Gymnastics Classes for Children in Surrey: Club Finder
Surrey has one of the strongest concentrations of children's gymnastics clubs in the south east. From a Saturday morning badge class in Epsom to a national squad in Cobham, there is a club within a fifteen minute drive of most Surrey postcodes, and several of them run waiting lists that fill up by the end of the summer holidays. This is a working guide to those clubs, area by area, with what is on offer, what parents and carers typically pay, and the practical detail that decides whether a child sticks with it past Christmas.
Quick answer
The most established clubs for children's gymnastics in Surrey are Woking Gymnastics Club (GU22 9GE), Silvermere Gymnastics in Cobham (KT11 1EQ), Weybourne Gymnastics Club in Addlestone (KT15 3JE) and Spelthorne Gymnastics in Sunbury-on-Thames (TW16 6LP). All four run recreational classes from around age four, take pre-school gymnasts younger, and offer a competitive pathway for children who want to progress. Waiting lists are common in September; term-time taster sessions and holiday courses are the easiest way in.
Where to find gymnastics classes in Surrey by area
Surrey is a wide county, and drive time matters more than county boundary. The clubs below are grouped by broad area, with age range and Google review context so you can compare like for like before you visit. Ratings and review counts were checked from the KidzRGoGo listings on 9 July 2026.
| Club | Area / postcode | Ages | Google rating | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Woking Gymnastics Club | Woking, GU22 9GE | Toddler to teen | 4.4 (40) | Registered charity, 1,500+ members, dedicated additional needs sessions |
| Gymnastics Factory | Guildford, GU3 1LP | Baby to teen | 4.2 (43) | Purpose-built, pay-as-you-go baby sessions, holiday courses |
| Flair Gymnastics : Guildford Spectrum | Guildford, GU1 1UP | Preschool to 16 | 4.7 (48) | Runs inside Guildford Spectrum leisure centre |
| Silvermere Gymnastics | Cobham, KT11 1EQ | 4 months to adult | 4.7 (54) | Onsite café and viewing area, free parking, SEND classes |
| Weybourne Gymnastics Club | Addlestone, KT15 3JE | 4 and under to advanced | 4.4 (96) | Sprung floor, air track, artistic squads |
| Good Life Gymnastics | Esher, KT10 0AQ | Preschool to teen | 4.8 (111) | Hinchley Wood school hall, small class sizes |
| Epsom Gymnastics | Epsom, KT17 1BN | 3 and above | 5.0 (5) | Saturday mornings only, badge scheme |
| Star-Tastic Gymnastics | Epsom, KT18 7NQ | Preschool to teen | 4.7 (38) | Also runs Powerhouse Parkour on the same site |
| Spelthorne Gymnastics | Sunbury-on-Thames, TW16 6LP | Baby to squad | 4.2 (65) | Elite acrobatics and tumbling programme |
| Leatherhead and Dorking Gymnastics Club | Leatherhead, KT22 9BL | Preschool to teen | 3.9 (28) | Fetcham Grove site, high-turnover recreational classes |
| The Little Gym Camberley | Camberley, GU15 3PT | 4 months to 12 years | 4.9 (88) | Franchise curriculum, small class sizes, higher fees |
| The Little Gym Godalming | Chiddingfold, GU8 4QD | 4 months to 12 years | 4.8 (82) | Same franchise as Camberley, rural setting |
| Generation Gymnastics CIC | Camberley, GU15 4AJ | Preschool to teen | 4.9 (17) | Not-for-profit at Collingwood Gymnastics Centre |
| Springfit Gymnastics & Trampoline Club | Horley, RH6 9AB | Preschool to teen | 4.9 (13) | Also runs at Redhill (RH1 2LQ) |
| Sovereign Gymnastics and Trampoline club | Redhill, RH1 2LW | Preschool to teen | 5.0 (4) | Dedicated tumbling and trampoline programme |
The clubs in this guide are included based on parent recommendations, Google ratings and publicly available information. KidzRGoGo has no commercial relationship with any provider listed and does not approve, inspect or endorse them. Always check directly with the club before booking, particularly for current pricing, availability, British Gymnastics affiliation and safeguarding policies. Details are drawn from provider websites and Google listings and may change.
