Kickflip is a padded-knee, helmet-first skate school in the heart of the city. Our coaches remember what it felt like to be scared of the ramp — and they'll be right there when your kid pushes off for the first time.
Coach Maya steadies tiny hands on a board for the very first push.
Sam, age 9, grins wide after rolling off for the first time.
The 11–13 crew carves smooth lines while the younger kids watch in awe.
Every lesson ends here — helmets off, high-fives all around.
From first stand to carving bowls
Every child moves at their own pace. These are the moments we live for.
Standing still is the first win.
Before the first push, there is the first stand. Lily, age 6, discovers the board is not as wobbly as she thought.
The first push changes everything.
Coach Jordan walks alongside every kid for their first solo roll. No hands on the board — just steady words.
That grin is the whole point.
Marcus, 8 years old, just rolled off the quarter pipe for the first time. He asked to do it again before he even reached the bottom.
When they start teaching each other.
Zoe, 12, spots Finn on his first ollie attempt. We didn't plan this — it just happens when the culture is right.
What parents say when they're being honest
I cried watching her push off for the first time. Not because I was scared — because she wasn't. Coach Maya had worked with her for 20 minutes and somehow, quietly, made her brave.
My son has anxiety. I told the coaches before his first lesson. They didn't make a big deal of it — they just slowed down, used his name, and let him set the pace. He asked to go back the next day.
She went from 'I can't do this' to teaching her little brother how to kick-push in three months. The coaches here don't just teach skating — they teach kids how to try.
Coaches who remember being scared
Every Kickflip coach has a story about the ramp that almost stopped them. That story is what makes them great.

"I remember standing at the top of my first ramp. I was terrified. That memory is the most useful thing I bring to every lesson."

"My job isn't to teach tricks. It's to make kids fall in love with the feeling of wheels under their feet."
"The kids who push hardest aren't the fearless ones — they're the ones who learned to be afraid and go anyway."
Three levels, one culture
Every class moves at the pace of the least confident kid. That's not a constraint — it's the point.
Tiny Rollers
Standing, balancing, first pushes
- Proper stance and balance
- First supervised rolls
- Falling safely (yes, we teach this)
- Helmet & pad fitting
Pushers
Moving with confidence, first ramps
- Rolling and turning
- Quarter pipe drop-ins
- Kick-push technique
- Beginner trick foundations
Carvers
Bowl sessions, ollies, real progression
- Bowl carving & transitions
- Ollie foundations
- Mini-ramp technique
- Peer coaching culture
Watch a free lesson clip
See how our coaches handle the moment when a kid says “I can't.” This is the tone of every single lesson.
Real kids. Real coaches. Real scraped-up boards. 🛹
Download the Parent Starter Guide
What gear to buy, what to expect at the first lesson, and how our coaches handle fear and falls — all in one honest, jargon-free guide.