April 10, 2026 · Paul
How to start with salsa (without quitting in week three)
A practical, gentle guide for absolute beginners — what to expect, how to find a class, and what nobody tells you about the first month.
Most beginners quit salsa in the first three weeks. Not because they can't dance. Because nobody told them what was actually going to happen.
Here's the gentle, honest version.
1. Take a real beginner class. Not a free one.
Free intro classes are a marketing tool. They're fine, but they rarely give you the foundation you need. Find a studio with a beginner-1 series — usually 4–6 weeks, same students each week, same instructor. That's where the actual learning happens.
2. Salsa-on-1 vs salsa-on-2 — pick one.
On-1 is more common in LA, Miami, and most of the country. On-2 is the New York mambo style. They feel different, count differently, and social etiquette is different. As a beginner, just start with whatever is taught at the studio nearest you. Switching later is fine.
3. Show up to the social. Stay 90 minutes.
The class teaches the steps. The social teaches you to dance. After your second beginner class, find a beginner-friendly social near you (ours start with a free hour-long lesson — that's a good signal). Stay at least 90 minutes. Ask people to dance. Get rejected sometimes — it happens to everyone. Keep going.
4. The first month is the hardest.
Around week three, every beginner thinks they're bad and that everyone else is amazing. They're wrong. The other dancers all thought the same thing. Push through to month two and you'll suddenly notice you're leading or following whole songs without thinking.
5. Get the right shoes around month two.
Don't spend money on shoes until you're sure you'll keep going. After a month, get a pair of dance shoes — leather sole, suede tip, low heel. They're a game-changer. Most studios sell them or know where to buy.
6. Your second studio is a feature, not a betrayal.
Different teachers see different things. Once you've done a beginner series at one studio, take a class at another. You'll learn faster. The instructor at studio one isn't mad — seriously, they all dance at each other's socials.
What changes when you have Bailar
The whole map opens up. Every studio in your city, every social tonight, every instructor offering private lessons. Filter by beginner-friendly, by style, by language. The next year of your dance life, planned in three taps.
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