The kinds of gymnastics a Surrey child might do
The word "gymnastics" covers a wide field, and understanding which discipline a club specialises in matters more than choosing a club by postcode. Most Surrey clubs offer women's artistic gymnastics as the default, but the extras vary widely.
Women's artistic gymnastics is the version most parents picture: floor, vault, beam and uneven bars. Men's artistic swaps beam and bars for pommel horse, rings, parallel bars and high bar. Both routes run at Woking Gymnastics Club, and Weybourne is well set up for women's artistic with sprung floor, air track and a foam pit.
Tumbling and trampolining are separate British Gymnastics disciplines. Spelthorne Gymnastics has produced British, European and world champions in acrobatics and tumbling, and Sovereign Gymnastics in Redhill runs a dedicated trampoline programme alongside its tumble sessions. If a child is drawn to rebound work rather than beam and bars, these are the clubs to look at.
Acrobatic gymnastics is the paired or grouped discipline, closer to circus arts than solo apparatus. East Surrey Acrobatics in Reigate and Prime Acrobatics at Horsell Common in Woking (rated 4.8 from 69 reviews) are the specialists.
Rhythmic gymnastics, which uses ribbons, hoops, balls, clubs and ropes, is smaller in the UK than artistic and rarer in Surrey. Prestige Rhythmic Gymnastics Academy in Cobham (KT11 1TF, rated 5.0 from 21 reviews) is the county's main dedicated rhythmic club.
Parkour and freerunning are outside British Gymnastics governance but often taught alongside gymnastics because the movement vocabulary overlaps. Powerhouse Parkour at Rosebery School in Epsom (KT18 7NQ, 4.6 from 17 reviews) is run by the same team as Star-Tastic Gymnastics and takes older children looking for something less choreographed than artistic gymnastics.
Preschool gymnastics is its own category and is treated in its own section below. A three-year-old is not doing beam routines; they are doing rolls, jumps, hangs and shapes on age-appropriate equipment, often with a parent or carer in the room.
Gymnastics clubs in West Surrey
The Guildford, Farnham, Godalming and Hindhead corridor is well served, with a mix of purpose-built clubs and leisure-centre partnerships.
Gymnastics Factory at Pew Corner on the Old Portsmouth Road (GU3 1LP) is a purpose-built site running recreational classes from babies upward. Their pay-as-you-go baby sessions are useful for parents and carers who are not sure yet whether a full-term commitment is right, and they run holiday courses in most school breaks. It is a ten minute drive from central Guildford and has its own parking. Google rating is 4.2 from 43 reviews.
Flair Gymnastics at Guildford Spectrum (GU1 1UP) is the leisure-centre partnership option and one of the highest-rated gymnastics operations in the county at 4.7 from 48 reviews. Flair also runs at Surrey Sports Park (GU2 7AD) and Woking Leisure Centre (GU22 9BA), and the model is consistent across sites: recreational classes for a broad age range, badge progression, and access to leisure-centre facilities on the same site if a sibling wants to swim or skate at the same time. The Spectrum car park is a paid council car park; factor that in.
Sponte Sua Gymnastics Academy on Park Barn Drive (GU2 8EP) is a small operation in west Guildford, well-rated but with a lower review count.
Toward Farnham, Farnham Gymnastics Club on Dogflud Way (GU9 7UF) is the historic club in the town, and Flair Gymnastics also runs a Farnham class (GU9 7QQ). Stellar Gymnastics (GU9 9EW) and ((BOUNCE)) Farnham at Heath End School (GU9 9BN) round out the local options, with Bounce covering the tumble and trampoline side.
