Your FirstSeasonSurvivalGuide.
The seasoned dance mom leaning over in the lobby, handing you the checklist you wish someone gave you on day one โ shoes, tights, hairnets, and all.
2,400+ parents already prepared

Choosing the Right Studio
Where your child will spend the next eight months.
Not all studios are the same โ and that's fine. What matters is finding one that matches your child's energy, your schedule, and your budget. A good fit means your five-year-old comes home excited, not exhausted. Look for trial classes, transparent recital fees, and a teacher who talks to the kids, not over them.
Quick Checklist
Ask about the recital fee upfront
Can range from $40 to $300+ depending on studio
Check if costumes are included or extra
Most studios charge $60โ$120 per costume
Confirm class size (ideal: 8โ12 kids)
Smaller classes = more individual attention
Attend one trial class before committing
Ask whether the recital is mandatory or optional

The Gear Checklist
Buy smart. Buy once. Do not panic at the dance store.
The first trip to the dance supply store can feel overwhelming. Here's the secret: you probably need less than you think. Start with the basics your studio requires, and skip the extras until your child has been going for a month. Pink leather ballet shoes and a single pair of footed tights covers most beginners โ everything else can wait.
Quick Checklist
Pink leather ballet slippers (not canvas for beginners)
Bloch or Capezio are studio-trusted brands
Footed pink tights ร 2 pairs
Get two โ one will ladder by week three
Leotard in studio-required color
Black is most common; check your studio policy
Hair net + bobby pins (ร12 minimum)
Buy a whole box โ they vanish constantly
Small dance bag for shoes + water bottle
Skip the tap shoes and jazz shoes until asked
Halfway there โ grab the full thing
The complete checklist, printable & yours free.
Everything on this page โ and 40 more tips โ in one beautifully formatted PDF you can actually use at the studio.

Hair & Costume Prep
The part every new dance parent underestimates.
Hair is the thing that will stress you out more than anything else in your first year. The good news: a solid bun takes about three weeks to master, and then it becomes second nature. Buy a bun-maker donut in your child's hair color, a can of firm-hold hairspray, and watch one YouTube tutorial. For costume week, get everything prepped four days before โ not the night before.
Quick Checklist
Bun-maker donut (matches hair color)
Available at any dollar store or Amazon
Firm-hold hairspray (not flexible hold)
Got2b Glued is the dance-mom gold standard
Hairnet in matching color ร 3 spares
Practice bun at home before class day
Do it 3โ4 times before you need to do it fast
Steam/press costume 4+ days before recital
Label every costume piece with child's name
Nude undergarments under costume (studio will specify)
Recital Week Without Tears
Yours or theirs โ we're covering both.
Recital week is chaotic, magical, and exhausting in equal measure. The parents who sail through it are the ones who front-load all the prep. Arrive at dress rehearsal 20 minutes early with a labeled bag containing: costume, shoes, spare tights, snacks, water, and a book for the waiting. Your child will be backstage for 90 minutes โ make sure they're comfortable, fed, and know you'll be cheering.
Quick Checklist
Arrive 20 minutes early to dress rehearsal
Traffic + parking + costume adjustment = time disappears
Pack a labeled backstage bag the night before
Include: spare tights, snacks, water, small toy
Backstage waits can be 60โ90 minutes for young kids
Confirm your seat assignment and photography rules
Charge your phone fully the night before
Post-show flowers: optional but absolutely worth it
Celebrate regardless of wobbles โ they performed.
Stop guessing. Start prepared.
The Pliรฉ Parent Playbook covers shoes, tights, hair prep, recital-week logistics, and everything else nobody tells you โ in one printable guide you'll actually use.
Joined by 2,400+ dance parents from studios across the US