Dance Competition: Top Tips

Danielle Bull

May 27 2025

5 min read

Dance Competition: Top Tips

Danielle Bull

May 27 2025

5 min read

Dance Competition: Top Tips

Danielle Bull

May 27 2025

5 min read

Dance lesson ballet
Ballet Shoes on Pointe
Ballet Shoes on Pointe

Thinking of entering a dance competition? Whether it’s your first time or your hundredth, there’s always something new to learn. 

I recently had the joy of taking two teams to a street dance competition. And while I might be a little biased, they absolutely smashed it, placing 5th and 3rd, and even qualifying for both the Euros and Worlds!

But behind the success? A lot of lessons.

From actually reading the whole of the rule book (oops) to navigating social media, logistics, and everything in between, here are my top tips to keep in mind when entering a dance competition.

Thinking of entering a dance competition? Whether it’s your first time or your hundredth, there’s always something new to learn. 

I recently had the joy of taking two teams to a street dance competition. And while I might be a little biased, they absolutely smashed it, placing 5th and 3rd, and even qualifying for both the Euros and Worlds!

But behind the success? A lot of lessons.

From actually reading the whole of the rule book (oops) to navigating social media, logistics, and everything in between, here are my top tips to keep in mind when entering a dance competition.

Thinking of entering a dance competition? Whether it’s your first time or your hundredth, there’s always something new to learn. 

I recently had the joy of taking two teams to a street dance competition. And while I might be a little biased, they absolutely smashed it, placing 5th and 3rd, and even qualifying for both the Euros and Worlds!

But behind the success? A lot of lessons.

From actually reading the whole of the rule book (oops) to navigating social media, logistics, and everything in between, here are my top tips to keep in mind when entering a dance competition.

Thinking of entering a dance competition? Whether it’s your first time or your hundredth, there’s always something new to learn. 

I recently had the joy of taking two teams to a street dance competition. And while I might be a little biased, they absolutely smashed it, placing 5th and 3rd, and even qualifying for both the Euros and Worlds!

But behind the success? A lot of lessons.

From actually reading the whole of the rule book (oops) to navigating social media, logistics, and everything in between, here are my top tips to keep in mind when entering a dance competition.

Thinking of entering a dance competition? Whether it’s your first time or your hundredth, there’s always something new to learn. 

I recently had the joy of taking two teams to a street dance competition. And while I might be a little biased, they absolutely smashed it, placing 5th and 3rd, and even qualifying for both the Euros and Worlds!

But behind the success? A lot of lessons.

From actually reading the whole of the rule book (oops) to navigating social media, logistics, and everything in between, here are my top tips to keep in mind when entering a dance competition.

Top Tips When Entering A Dance Competition

Top Tips When Entering A Dance Competition

Top Tips When Entering A Dance Competition

Top Tips When Entering A Dance Competition

Top Tips When Entering A Dance Competition

Ahead Of The Competition:

Go as a spectator first

I cannot recommend this enough. If you can, attend the competition the year before you enter. Watch everything, how the day is run,  the ability/size of the groups who enter, who judges, what kind of performances place well, and which don’t. 

What’s the vibe?
What’s the standard?
How smooth is the organisation?

Getting a feel for the ins and outs makes you way more prepared when it’s your team hitting the stage.


Ahead Of The Competition:

Go as a spectator first

I cannot recommend this enough. If you can, attend the competition the year before you enter. Watch everything, how the day is run,  the ability/size of the groups who enter, who judges, what kind of performances place well, and which don’t. 

What’s the vibe?
What’s the standard?
How smooth is the organisation?

Getting a feel for the ins and outs makes you way more prepared when it’s your team hitting the stage.


Ahead Of The Competition:

Go as a spectator first

I cannot recommend this enough. If you can, attend the competition the year before you enter. Watch everything, how the day is run,  the ability/size of the groups who enter, who judges, what kind of performances place well, and which don’t. 

What’s the vibe?
What’s the standard?
How smooth is the organisation?

Getting a feel for the ins and outs makes you way more prepared when it’s your team hitting the stage.


Ahead Of The Competition:

Go as a spectator first

I cannot recommend this enough. If you can, attend the competition the year before you enter. Watch everything, how the day is run,  the ability/size of the groups who enter, who judges, what kind of performances place well, and which don’t. 

What’s the vibe?
What’s the standard?
How smooth is the organisation?