Excel Gymnastics Academy at Amesbury School in Hindhead (GU26 6BL) serves the south-west corner of Surrey. It is a smaller operation running out of a school gym, which keeps class sizes tight but limits the equipment on offer compared with a purpose-built site.
Godalming families now have The Little Gym Godalming at Chiddingfold (GU8 4QD, 4.8 from 82 reviews). The Little Gym is a franchise operation and the fees sit at the top end of the market, but the curriculum is structured, class sizes are capped, and the parent-and-toddler classes are among the best set up for pre-walkers in Surrey.
Gymnastics clubs in North Surrey
The Elmbridge and Runnymede belt has an unusual density of clubs, partly because of the concentration of leisure centres and partly because the area produced several elite gymnasts in the 2000s and the infrastructure has stuck around.
Weybourne Gymnastics Club in New Haw / Addlestone (KT15 3JE) is one of the busiest recreational clubs in the county, with 96 Google reviews at a 4.4 average. It runs from four-and-under Stay-and-Play through to advanced women's artistic squads, and the site has the equipment to back the full pathway: sprung floor, air track, beam, bars, rings, vault and a foam pit. Waiting lists are the norm here and the Saturday morning slots go first.
Silvermere Gymnastics at Bramley Hedge Farm in Cobham (KT11 1EQ) takes children from four months upward. It has an onsite café with a viewing area, which is a small thing that turns a class into a manageable morning if you have a sibling in a pushchair. Free parking, SEND-adapted sessions, home education classes and holiday camps make it one of the more accessible clubs in the area.
Prestige Rhythmic Gymnastics Academy on Portsmouth Road in Cobham (KT11 1TF) is the county's dedicated rhythmic gymnastics club. It is a five-star listing on Google from 21 reviews and it is worth the drive from further afield if a child is specifically interested in ribbon, ball, hoop or clubs work.
Good Life Gymnastics at Hinchley Wood in Esher (KT10 0AQ) is a school-hall operation with 111 Google reviews at a 4.8 average, one of the highest counts in Surrey. The trade-off with a school-hall club is that equipment gets set up and packed away every session, so the ratio of active gymnastics time to setup time is lower than at a purpose-built venue. Coaching, though, is the reason parents recommend it.
Genesis Gymnastics Club on Orchard Avenue in Thames Ditton (KT7 0BB) sits at a 3.0 review average from four reviews. That is a small sample size to draw conclusions from, but it is worth checking a taster session before signing up for a term.
Walton Gymnastics Club at Elmbridge Xcel (KT12 2JG) is the leisure-centre-based option in Walton-on-Thames, and Gymfinity Kids at The Heart (KT12 1GH) is the shopping-centre-based option with 71 Google reviews at 4.2. Gymfinity's location makes it a practical choice if you want to combine a class with a coffee and a browse of the shops while your child is in session.
Weybridge Gymnastics Club runs out of Cleves School Bungalow (KT13 9TS), and Spelthorne Gymnastics at Laytons Lane in Sunbury-on-Thames (TW16 6LP) is the club to look at if a child is interested in acrobatics or tumbling at national level. Spelthorne has produced British, European and world champions in those disciplines.
Byfleet Gymnastics Club on the High Road (KT14 7QL) and First Steps Gymnastics at Oxshott Community Hub (KT22 0RZ) round out the local options, with First Steps focused on the preschool age bracket.
Gymnastics clubs in East Surrey
Epsom, Ewell, Leatherhead and Tadworth have a cluster of clubs around Rainbow Leisure Centre, the Harrier Centre and Rosebery School.
Epsom Gymnastics at Rainbow Leisure Centre (KT17 1BN) is a Saturday-mornings-only club, registered with the Independent Gymnastics Association, with a designated welfare officer and documented safeguarding policies. It takes children from three years upward, with classes broken down by school year (Early Years, Reception, Year 1-2, Year 3-4, Year 5+). Term-time only. The five-star Google rating is from a small sample of five reviews.
