Should we move for sports?
The decision to relocate for a youth sports program is one of the highest-stakes calls a family can make. Here is how to think through it honestly before committing.
The real question
Should we move to a new city or school district for our kid's sports program?
Benefits
- · Access to a higher-level program with better coaching and competition
- · Better fit school or academic environment if the move involves both
- · The kid gets to be in the environment they have been working toward
- · Can align with high school district boundaries that produce better recruiting exposure
Costs
- · Uprooting the entire family for one child's activity
- · Sibling disruption: school changes, friend group losses, activity restarts
- · Financial cost of relocation is substantial and non-recoverable if the program does not work out
- · The program may not live up to expectations once you are inside it
- · The kid may quit the sport within two years of the move. That is a realistic base rate at youth levels.
- · Relationship with the current program and community is severed
Signs it's a good fit
- · The kid is 14 or older and has been in the sport seriously for multiple years
- · An objective outside evaluator confirms the kid has the talent level to justify elite training
- · The program being moved to has a demonstrated track record of athlete development and college placement
- · The family has evaluated the move as a whole: job market, schools, cost of living, not just the sports piece
- · The kid has visited and wants this, unprompted, after seeing the reality of the new environment
Signs it's not
- · The kid is under 13
- · The decision is driven primarily by one parent's belief that the current program is underserving the kid
- · The target program has not been independently verified as materially better for this specific athlete
- · Other children in the family have not been factored into the equation
- · The kid has not been told the full picture of what moving means socially
How to handle the conversation
- · Have a direct conversation with the program director at the target program before any decision. Ask what the realistic outcome is for your kid at their current level.
- · Visit for a week-long camp or training stay before committing to a permanent move.
- · Consult with a coach or evaluator who has no financial interest in the outcome.
- · Price the move fully including relocation, housing delta, and one full year of program costs.
- · Set a clear evaluation trigger: what does success look like 18 months after the move, and what happens if that is not achieved?
The rule
Moving for sports is a family decision, not a sports decision. If the sports piece is the only thing that makes the move worth it, the move is probably not worth it.
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