Your first month of roller skating
The first time you stand up on skates, you'll understand why toddlers fall so much. Your brain doesn't know how to move your feet sideways yet. Give it three sessions, though, and something shifts — the wheels stop feeling like obstacles and start feeling like your feet.
By The JustBeginning Editors · Published May 23, 2026
Roller skating has a learning curve that’s both shorter and more humbling than people expect. Shorter because the basic mechanics — roll forward, stop, turn — take only a few hours to grasp. More humbling because those few hours involve a lot of standing still, windmilling your arms, and sitting down on the pavement faster than you intended.
This is normal. This is how everyone starts. Here’s what your first month actually looks like.
Sessions 1–3: Standing, rolling, and not dying
Before you do anything else, learn to fall. This sounds absurd. Do it anyway.
Put on all your pads, crouch low on your skates, and practice falling forward onto your knee pads intentionally. Do it ten times. A controlled fall onto knee pads doesn’t hurt. A panic fall onto your hands or tailbone does. The goal here is to short-circuit your brain’s instinct to catch itself — which leads to wrist fractures — and replace it with the habit of folding forward onto padded knees.
Once you’ve practiced falling, practice standing. Stand with your feet shoulder-width apart, toes angled slightly outward in a V. Don’t lock your knees. Bend them slightly — a soft knee is a stable knee. If you lock your knees, you have no shock absorption and you’ll fall backward at the slightest off-balance.
Rolling comes next. Push off one foot at a time, gentle diagonal pushes. Not straight back — sideways, at about a 45-degree angle. You’re pushing against the pavement, not trying to walk with your feet parallel. Skating stride is more like a waddling duck than walking; embrace it.
The first few sessions, focus only on three things:
- Rolling forward without panic
- Stopping with your toe stop (drag the rubber toe stop on the front of your skate behind you, transferring weight forward)
- Surviving your first few falls without injury
Everything else — crossovers, backwards skating, spins — is the second chapter. This is chapter one.
Sessions 4–8: Learning to actually stop
Stopping is the skill most beginners underestimate. Rolling is easy once you start. Stopping is what keeps you from collecting a fence or a slower skater.
Quad skates have two main stops for beginners:
Toe stop drag. Lift one foot slightly, extend it behind you, and drag the rubber toe stop against the pavement. You need to transfer weight onto that trailing foot to create friction. Practice this until it’s automatic — not something you have to think through.
T-stop. Bring one foot perpendicular to your direction of travel, trailing behind your lead foot, and drag the wheels sideways. More graceful than the toe drag, harder to learn, but kinder on your toe stops.
Do not try to stop by grabbing something. Do not try to stop by rolling into the grass. Learn to stop with your skates.
Once stopping feels reliable, crossovers become the first real skill worth learning. A crossover is how you turn without slowing down — you swing your outside foot over your inside foot as you turn, using the weight shift to carve the corner. Start by walking through the motion without skating, then practice it very slowly on a gentle curve.
This is also when most people discover their dominant side. You’ll crossover more easily in one direction than the other. That’s universal. Drill your weaker side twice as much as your strong side for the first month.
Sessions 9–15: When it starts to feel like skating
Somewhere around session ten, something changes. The calculation of every move — push here, shift weight there — starts to fade. You roll. You turn. You stop. Not perfectly, but without narrating each step to yourself.
This is when the hobby becomes fun.
Once rolling and stopping feel automatic, the skills worth adding are:
Skating backward. Start by rocking your weight heel to toe with feet parallel, generating a figure-eight pattern underneath you. You’re not pushing backward yet — you’re coaxing the skates. Once you feel the backward roll start, extend the figure-eight into actual backward strokes. It’s disorienting for the first few attempts and then clicks abruptly.
Jumps and transitions. The simplest transition is a half-turn jump: roll forward, jump and rotate 180 degrees, land rolling backward. It looks hard. At slow speed, with a smooth surface, it’s one of the earlier tricks most skaters land — the rotation is small and forgiving.
Skating at a rink. If you haven’t yet, find open skate at a local rink. The smooth floor, the music, and the presence of other skaters at all levels does something to your progress. The social context accelerates learning. You’ll try things you wouldn’t try alone in a parking lot.
At this point you’re no longer a beginner learning to survive on skates. You’re a skater who is still learning. That’s a meaningful distinction — it means the hobby is yours now, and the question is just where you want to take it.
What trips up beginners
A few patterns come up consistently:
Skating in a straight line and nothing else. Turning requires leaning. Leaning requires trusting the skates. A lot of beginners spend months rolling straight and never commit to a real lean. Practice carving figure-eights in an open space — the motion forces you to lean.
Tight trucks. Your trucks (the axle hardware connecting wheels to plate) come tight from the factory on most beginner skates. Tight trucks give you stability but steal agility. Once you have the basics, loosen them slightly — you’ll feel the difference immediately. Your skate tool does this.
Skipping outdoor wheels. The wheels on most beginner skates are designed for smooth surfaces. They catch every crack and pebble outdoors. Skating outside on stock wheels is genuinely hard in a way that good outdoor wheels eliminate. It’s a $25 upgrade that changes the experience.
Not wearing pads. The falls that happen at session 12 hurt more than the falls at session 2 — you’re moving faster, with more confidence, and less anticipation. Keep the pads on until you genuinely never fall, not until you stop falling in the first week.
What to do at month two
By the end of your first month, you should be able to roll forward with control, stop reliably, turn in both directions, and skate for 20–30 minutes without exhaustion.
From here, the branches split. Rink skating leads you toward artistic skating, rhythm skating, and the social scene of open skate nights. Outdoor skating leads you toward longer distances, trail riding, and skate dancing. Roller derby is a whole culture of its own, competitive and physical and deeply community-driven.
Pick the one that excites you and find its community. In-person skate groups accelerate your learning more than any YouTube video, and the roller skating community is, as a whole, unusually welcoming to newcomers.
Ready to buy your first setup? See our roller skating gear guide for the skates, pads, and wheels worth buying — and the five things you can skip.