Acorn Gymnastics Club at the Harrier Centre in West Ewell (KT19 9RY) has a 4.8 average from 16 reviews, and South Western Gymnastics Club at Harrier Centre / Christ Church Road (KT19 8NE) has a 4.7 from 15 reviews. Both are recreational-first with progression routes for children who want to compete.
Star-Tastic Gymnastics Group at Rosebery School on White Horse Drive in Epsom (KT18 7NQ) has 38 Google reviews at 4.7, and the same team runs Powerhouse Parkour on the same site. That combination is useful for families with siblings who want different things, or for a single gymnast who is beginning to look for a more freestyle discipline.
Aerial Tumbling Club at Epsom Downs Primary School in Tadworth (KT18 5RJ) is a specialist in tumbling, rated 4.7 from 12 reviews, and Star-Tastic Gymnastics (Tadworth) at the Leisure and Community Centre (KT20 5FB) is the same operation as the Epsom club.
Leatherhead and Dorking Gymnastics Club at Fetcham Grove (KT22 9BL) is one of the longer-established clubs in the area. Its 3.9 rating from 28 reviews is lower than the county average, and the reviews reflect a mix of experiences with class size and administration. It is worth going to a taster before committing to a term here, more so than at some of the higher-rated clubs.
Gymfit Gymnastics Club operates at two Ewell sites, The Edge Youth Centre (KT19 9PW) and West Ewell Primary School (KT19 0UY), and Tumble Tots Epsom runs classes at Epsom Methodist Church (KT18 5AQ) and at 4th Ewell (Nonsuch) Scout Hall (KT17 2SA) for the toddler-and-preschool bracket.
Gymnastics clubs in South Surrey
Redhill, Reigate, Dorking, Horley and Caterham form the south Surrey belt, and the clubs here are a mix of school-hall operations and dedicated units.
Redhill and Reigate Gymnastics Club at Donyngs Recreation Centre in Redhill (RH1 1DP) is the recreational-first option in the town centre. Sovereign Gymnastics and Trampoline club on Ormside Way in Redhill (RH1 2LW) has a 5.0 Google rating from four reviews and is the club to look at for tumbling and trampolining.
Springfit Gymnastics & Trampoline Club runs at St Bede's School in Redhill (RH1 2LQ) and at Oakwood Sports Centre in Horley (RH6 9AB). The Horley site rates 4.9 from 13 reviews, one of the higher ratings in the south of the county.
Flipstarz Gymnastics on Lesbourne Road in Reigate (RH2 7BY), East Surrey Acrobatics on Slipshatch Road in Reigate (RH2 8HA) and ESE Sports Coaching round out the Redhill and Reigate cluster.
SaS Gymnastics Club at The Ashcombe School in Dorking (RH4 1LY) is Dorking's local club, and Max Force Trampoline Club on Reigate Road (RH4 1SW) is the local trampolining club.
Down in Caterham, Caterham Gymnastics Academy at De Stafford Sports Centre (CR3 5YX) is 5.0 from five reviews, and Zodiac Gymnastic Club at The Arc on Weston Drive (CR3 5XY) sits at 4.1 from eight reviews. Anti-gravity and Saturn V both operate out of The Rebound Hall on William Road (CR3 5NN), which is a specialist tumble and rebound facility.
For older children with a serious competitive interest, Pointers Gymnastics and Trampoline Club at Warlingham (CR6 9YB) and Croydon Gymnastics Club on Croydon Road in Caterham (CR3 6QB) are worth a look.
Preschool and toddler gymnastics in Surrey
A gymnastics class for a two- or three-year-old is not really a gymnastics class in the shape most adults imagine it. It is a supervised session of climbing, jumping, hanging, rolling, balancing and copying, on soft equipment sized for small children. The point at that age is confidence and body awareness, not routines.
