Skip to content
learn to swim

A Complete Beginner’s Guide to Learning How to Swim

Learning to swim is one of the most valuable life skills a person can acquire. Swimming is not just a recreational activity or competitive sport — it is a fundamental survival skill that protects you and your family in and around water. Whether you are a child taking your first splash, a teenager preparing for a lifeguarding career, or an adult who never had the opportunity to learn, this step-by-step guide will walk you through the progression from complete beginner to confident swimmer. Combined with proper water safety education, learning to swim opens up a lifetime of aquatic enjoyment and fitness. Drowning is one of the leading causes of accidental death in Canada, and the single most effective way to prevent drowning is to learn to swim. The Canadian Red Cross reports that the majority of drowning victims either could not swim or overestimated their swimming ability. By following a structured learning progression and practising consistently, anyone can develop the swimming skills needed to be safe and confident in the water. Learning to swim step by step guide

Step 1: Getting Comfortable in the Water

The first and most important step in learning to swim is becoming comfortable in the water. For many beginners — particularly adults — water anxiety is a significant barrier. Take your time with this step and do not rush to the next one until you feel genuinely relaxed in the water.

Water Entry and Familiarization

Start in shallow water where you can stand comfortably with your head well above the surface. Walk around the pool, feeling how the water supports your body. Practice putting your face in the water and blowing bubbles — this helps you get used to the sensation of water on your face and teaches you to control your breathing. Cup water in your hands and pour it over your head. These simple exercises may seem basic, but they build the comfort and trust in the water that everything else depends on.

Submerging and Breath Control

Once you are comfortable with water on your face, practice submerging your entire head briefly. Take a breath, dip under the surface, and come back up. Gradually extend the time you spend underwater. Practice exhaling through your nose and mouth while submerged — this is a fundamental swimming skill that prevents water from entering your nose. Blowing bubbles underwater should become second nature before you move on to floating and swimming skills.

Step 2: Learning to Float

Floating is the foundation of swimming. When you can float, you can rest in the water without expending energy, which is both a swimming skill and a survival skill. There are two basic floats to master:

Back Float

The back float is the most important survival skill in swimming because it allows you to breathe while resting in the water. Start in shallow water with a partner or instructor supporting your back. Lean back, extend your arms to the sides, and let your legs float up. Keep your ears in the water, your chin slightly tilted up, and your belly at the surface. Relax completely — tension causes your body to sink. Take slow, deep breaths. Once you can float on your back without support for 30 seconds or more, you have mastered a life-saving skill.

Front Float

The front float (also called the prone float or dead man’s float) teaches you body position for swimming strokes. Take a breath, put your face in the water, and extend your arms forward. Let your legs float behind you. Your body should form a straight, streamlined shape at or near the surface of the water. When you need to breathe, lift your head or roll onto your back. Practice transitioning between front float and back float smoothly.
Safety Tip: Always learn to swim in a supervised environment with a qualified instructor or lifeguard present. Never attempt to learn in open water such as lakes, rivers, or oceans, where currents, depth changes, and cold water create additional hazards for beginners.

Step 3: Kicking and Propulsion

Once you can float, adding a kick gives you the ability to move through the water. The flutter kick is the most basic and widely used kick in swimming:

Flutter Kick

Hold onto the pool wall or a kickboard with your arms extended. Keep your legs straight but relaxed, with a slight bend at the knee. Kick from the hips in an alternating up-and-down motion, keeping your feet just below the surface. Your toes should be pointed and your ankles loose. The kick should be continuous and rhythmic — think of your legs as moving like scissors. Practice kicking across the pool until you can maintain a steady, efficient kick that propels you forward without excessive splashing.

Step 4: Learning Your First Stroke — Freestyle

Freestyle (also called front crawl) is the most common and efficient swimming stroke. It combines the flutter kick with alternating arm pulls and rhythmic side breathing:

Arm Movement

Reach forward with one arm, entering the water fingertips first in front of your shoulder. Pull your hand through the water in an S-shaped pattern beneath your body, pushing back toward your hip. As one arm finishes its pull, the other arm begins its reach forward. Your arms should alternate continuously in a windmill-like pattern. Keep your fingers together and slightly cupped to maximize the pulling surface.

Breathing Technique

Breathing in freestyle involves turning your head to one side during the arm recovery phase. As your arm lifts out of the water, rotate your head to the side just enough to take a quick breath. Your mouth should barely clear the water surface. Exhale steadily through your nose and mouth while your face is in the water between breaths. Most beginners breathe every two or three strokes, but find whatever rhythm feels most comfortable as you learn. Swimming stroke technique practice

Watch: How to Swim Freestyle

Step 5: Learning Additional Strokes

Once you are comfortable with freestyle, expanding your stroke repertoire improves your versatility and fitness in the water:

Backstroke

Backstroke is essentially freestyle performed on your back. It is an excellent stroke for beginners because your face stays out of the water, making breathing easy. Float on your back and use an alternating flutter kick. Your arms alternate in a windmill motion over your head, entering the water pinky-first behind your shoulder and pulling through the water beside your body.

Breaststroke

Breaststroke is a symmetrical stroke where both arms pull simultaneously in a heart-shaped pattern while your legs perform a frog kick — bending at the knees and pushing outward and backward. Breaststroke is slower than freestyle but is useful for swimming with your head above water to see where you are going.

Treading Water

Treading water is the ability to stay in one place with your head above the surface. It combines a sculling motion with your hands and an eggbeater or flutter kick with your legs. This is an essential survival skill for deep water and should be practiced regularly until you can tread water comfortably for several minutes.

Step 6: Building Endurance and Confidence

Swimming is a skill that improves with consistent practice. Set achievable goals and gradually increase the distance and duration of your swims. Start with short distances — one or two pool lengths — and work your way up. Focus on technique first and speed second. A smooth, efficient stroke will always be faster and less tiring than a powerful but sloppy one. Swimming just two or three times per week will produce noticeable improvements in your endurance, technique, and confidence within a few weeks.

Water Safety: Essential Knowledge for Every Swimmer

Learning to swim is just one part of being safe in the water. Every swimmer should also understand the importance of never swimming alone, how to recognize and escape rip currents, the effects of cold water on the body, the proper use of personal flotation devices, how to recognize signs of drowning in others, and basic rescue techniques. Pairing your swimming skills with CPR and first aid training creates a comprehensive safety foundation that protects you and those around you in any aquatic environment.

Start Your Swimming Journey Today

Whether you are a complete beginner or looking to refine your technique, Coast2Coast First Aid and Aquatics offers swimming programs for all ages and abilities. Explore our courses and find a location near you. Register Now
A

About the Author

Ashkon Pourheidary, B.Sc. (Hons) — Co-Founder, Coast2Coast First Aid & Aquatics

Ashkon has been a certified First Aid and CPR instructor since 2011 and an Instructor Trainer since 2013. He is also a certified Emergency Medical Responder (EMR) instructor, Psychological First Aid instructor, and BLS (Basic Life Support) instructor. Ashkon graduated with honours with a Bachelor of Science in Neuroscience from the University of Toronto in 2016. As co-founder of Coast2Coast First Aid & Aquatics, he has helped grow the organization to over 30 locations across Canada and into the United States. Connect on LinkedIn

Recommended Posts

No comment yet, add your voice below!


Add a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Shopping cart