight since they won’t know the weight classes in advance.



                    Juvenile (ages 4-17) Skill Levels

                    Beginners: Up to one year of training any grappling art.

                    Intermediate: Up to three years of training any grappling art.

                    Advanced: Over three years training any grappling art.



                    Any Juvenile that has been awarded a blue belt (adult level) must compete in the Juvenile Advanced skill level, regardless of time training. Juvenile blue belts can also compete in the adult blue belt and adult intermediate or advanced no gi divisions.



                    Juvenile division skill levels are commonly combined. US Grappling manually creates juvenile divisions, and sorts competitors by age and weight, and then by skill to ensure that matches are safe for all competitors.




                    That said, the techniques that can be used are limited by belt. For example, for BJJ Gi competition:





                    1. The only submission below the waist that is legal for white, blue, and purple belts are straight ankle locks (AKA straight footlock).

                    2. Kneebars, figure-four toeholds, and compression locks (AKA “slicers”, “crushers”) are legal in brown and black belt divisions only.







                    share|improve this answer

















                    • 1




                      These are the rules for a small organization called "US Grappling." They are not the governing body of BJJ, as one does not exist.
                      – coinbird
                      Nov 19 at 21:59

















                    up vote
                    0
                    down vote













                    According to the US Grappling rules, the only time "time in belt" counts is in No-Gi competitions.




                    Adult and 30+ No Gi Skill Levels
                    Skill levels are determined by time spent training in any comparable grappling art. Any wrestler with extensive experience (3 or more years in high school, or any collegiate experience) must enter at least intermediate no-gi. Judo, Sambo, and MMA experience count the same as BJJ.



                    Adult Divisions (Men and Women)

                    Novice: Up to 9 months (white belts only).

                    Beginner: Up to 2 years (white belts only).

                    Intermediate: 2 – 5 years, or blue belt.

                    Advanced: Over 5 years, or purple belt and above.



                    30+ Men

                    Beginner: Up to 2 years (white belts only).

                    Intermediate: 2 – 5 years, or blue belt.

                    Advanced: Over 5 years, or purple belt and above.



                    Juvenile (ages 4-17) Weight Classes

                    Brackets for competitors aged 4-17 are made using the Madison Bracketing System. There are no preset weight classes for children and teens. At the end of weigh ins, the children and teens will be sorted by weight. Brackets will then be made by grouping them into sets of 4 or 8 (depending on turnout). Juveniles will be divided by weight, experience, and age (whenever possible). Using the Madison system means children and teens will no longer cut weight since they won’t know the weight classes in advance.



                    Juvenile (ages 4-17) Skill Levels

                    Beginners: Up to one year of training any grappling art.

                    Intermediate: Up to three years of training any grappling art.

                    Advanced: Over three years training any grappling art.



                    Any Juvenile that has been awarded a blue belt (adult level) must compete in the Juvenile Advanced skill level, regardless of time training. Juvenile blue belts can also compete in the adult blue belt and adult intermediate or advanced no gi divisions.



                    Juvenile division skill levels are commonly combined. US Grappling manually creates juvenile divisions, and sorts competitors by age and weight, and then by skill to ensure that matches are safe for all competitors.




                    That said, the techniques that can be used are limited by belt. For example, for BJJ Gi competition:





                    1. The only submission below the waist that is legal for white, blue, and purple belts are straight ankle locks (AKA straight footlock).

                    2. Kneebars, figure-four toeholds, and compression locks (AKA “slicers”, “crushers”) are legal in brown and black belt divisions only.







                    share|improve this answer

















                    • 1




                      These are the rules for a small organization called "US Grappling." They are not the governing body of BJJ, as one does not exist.
                      – coinbird
                      Nov 19 at 21:59















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                    down vote










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                    According to the US Grappling rules, the only time "time in belt" counts is in No-Gi competitions.




                    Adult and 30+ No Gi Skill Levels
                    Skill levels are determined by time spent training in any comparable grappling art. Any wrestler with extensive experience (3 or more years in high school, or any collegiate experience) must enter at least intermediate no-gi. Judo, Sambo, and MMA experience count the same as BJJ.



                    Adult Divisions (Men and Women)

                    Novice: Up to 9 months (white belts only).

                    Beginner: Up to 2 years (white belts only).

                    Intermediate: 2 – 5 years, or blue belt.

                    Advanced: Over 5 years, or purple belt and above.



                    30+ Men

                    Beginner: Up to 2 years (white belts only).

                    Intermediate: 2 – 5 years, or blue belt.

                    Advanced: Over 5 years, or purple belt and above.



