Your takedowns and top control give you a massive head start. Add the submission game.
Wrestling translates directly to BJJ takedowns, top pressure, and scrambles. You already have elite baseline skills.
Your wrestling instincts — base, angles, pressure — make you an immediate threat even at white belt.
Most BJJ practitioners have weak takedowns. Your wrestling background gives you an automatic advantage.
Wrestlers typically progress faster through the early belts because of their existing grappling base. Expect to earn blue belt in 1-2 years if training consistently.
| Belt | Min. Time at Previous Belt | Min. Age |
|---|---|---|
| White | — | 4 |
| Blue | 12 months | 16 |
| Purple | 24 months | 16 |
| Brown | 18 months | 18 |
| Black | 12 months | 19 |
Enter your belt, start date, and session frequency to see where you stand against IBJJF minimums.
Open CalculatorThe BJJ Index combines three data points into one progression score: time in grade, training volume, and consistency. All three matter. Together they tell you exactly where you stand.
How long since your last promotion. The IBJJF-mandated minimum you must meet before your next belt.
Total sessions logged at your current belt. Volume separates progressers from stagnant practitioners.
Your weekly training rhythm. Consistency is the single biggest predictor of long-term progression.
Track every session automatically. See your BJJ Index update after every class.
Download — App StoreWrestling translates directly to takedowns, top control, scrambles, and base. The main gaps are guard work and submissions.
Yes. Wrestlers consistently reach high levels of BJJ faster than non-wrestlers because of their existing grappling experience.
Learn to play guard, understand submissions, and avoid getting caught in triangles and armbars from your aggressive top game.
Yes. BJJ improves your ground game, submission awareness, and ability to finish from top positions.
Yes. Gi training exposes you to grips, chokes, and positional concepts that make you a more complete grappler.
The first 90 days of BJJ are the highest-leverage period of your training career. Most people who quit BJJ do so within the first three months — overwhelmed by the unfamiliar movement, awkwardness on the mat, and the rate of being submitted by everyone. Surviving this period is more about psychology than technique.
Your first goal: show up consistently for 90 days at minimum 2 sessions per week. Skill will follow. The technical learning happens involuntarily once you commit to attendance. By month four, the movements that felt impossible become reflexive. By month six, you start submitting fellow beginners. By month twelve, blue belt is on the horizon.
Track every session. Most practitioners overestimate their consistency by 30 to 40 percent. The data discipline of logging sessions provides accountability that motivation cannot match. Small wins build momentum.
The BJJ Belt Progress app calculates your IBJJF time-in-grade based on the same algorithm professors use. White belt minimum is 12 months before blue belt eligibility, but most adults take 18 to 30 months of consistent training. Knowing where you stand removes the guesswork.
Beyond time-in-grade, the app analyzes your training patterns through NORTH AI. Are you trending up or stagnating? Did you miss too many sessions last month? Is your gi-to-no-gi ratio aligned with your goals? These are the questions tracking answers automatically.
Free 14-day trial. No credit card. The same tool used by serious practitioners worldwide to verify their IBJJF eligibility.
Download — App Store Download — Google PlayTwo to four sessions per week is optimal for most practitioners. Less than two slows progression below useful pace. More than four requires careful recovery management.
Months 1-3 feel like nothing clicks. Months 4-6 you start chaining techniques. Year one usually produces dramatic mental and physical changes alongside meaningful skill development.
Most BJJ practitioners benefit from at least one striking discipline (boxing, Muay Thai) and wrestling-style takedowns. The cross-training amplifies BJJ skill, particularly for self-defense and MMA application.
The IBJJF is the International Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu Federation. It defines belt requirements, hosts the most prestigious tournaments, and codifies the rules used as the global standard.