Your first month of Muay Thai
Muay Thai has a clear arc: stance and jab-cross in week one, roundhouses in week two, clinch and knees by week four. Here's what each phase looks like and when things stop feeling awkward.
By The JustBeginning Editors · Published May 23, 2026
Muay Thai has a reputation for being brutal. It is — eventually. In your first month, it’s mostly about learning to stand correctly, hit something without hurting yourself, and survive the conditioning. The brutality is something you earn gradually, and by the time you get there, you’ll be more surprised than scared.
Here’s what the first month actually looks like, week by week, with the things that matter and the things that feel important but aren’t.
Week 1: Stance, jab-cross, and surviving the warmup
Every Muay Thai class starts with a warmup that will humble you. Skipping rope, shadowboxing, burpees, and sometimes a run — before the actual training begins. Your cardio is not where it needs to be. That’s expected. No one in the gym cares. Do the warmup, go slower if you need to, and don’t stop.
Stance comes first. Your coach will correct it constantly in the first week because it’s the foundation everything else builds on. The orthodox stance (right hand dominant): left foot forward, feet roughly shoulder-width apart, both feet at a slight diagonal, weight slightly on the balls of your feet. Hands at your cheeks — not your chin. Elbows down protecting your ribs.
The instinct is to stand square. Don’t. The angled stance protects your center line and lets you generate rotation for kicks.
The jab-cross is 80% of your early training. Not because it’s flashy — it isn’t — but because your jab sets up everything else. A good jab closes distance, disrupts your opponent’s vision, and creates openings. Your cross generates power from hip rotation, not arm strength. If your shoulder is doing most of the work, you’re doing it wrong.
Spend the first week letting muscle memory build on these two punches. You’ll feel stiff and awkward. That’s correct. You’re rewiring movement patterns you’ve had your whole life.
Week 2: The roundhouse kick
The Muay Thai roundhouse is not the karate side-chop kick you’ve seen in movies. It’s a shin strike delivered through the target with a full hip pivot — you’re rotating through the kick, not at it.
The setup: step out at a 45-degree angle to generate the pivot, let your hip swing your leg like a baseball bat, and make contact with your shin, not your foot. Keep your hands up during the kick. This feels impossible at first. You will drop your hands constantly. Your coach will remind you constantly.
Why the shin? It’s a denser, harder surface than the top of your foot. Experienced Muay Thai fighters have shins conditioned from years of kicks on bags and pads — hard enough to feel like wood to their training partners. Your shins are not there yet. They will hurt for the first month. This is normal and temporary. It’s called “conditioning” and it actually works.
The teep (push kick) is your other major week-two addition. Less about power, more about distance control — a straight extension of your lead leg into your opponent’s midsection to reset the space between you. Think of it as a jab for your legs.
By the end of week two, you have the basic tools: jab, cross, and roundhouse. These three techniques make up the majority of Muay Thai striking at every level. The rest is combinations, timing, and reading another person.
Week 3: Combinations and the heavy bag
Week three is where the bag work starts to feel real. Your technique is rough, but you have enough vocabulary to start putting things together: jab-cross-kick is the first combination most coaches teach, and for good reason — it works at every level of competition.
The goal in bag work isn’t power. It’s rhythm and reset. Hit, come back to stance, breathe, hit again. Beginners burn out in thirty seconds by swinging without recovery. Experienced fighters can look effortless through a three-minute round because every combination ends in a reset — hands up, weight balanced, breathing controlled.
Your hands will be fine. If you wrapped them properly and your gloves fit correctly, the bag doesn’t hurt. What hurts is bad technique — punching with your wrist bent, making contact at the wrong angle, or snapping your arm instead of rotating through the punch. When something hurts, it’s usually a form problem, not a conditioning problem.
This is also the week most beginners discover they’re breathing wrong. You should be exhaling sharply on every strike — a tight exhale tightens your core, protects your ribs if you get hit back, and forces you to breathe rhythmically. Holding your breath between combinations is what gasses you out at the two-minute mark.
Week 4: Knees, elbows, and the clinch
Muay Thai adds knees and elbows — the two techniques that separate it from Western boxing and most kickboxing rulesets. In week four, most beginner programs introduce them.
Knees are thrown from the clinch — the close-range grappling position where both fighters grip each other’s necks and battle for control. The knee comes straight up into the midsection or thigh. It requires very little conditioning to generate impact, which is why Thai fighters throw them constantly in close range.
Elbows are the dangerous ones. Short, sharp, and able to cut skin. In training you’ll throw them on pads and bags only — never in light sparring until you have real control. Elbow technique is easier than it looks: most of the power comes from hip rotation, the same source as your punches.
The clinch itself is its own discipline. Grabbing someone’s neck while they grab yours, both of you trying to control the other’s posture — it looks like a wrestling hug but it’s positional combat. At week four, you’re just learning what it feels like. Control comes later.
What you’ll fail at — and why that’s fine
Every beginner makes the same handful of mistakes in the first month. You’ll make all of them:
- Dropping your hands after combinations. Your brain is busy computing the technique; self-protection gets deprioritized. Coaches call this constantly. It improves with reps.
- Watching your own technique instead of the target. Looking at your shin while you kick, checking your glove position. Real Muay Thai is eyes on the opponent, always.
- Trying to generate power before learning mechanics. Power comes from rotation, not from swinging harder. The harder you try to hit hard, the worse your technique gets. Slow down and rotate correctly.
- Skipping the conditioning. The warmup feels like punishment. It’s not — it’s what lets you train hard at the end of the round instead of gassing out at the beginning.
Nobody watching you cares. The experienced fighters in the gym remember being where you are. The other beginners are all making the same mistakes.
What to do at month two
If you’ve shown up consistently — two or three times a week — you have the basics. Here’s what accelerates the curve:
Find your two or three sessions per week and protect them. Muay Thai improves through repetition, not study. Three sessions per week produces noticeably better results than one. The gap between training twice and training three times a week is larger than you’d expect.
Ask your coach for one specific thing to work on. Not “how can I improve” — they’ll give you everything. Ask “what’s the one thing I do most wrong?” A coach who’s been watching you for a month has a very specific answer. Work on that one thing until the next time you ask.
Watch Muay Thai on YouTube. Not to copy technique, but to see the rhythm. ONE Championship posts full bouts. A fifteen-minute fight teaches you more about distance, timing, and combination structure than any technique breakdown.
Don’t spar until your coach says you’re ready. Light technical sparring might start around week four to six in a good beginner program. Hard sparring is months away. There is no hurry. The injuries you avoid by waiting are worth every extra session on the bags.
Ready to set up your training kit? See our Muay Thai gear guide for gloves, shin guards, wraps, and what to skip in your first month.