Getting a feel for the ins and outs makes you way more prepared when it’s your team hitting the stage.


Ahead Of The Competition:

Go as a spectator first

I cannot recommend this enough. If you can, attend the competition the year before you enter. Watch everything, how the day is run,  the ability/size of the groups who enter, who judges, what kind of performances place well, and which don’t. 

What’s the vibe?
What’s the standard?
How smooth is the organisation?

Getting a feel for the ins and outs makes you way more prepared when it’s your team hitting the stage.


Read the rulebook. All of it.

I know, it sounds so simple. But, we dancers, we’re not often ones for reading pages of texts and rules. We’re more creatively minded. 

But this is one tip you don’t want to miss out on. Don’t skim. Read every single section. You never know what rules they have in there that you may be accidentally breaking. (We almost broke a rule for our competition, by entering a mix of students in both teams, which wasn’t allowed in our comp…) 

Reading it properly before you start any prep could save you a whole lot of stress later.


Read the rulebook. All of it.

I know, it sounds so simple. But, we dancers, we’re not often ones for reading pages of texts and rules. We’re more creatively minded. 

But this is one tip you don’t want to miss out on. Don’t skim. Read every single section. You never know what rules they have in there that you may be accidentally breaking. (We almost broke a rule for our competition, by entering a mix of students in both teams, which wasn’t allowed in our comp…) 

Reading it properly before you start any prep could save you a whole lot of stress later.


Read the rulebook. All of it.

I know, it sounds so simple. But, we dancers, we’re not often ones for reading pages of texts and rules. We’re more creatively minded. 

But this is one tip you don’t want to miss out on. Don’t skim. Read every single section. You never know what rules they have in there that you may be accidentally breaking. (We almost broke a rule for our competition, by entering a mix of students in both teams, which wasn’t allowed in our comp…) 

Reading it properly before you start any prep could save you a whole lot of stress later.


Read the rulebook. All of it.

I know, it sounds so simple. But, we dancers, we’re not often ones for reading pages of texts and rules. We’re more creatively minded. 

But this is one tip you don’t want to miss out on. Don’t skim. Read every single section. You never know what rules they have in there that you may be accidentally breaking. (We almost broke a rule for our competition, by entering a mix of students in both teams, which wasn’t allowed in our comp…) 

Reading it properly before you start any prep could save you a whole lot of stress later.


Read the rulebook. All of it.

I know, it sounds so simple. But, we dancers, we’re not often ones for reading pages of texts and rules. We’re more creatively minded. 

But this is one tip you don’t want to miss out on. Don’t skim. Read every single section. You never know what rules they have in there that you may be accidentally breaking. (We almost broke a rule for our competition, by entering a mix of students in both teams, which wasn’t allowed in our comp…) 

Reading it properly before you start any prep could save you a whole lot of stress later.


Know the syllabus

Is the comp affiliated with a syllabus? If it is, get your hands on it. Learn it. Use it.

Most likely, the judges are scoring routines based on that syllabus. So why not give your dancers the best shot? Base your choreography around it. Show off the skills they’re looking for. 

Worth a try!  


Know the syllabus

Is the comp affiliated with a syllabus? If it is, get your hands on it. Learn it. Use it.

Most likely, the judges are scoring routines based on that syllabus. So why not give your dancers the best shot? Base your choreography around it. Show off the skills they’re looking for. 

Worth a try!  


Know the syllabus

Is the comp affiliated with a syllabus? If it is, get your hands on it. Learn it. Use it.

Most likely, the judges are scoring routines based on that syllabus. So why not give your dancers the best shot? Base your choreography around it. Show off the skills they’re looking for. 

Worth a try!  


Know the syllabus

Is the comp affiliated with a syllabus? If it is, get your hands on it. Learn it. Use it.

Most likely, the judges are scoring routines based on that syllabus. So why not give your dancers the best shot? Base your choreography around it. Show off the skills they’re looking for. 

Worth a try!  


Know the syllabus

Is the comp affiliated with a syllabus? If it is, get your hands on it. Learn it. Use it.

Most likely, the judges are scoring routines based on that syllabus. So why not give your dancers the best shot? Base your choreography around it. Show off the skills they’re looking for. 

Worth a try!  


Don’t copy choreography

Even if you think you’ve found the most obscure old school dance video on YouTube, don’t risk it. Trust me. 