The Tumble Tots franchise runs across Surrey with sessions at Addlestone (KT15 2NJ), Epsom (KT18 5AQ) and Ewell (KT17 2SA). Classes are structured around a set curriculum with a warm-up, apparatus circuit and finishing rhymes. It works well for children who thrive in a predictable routine.
The Little Gym at Camberley (GU15 3PT) and Godalming (GU8 4QD) take children from four months upward. Parent and Child classes are for pre-walkers and toddlers; Pre-School classes run from around three; and Primary School classes take the ratio down further and start introducing routines. Fees sit at the top of the market but the curriculum is one of the most consistent internationally.
Silvermere Gymnastics runs a Bouncing Babies group for children as young as four months. Gymnastics Factory offers pay-as-you-go baby sessions. First Steps Gymnastics at Oxshott Community Hub (KT22 0RZ) is preschool-focused.
For the two-and-a-half-to-four-year-old bracket, most of the recreational clubs listed above also run a preschool session, usually mid-morning during term time. These are typically cheaper than the branded franchise classes but sell out faster because there are fewer sessions available.
Recreational, competitive and squad routes
Most Surrey children who start gymnastics do so for the recreational route. That means one class a week, badge progression through British Gymnastics or the Independent Gymnastics Association, and no expectation of competition. A recreational gymnast will typically stay in the same class through their whole time at a club, with the exception of moving up an age group.
If a coach spots ability early and the child is willing, a club may invite them into a development squad. That usually adds a second, longer session a week, more focused apparatus work, and the option of entering local competitions. Fees roughly double from recreational level.
Full competitive squads train three or more sessions a week and compete at regional and national events under British Gymnastics rules. Weybourne, Silvermere, Woking, Weybridge, Walton, and Spelthorne all have competitive pathways in women's artistic; Woking and Weybourne also run men's artistic; Spelthorne is the club to look at for elite acrobatics and tumbling; Prestige is the specialist for rhythmic.
The honest conversation to have with any club before joining a squad programme is time and cost. Squads are expensive, both in fees and in weekend commitments. Many families find that a recreational class of one hour a week for eight or ten years serves a child better than a squad they burn out on by the age of eleven.
How to choose the right club
For a nervous child, the priority is small class size and a coach who is warm rather than drill-focused. Ask what the coach-to-child ratio is on a recreational class. Anything above one coach to eight children at recreational level should prompt a follow-up question about how they manage safety on beam and vault.
For a confident child looking for challenge, the priority is equipment. A club with a sprung floor, air track and pit gives a coach the tools to progress a child through the movement vocabulary safely. Purpose-built sites (Weybourne, Silvermere, Woking, Gymnastics Factory, Spelthorne) have this equipment permanently set up; school-hall operations do not, and this is the single biggest trade-off in Surrey gymnastics.
For a child with additional needs, ask about SEND-adapted sessions. Silvermere Gymnastics runs a dedicated programme, Woking Gymnastics Club runs additional-needs classes, and Spelthorne has a separate additional-needs stream. Not all clubs advertise these, so ask directly if it is not on the website.
For a family juggling siblings, the leisure-centre clubs (Flair at Guildford Spectrum, Flair at Woking, Walton Gymnastics Club at Elmbridge Xcel) are worth considering. A sibling can be swimming, skating or in a soft play in the same building at the same time.
For a family with a tight budget, the school-hall operations and the recreational-only clubs (Epsom Gymnastics, Redhill and Reigate Gymnastics Club, Farnham Gymnastics Club) are usually cheaper per term than the franchise operations. The Little Gym sits at the top of the market on price.
What a taster session looks like
A taster session is usually a single free or discounted class in the age group the child would join, at the normal time and with the normal coach. Most Surrey clubs offer them; some require a booking, some are drop-in.
Arrive fifteen minutes early. Children should wear a leotard or shorts and a fitted t-shirt (no baggy tops or jewellery), and they will be barefoot on the floor. Coaches will usually ask an older child to try a forward roll, a jump from a low box, and a hang on a bar to gauge starting level.