                    Juvenile (ages 4-17) Weight Classes

                    Brackets for competitors aged 4-17 are made using the Madison Bracketing System. There are no preset weight classes for children and teens. At the end of weigh ins, the children and teens will be sorted by weight. Brackets will then be made by grouping them into sets of 4 or 8 (depending on turnout). Juveniles will be divided by weight, experience, and age (whenever possible). Using the Madison system means children and teens will no longer cut weight since they won’t know the weight classes in advance.



                    Juvenile (ages 4-17) Skill Levels

                    Beginners: Up to one year of training any grappling art.

                    Intermediate: Up to three years of training any grappling art.

                    Advanced: Over three years training any grappling art.



                    Any Juvenile that has been awarded a blue belt (adult level) must compete in the Juvenile Advanced skill level, regardless of time training. Juvenile blue belts can also compete in the adult blue belt and adult intermediate or advanced no gi divisions.



                    Juvenile division skill levels are commonly combined. US Grappling manually creates juvenile divisions, and sorts competitors by age and weight, and then by skill to ensure that matches are safe for all competitors.




                    That said, the techniques that can be used are limited by belt. For example, for BJJ Gi competition:





                    1. The only submission below the waist that is legal for white, blue, and purple belts are straight ankle locks (AKA straight footlock).

                    2. Kneebars, figure-four toeholds, and compression locks (AKA “slicers”, “crushers”) are legal in brown and black belt divisions only.







                    share|improve this answer












                    According to the US Grappling rules, the only time "time in belt" counts is in No-Gi competitions.




                    Adult and 30+ No Gi Skill Levels
                    Skill levels are determined by time spent training in any comparable grappling art. Any wrestler with extensive experience (3 or more years in high school, or any collegiate experience) must enter at least intermediate no-gi. Judo, Sambo, and MMA experience count the same as BJJ.



                    Adult Divisions (Men and Women)

                    Novice: Up to 9 months (white belts only).

                    Beginner: Up to 2 years (white belts only).

                    Intermediate: 2 – 5 years, or blue belt.

                    Advanced: Over 5 years, or purple belt and above.



                    30+ Men

                    Beginner: Up to 2 years (white belts only).

                    Intermediate: 2 – 5 years, or blue belt.

                    Advanced: Over 5 years, or purple belt and above.



                    Juvenile (ages 4-17) Weight Classes

                    Brackets for competitors aged 4-17 are made using the Madison Bracketing System. There are no preset weight classes for children and teens. At the end of weigh ins, the children and teens will be sorted by weight. Brackets will then be made by grouping them into sets of 4 or 8 (depending on turnout). Juveniles will be divided by weight, experience, and age (whenever possible). Using the Madison system means children and teens will no longer cut weight since they won’t know the weight classes in advance.



                    Juvenile (ages 4-17) Skill Levels

                    Beginners: Up to one year of training any grappling art.

                    Intermediate: Up to three years of training any grappling art.

                    Advanced: Over three years training any grappling art.



                    Any Juvenile that has been awarded a blue belt (adult level) must compete in the Juvenile Advanced skill level, regardless of time training. Juvenile blue belts can also compete in the adult blue belt and adult intermediate or advanced no gi divisions.



                    Juvenile division skill levels are commonly combined. US Grappling manually creates juvenile divisions, and sorts competitors by age and weight, and then by skill to ensure that matches are safe for all competitors.




                    That said, the techniques that can be used are limited by belt. For example, for BJJ Gi competition:





                    1. The only submission below the waist that is legal for white, blue, and purple belts are straight ankle locks (AKA straight footlock).

                    2. Kneebars, figure-four toeholds, and compression locks (AKA “slicers”, “crushers”) are legal in brown and black belt divisions only.








                    share|improve this answer












                    share|improve this answer



                    share|improve this answer










                    answered Nov 19 at 20:43









                    Sean Duggan

                    4,7041930




                    4,7041930








                    • 1




                      These are the rules for a small organization called "US Grappling." They are not the governing body of BJJ, as one does not exist.
                      – coinbird
                      Nov 19 at 21:59
















                    • 1




                      These are the rules for a small organization called "US Grappling." They are not the governing body of BJJ, as one does not exist.
                      – coinbird
                      Nov 19 at 21:59










                    1




                    1




                    These are the rules for a small organization called "US Grappling." They are not the governing body of BJJ, as one does not exist.
                    – coinbird
                    Nov 19 at 21:59






                    These are the rules for a small organization called "US Grappling." They are not the governing body of BJJ, as one does not exist.
                    – coinbird
                    Nov 19 at 21:59




















                     

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