No matter how niche you think the video you’ve found is, they will know. Be original, get creative, and design a choreography that is 100% your own.


Don’t copy choreography

Even if you think you’ve found the most obscure old school dance video on YouTube, don’t risk it. Trust me. 

No matter how niche you think the video you’ve found is, they will know. Be original, get creative, and design a choreography that is 100% your own.


Don’t copy choreography

Even if you think you’ve found the most obscure old school dance video on YouTube, don’t risk it. Trust me. 

No matter how niche you think the video you’ve found is, they will know. Be original, get creative, and design a choreography that is 100% your own.


Don’t copy choreography

Even if you think you’ve found the most obscure old school dance video on YouTube, don’t risk it. Trust me. 

No matter how niche you think the video you’ve found is, they will know. Be original, get creative, and design a choreography that is 100% your own.


Don’t copy choreography

Even if you think you’ve found the most obscure old school dance video on YouTube, don’t risk it. Trust me. 

No matter how niche you think the video you’ve found is, they will know. Be original, get creative, and design a choreography that is 100% your own.


Choreo to the age group

Keep tricks, skills, and formations age-appropriate.

Judges are looking for routines that match the age and ability of the dancers. If it feels too mature or too simplistic, they notice. Instead, lean into what your dancers do well for their age: clean footwork, sharp arms, performance energy, and musicality. Highlight those. 


Choreo to the age group

Keep tricks, skills, and formations age-appropriate.

Judges are looking for routines that match the age and ability of the dancers. If it feels too mature or too simplistic, they notice. Instead, lean into what your dancers do well for their age: clean footwork, sharp arms, performance energy, and musicality. Highlight those. 


Choreo to the age group

Keep tricks, skills, and formations age-appropriate.

Judges are looking for routines that match the age and ability of the dancers. If it feels too mature or too simplistic, they notice. Instead, lean into what your dancers do well for their age: clean footwork, sharp arms, performance energy, and musicality. Highlight those. 


Choreo to the age group

Keep tricks, skills, and formations age-appropriate.

Judges are looking for routines that match the age and ability of the dancers. If it feels too mature or too simplistic, they notice. Instead, lean into what your dancers do well for their age: clean footwork, sharp arms, performance energy, and musicality. Highlight those. 


Choreo to the age group

Keep tricks, skills, and formations age-appropriate.

Judges are looking for routines that match the age and ability of the dancers. If it feels too mature or too simplistic, they notice. Instead, lean into what your dancers do well for their age: clean footwork, sharp arms, performance energy, and musicality. Highlight those. 


Plan everything early

Costumes. Hair. Music. Rehearsals. Parent emails. Payments. Tickets. Consent forms. The list goes on.

Start planning weeks in advance. Not only does it give you time to adapt if something goes wrong (because it probably will!), but it also gives everyone, the dancers, the parents, and yourself, time to feel prepared and confident.


Plan everything early

Costumes. Hair. Music. Rehearsals. Parent emails. Payments. Tickets. Consent forms. The list goes on.

Start planning weeks in advance. Not only does it give you time to adapt if something goes wrong (because it probably will!), but it also gives everyone, the dancers, the parents, and yourself, time to feel prepared and confident.


Plan everything early

Costumes. Hair. Music. Rehearsals. Parent emails. Payments. Tickets. Consent forms. The list goes on.

Start planning weeks in advance. Not only does it give you time to adapt if something goes wrong (because it probably will!), but it also gives everyone, the dancers, the parents, and yourself, time to feel prepared and confident.


Plan everything early

Costumes. Hair. Music. Rehearsals. Parent emails. Payments. Tickets. Consent forms. The list goes on.

Start planning weeks in advance. Not only does it give you time to adapt if something goes wrong (because it probably will!), but it also gives everyone, the dancers, the parents, and yourself, time to feel prepared and confident.


Plan everything early

Costumes. Hair. Music. Rehearsals. Parent emails. Payments. Tickets. Consent forms. The list goes on.

Start planning weeks in advance. Not only does it give you time to adapt if something goes wrong (because it probably will!), but it also gives everyone, the dancers, the parents, and yourself, time to feel prepared and confident.


Practice in full comp gear

Get them dancing in their full outfit, hair, shoes, the lot.

Why? Because the last thing you want is them flicking hair out of their face or fiddling with clothes mid-routine. Practicing in full gear helps spot any issues early. 