Watch for two things during the class. First, is the coach's language positive and correcting-with-context, rather than critical and generic? "Point your toes when you land" beats "no, wrong." Second, is the class active, or is your child standing in a queue waiting for a turn? A well-run recreational class has children moving for at least half the session.
Have a five minute chat with the coach at the end. That conversation, more than the marketing on the website, will tell you whether this is the right club.
Fees, waiting lists and how booking usually works
Recreational class fees in Surrey range roughly from £6 to £14 per hour, depending on the club and how sessions are billed. Term-time-only clubs charge by the term, usually £70 to £160 for a ten to twelve week term. Franchise operations such as The Little Gym charge more, sometimes double, and often add a joining fee. All of these figures are ballpark; get the current fee from the club before you book.
Kit costs are modest. A leotard is around £20 to £35, shorts and a fitted t-shirt work for boys and for less formal classes, and grips are only needed for competitive squads. Most clubs sell club-branded leotards but do not require them for recreational classes.
Waiting lists are the reality in Surrey. Popular clubs like Weybourne, Silvermere and Woking often close September enrolments by the end of August, and new spaces open at Christmas and Easter as children leave. If you are set on a specific club, get on its waiting list rather than waiting for a public advert.
Holiday courses are a useful entry route. Most clubs run three-to-five day intensive courses during school holidays for children who are not yet in the term-time programme. They give the child a feel for the club, and they give the club a way to slot the child into a term-time slot if one opens up.
Accessibility and SEND provision
Accessibility varies significantly across Surrey clubs. Purpose-built venues like Silvermere and Gymnastics Factory are typically single-level with step-free access and accessible toilets. Leisure-centre operations at Guildford Spectrum, Woking Leisure Centre and Elmbridge Xcel benefit from the accessibility standards of the parent centre. School-hall operations vary; some school gyms have step-free access and adapted facilities, some do not.
For children with additional needs, the following clubs run dedicated SEND-adapted sessions: Silvermere Gymnastics in Cobham, Woking Gymnastics Club, Spelthorne Gymnastics, and Springfit Gymnastics & Trampoline Club. Class sizes are smaller, coaches are experienced with sensory processing needs and communication differences, and pace is set by the child. Not all clubs advertise their SEND provision on their homepage, so ask.
Parking is worth checking before booking. Silvermere, Weybourne and Gymnastics Factory have their own free car parks. Flair at Guildford Spectrum uses a paid council car park; Flair at Woking Leisure Centre uses the leisure centre car park; Star-Tastic and Powerhouse Parkour at Rosebery School use the school car park. School-hall operations often rely on street parking, which can be tight around drop-off and pick-up.
British Gymnastics affiliation and safeguarding
British Gymnastics is the national governing body for the sport in the UK. Its member clubs are required to meet safeguarding, coaching qualification and safety standards. Most of the clubs in this guide are British Gymnastics registered; a few, including Epsom Gymnastics, operate under the Independent Gymnastics Association with equivalent standards.
For parents and carers, the practical implications are: every recreational-level coach should hold a Level 2 gymnastics coaching qualification, competitive coaches should hold Level 3 or above, every club should have a named welfare officer, and every coach should have a valid DBS check. Ask if these details are not on the website. A club that cannot answer these questions clearly is not the right club.
Frequently asked questions
What age can children start gymnastics in Surrey?
Most clubs take children from four months for parent-and-baby sessions. Independent classes typically start from around three years old, and dedicated preschool sessions run from age two upward. Silvermere Gymnastics has a Bouncing Babies group from four months. The Little Gym Camberley also takes children from four months.
How much do gymnastics classes cost in Surrey?
Recreational class fees range from roughly £6 to £14 per hour, or £70 to £160 for a ten to twelve week term. Franchise operations such as The Little Gym charge higher fees. Squad and competitive sessions cost more, sometimes twice recreational fees. Kit is around £20 to £35 for a leotard.
