Learn boxing as a beginner in six months

There is no self-taught path here. A martial art is, by definition, a thing two people do to each other — you need partners, a coach, and a floor. Six months at a real boxing gym, three to four nights a week, gets a complete beginner to controlled three-round sparring. About 130 hours of training plus around $700 in fees.

6 months · ~130 hours · spar three rounds at light contact, throw clean combinations on the bag

Week 1 · find a real gym

1.Join a local boxing gym

This is non-negotiable. Search "boxing gym near me" — not "fitness boxing," not "kickboxing fitness," not a chain studio with mirrors. You want a gym with a ring, heavy bags, and people who actually compete. Visit two or three. Ask if they have beginner classes and how soon you'll be allowed to spar. The right answer is "after about three months, light contact only." If the coaches won't talk to you or you can't watch a class first, walk out. A good gym is the entire curriculum.

~$80–150/month + ~$150 in gear (gloves, wraps, mouthguard) over six months

USA Boxing club finder →
Weeks 1–4 · read in week one

2.The Boxer's Start-Up by Doug Werner

The single best beginner boxing book — endorsed by USA Boxing, written by an absolute beginner who trained six months under Alan Lachica and journaled every step. It will not teach you to box. Nothing in print can. What it does is give you the language and structure of what's about to happen at the gym: the stance, the four punches, why you skip rope, what shadow boxing is for, what the heavy bag actually trains. Read it before your first class so you arrive knowing how to listen.

~$15 paperback

The Boxer's Start-Up →

If this doesn't fit you

If boxing isn't your style, swap it for Brazilian jiu-jitsu — same structure, find a gym with a free first class, plan on six months to feel competent in a beginner roll. BJJ has the lowest injury rate of any combat sport for adult learners and the most welcoming beginner culture. Avoid striking-only McDojos and "self-defense" seminars. The test of a real martial arts gym is whether they let beginners spar or roll, and how they treat them when they do.

Why this path

You cannot YouTube your way to a martial art. Every move requires a partner who is responding in real time, every defensive habit needs to be installed against actual incoming pressure, and every solo drill develops bad habits that only a coach can see and correct. People who try to self-teach combat sports become confidently bad — the worst possible outcome, because they don't know they're bad until something goes wrong. Pay for the gym. Show up four nights a week. The book is a primer; the gym is the path.