Practice in full comp gear

Get them dancing in their full outfit, hair, shoes, the lot.

Why? Because the last thing you want is them flicking hair out of their face or fiddling with clothes mid-routine. Practicing in full gear helps spot any issues early. 


Practice in full comp gear

Get them dancing in their full outfit, hair, shoes, the lot.

Why? Because the last thing you want is them flicking hair out of their face or fiddling with clothes mid-routine. Practicing in full gear helps spot any issues early. 


Practice in full comp gear

Get them dancing in their full outfit, hair, shoes, the lot.

Why? Because the last thing you want is them flicking hair out of their face or fiddling with clothes mid-routine. Practicing in full gear helps spot any issues early. 


Practice in full comp gear

Get them dancing in their full outfit, hair, shoes, the lot.

Why? Because the last thing you want is them flicking hair out of their face or fiddling with clothes mid-routine. Practicing in full gear helps spot any issues early. 


During Training:

During Training:

During Training:

During Training:

During Training:

Over-prepare

Give them more than 16 counts of choreo upfront, even if it feels like too much.

Why? Because muscle memory is a powerful thing. Throw them in the deep end early. They'll sink, swim, and then soar. Later, you can refine and reshape with way less stress.


Over-prepare

Give them more than 16 counts of choreo upfront, even if it feels like too much.

Why? Because muscle memory is a powerful thing. Throw them in the deep end early. They'll sink, swim, and then soar. Later, you can refine and reshape with way less stress.


Over-prepare

Give them more than 16 counts of choreo upfront, even if it feels like too much.

Why? Because muscle memory is a powerful thing. Throw them in the deep end early. They'll sink, swim, and then soar. Later, you can refine and reshape with way less stress.


Over-prepare

Give them more than 16 counts of choreo upfront, even if it feels like too much.

Why? Because muscle memory is a powerful thing. Throw them in the deep end early. They'll sink, swim, and then soar. Later, you can refine and reshape with way less stress.


Over-prepare

Give them more than 16 counts of choreo upfront, even if it feels like too much.

Why? Because muscle memory is a powerful thing. Throw them in the deep end early. They'll sink, swim, and then soar. Later, you can refine and reshape with way less stress.


Be clear with parents

Send out all the info: dates, rehearsal times, costs, performance details, early and often.

Don’t assume anyone’s remembered anything. Repeat yourself. Then repeat again. You can never over-communicate when it comes to comp season. Because you can guarantee at least one parent will forget something, be that a rehearsal date, payments. Give them as much information as you can, and as often as you can. 


Be clear with parents

Send out all the info: dates, rehearsal times, costs, performance details, early and often.

Don’t assume anyone’s remembered anything. Repeat yourself. Then repeat again. You can never over-communicate when it comes to comp season. Because you can guarantee at least one parent will forget something, be that a rehearsal date, payments. Give them as much information as you can, and as often as you can. 


Be clear with parents

Send out all the info: dates, rehearsal times, costs, performance details, early and often.

Don’t assume anyone’s remembered anything. Repeat yourself. Then repeat again. You can never over-communicate when it comes to comp season. Because you can guarantee at least one parent will forget something, be that a rehearsal date, payments. Give them as much information as you can, and as often as you can. 


Be clear with parents

Send out all the info: dates, rehearsal times, costs, performance details, early and often.

Don’t assume anyone’s remembered anything. Repeat yourself. Then repeat again. You can never over-communicate when it comes to comp season. Because you can guarantee at least one parent will forget something, be that a rehearsal date, payments. Give them as much information as you can, and as often as you can. 


Be clear with parents

Send out all the info: dates, rehearsal times, costs, performance details, early and often.

Don’t assume anyone’s remembered anything. Repeat yourself. Then repeat again. You can never over-communicate when it comes to comp season. Because you can guarantee at least one parent will forget something, be that a rehearsal date, payments. Give them as much information as you can, and as often as you can. 


Be consistent, be firm

Sometimes you’ve got to be the “bad cop.” It’s okay. You’re not here to people please you’re here to lead. If someone misses a rehearsal and doesn’t know the steps? They’re out of that section. Set the bar high. Stick to it. Kind, but clear.

Not only will this set the expectations early on, but it will put the responsibility on your students and give them a chance to step up. You won’t be disappointed. 