Are there gymnastics clubs in Surrey with waiting lists?
Yes. Weybourne Gymnastics Club, Silvermere Gymnastics and Woking Gymnastics Club all run waiting lists at busy times of year, particularly for the September intake. Put your child on a list in the spring or early summer for the following September. Turnover happens at Christmas and Easter as children move up or leave.
Which Surrey gymnastics clubs offer SEND-adapted sessions?
Silvermere Gymnastics in Cobham, Woking Gymnastics Club, Spelthorne Gymnastics and Springfit Gymnastics & Trampoline Club run dedicated additional-needs sessions. Ask individual clubs directly, as not all publicise this on their website.
What is the difference between artistic, rhythmic, tumbling and acrobatic gymnastics?
Artistic uses apparatus: floor, vault, beam and uneven bars for women, and floor, pommel, rings, vault, parallel bars and high bar for men. Rhythmic is floor-only with hand apparatus (rope, hoop, ball, clubs, ribbon). Tumbling is a spring-floor discipline focused on runs of somersaults. Acrobatic gymnastics is paired or grouped balances and lifts, closer to circus arts.
Do gymnastics classes in Surrey run during school holidays?
Most term-time-only clubs pause during school holidays but run separate holiday courses, usually three to five day intensives. Gymnastics Factory, Silvermere Gymnastics, and Spelthorne Gymnastics all run holiday courses. The franchise operations like The Little Gym run their own holiday programmes.
Which Surrey gymnastics clubs have a competitive pathway?
Weybourne Gymnastics Club, Silvermere Gymnastics, Woking Gymnastics Club, Weybridge Gymnastics Club, Walton Gymnastics Club and Spelthorne Gymnastics all have competitive squads in women's artistic. Woking and Weybourne also run men's artistic. Spelthorne has produced world-level tumbling and acrobatic gymnasts. Prestige Rhythmic Gymnastics Academy in Cobham is the specialist rhythmic club.
What should my child wear for a gymnastics class?
A leotard or shorts and a fitted t-shirt. No baggy tops, no zips or buttons, no jewellery. Long hair should be tied back. Children train barefoot on the floor. For competitive sessions, some clubs require club-branded leotards; for recreational, plain kit is fine.
Are there men's gymnastics classes for boys in Surrey?
Yes. Woking Gymnastics Club runs men's artistic gymnastics alongside women's, and most recreational classes take boys and girls together up to around age eight. Boys who want to progress to competitive men's artistic will find the pathway at Woking and at a few of the larger clubs.
Can I stay and watch a gymnastics class in Surrey?
It depends on the club. Most purpose-built venues have a viewing area (Silvermere, Weybourne, Gymnastics Factory). Leisure-centre operations usually have poolside-style viewing. School-hall operations often ask parents and carers to wait outside during the session; parents are welcome for the taster session and for showcases. Ask before booking if this matters to you.
How do I get my child on a gymnastics club waiting list?
Contact the club directly through its website or phone number. Most Surrey clubs run a simple email or online-form waiting list. Include your child's age, any relevant experience, and any specific class times that suit you (Saturday mornings and after-school slots go first). Follow up in July and August for the September intake.
Is there a gymnastics club in Surrey that offers home education classes?
Yes. Silvermere Gymnastics in Cobham runs a Home Education Gymnastics programme during term-time daytime hours. Other clubs occasionally run daytime sessions that suit home-educated children; ask directly.
Find more children's activities in Surrey
Gymnastics is one of the strongest activity offerings in Surrey, but it is far from the only option. Explore all Surrey children's activities on KidzRGoGo, or browse by the sport you are after. Local town pages worth looking at: Guildford, Woking, Cobham, Epsom, Redhill, and Farnham. If your child is drawn to the rebound side of things rather than beam and bars, the trampoline parks in Surrey guide is worth a read.

