No clear next step
New skydivers often leave the course with freedom but no structured plan.

Post-licence skydiving support in Spain
New skydivers often leave the course with freedom but no structured plan.
Advice at the dropzone can be useful, but it may not always match your level, goals or current skills.
Group jumps can be valuable, but the wrong level or task can create confusion and pressure.
Mistakes repeat when jumps are not connected to video review, debriefs and specific training goals.
Tunnel time helps most when it is connected to the skydiving skills you actually need.
New gear, bigger groups, new disciplines and new goals require better decision-making — not just more jump numbers.
We define the next 5–10 jumps around one clear skill focus.
We check awareness, exits, approach, separation, landing pattern and decision-making.
We connect tunnel drills to real jump goals instead of treating tunnel as a separate sport.
You want to understand consolidation jumps, licence requirements and what to train next.
You can jump legally, but you want a clearer plan for your next 25–50 jumps.
You are jumping, but your skills, confidence or decision-making are not improving as clearly as you expected.
You want group jumps, but you need the right level, task and expectations.
You want to use tunnel time for real skydiving goals, not isolated practice.
You want structured review so each jump produces a clear next action.
Jumps 1-10 after AFF: consolidate exits, altitude awareness, landing routine, currency, canopy habits and simple solo tasks before adding complexity.
Jumps 10-25: choose a narrow skill focus, use video when available, plan tunnel only when it supports real skydiving goals, and avoid random group choices.
Jumps 25-50: prepare for level-appropriate groups, coached jumps, camps or a tunnel-to-sky block with clear briefing, separation and debrief habits.
Use planned jumps, clear tasks and structured debriefs where appropriate.
Review footage to identify patterns, not just isolated mistakes.
Connect tunnel training to actual freefall goals and future sky jumps.
Move into groups with clearer expectations, level-aware goals and better preparation.
Decide when it makes sense to progress toward camps, advanced coaching, wingsuit direction or special experiences.




A practical plan for your next stage based on your current level, goals and available dates.
Structured feedback from jump footage with clear next actions.
Help choosing tasks, goals and debrief focus for coached jumps.
Guidance on what to train in the tunnel and how to connect it to skydiving.
Support understanding which group jumps match your current level and what to prepare.
Between-jump questions, notes and planning support.
Send one or two jump videos. You receive structured notes, pattern-level feedback and goals for the next few jumps.
A level check, priority list and practical route for the next 25-50 jumps, including tunnel, coached days or group readiness when relevant.
Briefing, focused jump tasks, debrief priorities and video review for a training day when dates and location fit.
A check on whether small groups, tracking basics, freefly basics, tunnel blocks or camps match your current skill and awareness.
Some stages are delivered personally. Some stages may involve trusted tunnel coaches, instructors, camps or specialists. The important part is continuity: your progression stays connected, planned and guided instead of becoming a set of disconnected bookings.
The point is not to collect more services. The point is to connect the right support at the right time.
Tunnel specialists can support focused skills when tunnel work fits the skydiving plan.
Camps can become useful when the level, group and training goal are appropriate.
Coached jumps are planned around clear tasks and debrief priorities.
Advanced specialists can fit later stages when the timing and prerequisites make sense.
Group progression works best when expectations, skill level and training goals are clear.
Start with clearer expectations before the next jump day.
Turn each jump into a specific next action.
Use footage to find repeat patterns instead of isolated moments.
Keep the training focus narrow enough to make progress visible.
Make tunnel skills serve your actual freefall needs.
Choose group jumps gradually with level-aware expectations.
Ask between-jump questions when the next decision is unclear.
Use available footage to choose the next practical training focus.
Adjust the plan as jumps, tunnel time or dates change.
Prepare tasks, debrief focus and tunnel goals before the next training block.
Ask whoever is nearby. Join groups without clear level fit. Repeat the same mistakes. Use tunnel time without a sky goal. Make decisions jump by jump.
Start with a level check. Set training priorities. Review video patterns. Use tunnel with a skydiving purpose. Choose groups and camps more intentionally. Build a roadmap for the next stage.