Be consistent, be firm

Sometimes you’ve got to be the “bad cop.” It’s okay. You’re not here to people please you’re here to lead. If someone misses a rehearsal and doesn’t know the steps? They’re out of that section. Set the bar high. Stick to it. Kind, but clear.

Not only will this set the expectations early on, but it will put the responsibility on your students and give them a chance to step up. You won’t be disappointed. 


Be consistent, be firm

Sometimes you’ve got to be the “bad cop.” It’s okay. You’re not here to people please you’re here to lead. If someone misses a rehearsal and doesn’t know the steps? They’re out of that section. Set the bar high. Stick to it. Kind, but clear.

Not only will this set the expectations early on, but it will put the responsibility on your students and give them a chance to step up. You won’t be disappointed. 


Be consistent, be firm

Sometimes you’ve got to be the “bad cop.” It’s okay. You’re not here to people please you’re here to lead. If someone misses a rehearsal and doesn’t know the steps? They’re out of that section. Set the bar high. Stick to it. Kind, but clear.

Not only will this set the expectations early on, but it will put the responsibility on your students and give them a chance to step up. You won’t be disappointed. 


Be consistent, be firm

Sometimes you’ve got to be the “bad cop.” It’s okay. You’re not here to people please you’re here to lead. If someone misses a rehearsal and doesn’t know the steps? They’re out of that section. Set the bar high. Stick to it. Kind, but clear.

Not only will this set the expectations early on, but it will put the responsibility on your students and give them a chance to step up. You won’t be disappointed. 


Use positive reinforcement

Celebrate the little wins. Nail a tricky step? Survived a tough rehearsal? Hype them up.

Recognition builds confidence, motivation, and trust, especially in a high-pressure environment like comp prep. Positive reinforcement is always going to be better and get better results than negative reinforcement.


Use positive reinforcement

Celebrate the little wins. Nail a tricky step? Survived a tough rehearsal? Hype them up.

Recognition builds confidence, motivation, and trust, especially in a high-pressure environment like comp prep. Positive reinforcement is always going to be better and get better results than negative reinforcement.


Use positive reinforcement

Celebrate the little wins. Nail a tricky step? Survived a tough rehearsal? Hype them up.

Recognition builds confidence, motivation, and trust, especially in a high-pressure environment like comp prep. Positive reinforcement is always going to be better and get better results than negative reinforcement.


Use positive reinforcement

Celebrate the little wins. Nail a tricky step? Survived a tough rehearsal? Hype them up.

Recognition builds confidence, motivation, and trust, especially in a high-pressure environment like comp prep. Positive reinforcement is always going to be better and get better results than negative reinforcement.


Use positive reinforcement

Celebrate the little wins. Nail a tricky step? Survived a tough rehearsal? Hype them up.

Recognition builds confidence, motivation, and trust, especially in a high-pressure environment like comp prep. Positive reinforcement is always going to be better and get better results than negative reinforcement.


Keep it fun

Yes, it’s serious. But it should still be fun. Laugh, play games, remind them why they love to dance. 

I find that the strongest student-teacher relationships are built on just being stupid and doing weird things with the kids. Play games with them, make TikToks, dance with them - they will love you for it. 


Keep it fun

Yes, it’s serious. But it should still be fun. Laugh, play games, remind them why they love to dance. 

I find that the strongest student-teacher relationships are built on just being stupid and doing weird things with the kids. Play games with them, make TikToks, dance with them - they will love you for it. 


Keep it fun

Yes, it’s serious. But it should still be fun. Laugh, play games, remind them why they love to dance. 

I find that the strongest student-teacher relationships are built on just being stupid and doing weird things with the kids. Play games with them, make TikToks, dance with them - they will love you for it. 


Keep it fun

Yes, it’s serious. But it should still be fun. Laugh, play games, remind them why they love to dance. 

I find that the strongest student-teacher relationships are built on just being stupid and doing weird things with the kids. Play games with them, make TikToks, dance with them - they will love you for it. 


Keep it fun

Yes, it’s serious. But it should still be fun. Laugh, play games, remind them why they love to dance. 

I find that the strongest student-teacher relationships are built on just being stupid and doing weird things with the kids. Play games with them, make TikToks, dance with them - they will love you for it. 


Social Media

Entering a dance competition is a great way to promote your dance studio and encourage new sign-ups and growth for your studio. But that can only happen if people know about it. 

Document everything
Rehearsals, backstage moments, bloopers, progress clips.

Your dancers love seeing themselves online. Parents love the peek behind the curtain. And it helps others see what your studio is all about… 

Better yet, get your students, parents, or teachers to have a go at creating the content, and get them excited. (Make sure you have parental consent to post their child on your social media channels.) 


Social Media

Entering a dance competition is a great way to promote your dance studio and encourage new sign-ups and growth for your studio. But that can only happen if people know about it. 

Document everything
Rehearsals, backstage moments, bloopers, progress clips.

Your dancers love seeing themselves online. Parents love the peek behind the curtain. And it helps others see what your studio is all about… 

Better yet, get your students, parents, or teachers to have a go at creating the content, and get them excited. (Make sure you have parental consent to post their child on your social media channels.) 


Social Media

Entering a dance competition is a great way to promote your dance studio and encourage new sign-ups and growth for your studio. But that can only happen if people know about it. 

Document everything
Rehearsals, backstage moments, bloopers, progress clips.

Your dancers love seeing themselves online. Parents love the peek behind the curtain. And it helps others see what your studio is all about… 

Better yet, get your students, parents, or teachers to have a go at creating the content, and get them excited. (Make sure you have parental consent to post their child on your social media channels.) 


Social Media

Entering a dance competition is a great way to promote your dance studio and encourage new sign-ups and growth for your studio. But that can only happen if people know about it. 

Document everything
Rehearsals, backstage moments, bloopers, progress clips.

Your dancers love seeing themselves online. Parents love the peek behind the curtain. And it helps others see what your studio is all about… 

Better yet, get your students, parents, or teachers to have a go at creating the content, and get them excited. (Make sure you have parental consent to post their child on your social media channels.) 


Social Media

Entering a dance competition is a great way to promote your dance studio and encourage new sign-ups and growth for your studio. But that can only happen if people know about it. 

Document everything
Rehearsals, backstage moments, bloopers, progress clips.

Your dancers love seeing themselves online. Parents love the peek behind the curtain. And it helps others see what your studio is all about… 

Better yet, get your students, parents, or teachers to have a go at creating the content, and get them excited. (Make sure you have parental consent to post their child on your social media channels.) 


Enjoy It

It’s hard work. It's chaotic. But when those kids hit the stage with confidence and pride, it’s so worth it.

You’ve got this.

If you need a hand with any of the logistics, from class scheduling to automated payments, investing in a class management software can help you save up to 25 hours a week on administrative tasks. Something to think about?


Enjoy It

It’s hard work. It's chaotic. But when those kids hit the stage with confidence and pride, it’s so worth it.

You’ve got this.

If you need a hand with any of the logistics, from class scheduling to automated payments, investing in a class management software can help you save up to 25 hours a week on administrative tasks. Something to think about?


Enjoy It

It’s hard work. It's chaotic. But when those kids hit the stage with confidence and pride, it’s so worth it.

You’ve got this.

If you need a hand with any of the logistics, from class scheduling to automated payments, investing in a class management software can help you save up to 25 hours a week on administrative tasks. Something to think about?


Enjoy It

It’s hard work. It's chaotic. But when those kids hit the stage with confidence and pride, it’s so worth it.

You’ve got this.

If you need a hand with any of the logistics, from class scheduling to automated payments, investing in a class management software can help you save up to 25 hours a week on administrative tasks. Something to think about?


Enjoy It

It’s hard work. It's chaotic. But when those kids hit the stage with confidence and pride, it’s so worth it.

You’ve got this.

If you need a hand with any of the logistics, from class scheduling to automated payments, investing in a class management software can help you save up to 25 hours a week on administrative tasks. Something to think about?


Planning an event or recital?

Visit our sister company, Stage Stubs

for all your ticketing needs.

Free for studios.

© Class Manager 2025, All Rights Reserved

Resources

Planning an event or recital?

Visit our sister company, Stage Stubs

for all your ticketing needs.

Free for studios.

© Class Manager 2025, All Rights Reserved

Email Us

Contact Sales

Planning an event or recital?

Visit our sister company, Stage Stubs

for all your ticketing needs.

Free for studios.

© Class Manager 2025, All Rights Reserved

Email Us

Contact Sales

Planning an event or recital?

Visit our sister company, Stage Stubs

for all your ticketing needs.

Free for studios.

© Class Manager 2025, All Rights Reserved