Florida Basketball Training – Trainers, Teams, & Camps
Florida offers 500+ basketball trainers, 200+ camps, 300+ AAU and select teams, and 75+ college basketball programs across every level. That’s a lot of options — but not all answers. This page exists to provide context, not direction — helping families ask better questions rather than rushing decisions.
Not sure where to start? Our free guide helps you evaluate any trainer.
Why This Florida Basketball Training Directory Exists
Florida is one of the most competitive basketball states in America — from nationally-ranked prep academies in Fort Lauderdale and Montverde to powerhouse public schools in Miami, Jacksonville, and Orlando. With year-round warm weather and three NBA franchises driving grassroots interest, the Sunshine State produces an extraordinary volume of basketball talent. That also means an extraordinary volume of training programs competing for your family’s time and money.
This directory exists because having hundreds of Florida basketball training options doesn’t automatically make the choice easier. We’ve organized what’s available across the state — trainers, camps, AAU and select teams, high school programs, and college pathways — so you can see the full landscape before making decisions. We don’t rank programs as “best” or “worst.” We help you understand what makes different options right for different families.
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Our Approach: Context, Not Direction
We don’t rank trainers or camps as “best” — we help you understand what makes different programs right for different needs. The best trainer for one family might not fit another’s goals, budget, or learning style. Florida’s basketball market is enormous and competitive — that’s exactly why informed decision-making matters more than marketing claims.
Florida Basketball Season Calendar: When Everything Actually Happens
This timeline exists to help you plan thoughtfully, not to create panic about deadlines. Understanding when different programs run helps families make decisions that fit their schedule rather than reacting to last-minute pressure.
High School Season (FHSAA)
- October 24: First practice allowed by the FHSAA
- November 7–12: Preseason classic tournaments
- November 14: First regular season games begin
- November–January: Regular season — your school team’s primary focus
- Early February: District tournaments across all classifications (Rural through 7A)
- Mid-to-Late February: Regional tournaments statewide
- Late February–Mid-March: FHSAA State Championships at UNF Arena in Jacksonville (Rural: Feb. 24–27; Classes 1A–7A: March 5–14)
AAU/Select Basketball Season
Here’s what surprises many Florida families: AAU tryouts often start in late January through March — while the high school season is still happening. Teams form quickly because they want rosters set before spring tournaments begin. In Florida’s hyper-competitive grassroots scene, especially in South Florida and Central Florida, this timeline moves fast.
- January–March: Tryouts happening (yes, during school season)
- March–April: Season launches immediately after state tournaments end
- April–May: Spring tournament season
- June–August: Peak summer tournaments — teams travel to Orlando, Atlanta, Las Vegas, and other national destinations
- August: Season winds down
Basketball Camps
- May–June: Early summer camps start
- June–July: Peak camp season across Florida
- UF Gators Basketball Camp in Gainesville
- FSU Basketball Camp in Tallahassee
- UCF Knights Camp in Orlando
- FGCU Basketball Camp in Fort Myers
- Breakthrough Basketball camps at multiple Florida locations
- Private trainer camps throughout the state
- July–August: Final summer opportunities before fall training begins
- December: City of Palms Classic in Fort Myers — one of the nation’s premier high school basketball events and major exposure opportunity
Year-Round Training
- September–October: Fall skill development season — private trainers are typically busiest preparing players for school tryouts starting October 24
- March–August: The overlap season — AAU practices, tournaments, and camps all happening simultaneously. This is when families feel stretched.
- Anytime: Florida’s warm weather means private training and outdoor basketball are available year-round across all major metro areas
Planning Timeline, Not Pressure Timeline
This calendar shows when programs typically run in Florida — not deadlines you must meet. Some families train year-round. Others focus only on school season. Some skip AAU entirely. The goal is understanding what exists and when, so you can make choices that fit your family’s goals, budget, and capacity.
The Florida Reality: Florida’s sheer size and population density create distinct regional basketball cultures. Miami-Dade and Broward County offer some of the most competitive grassroots basketball in the country, with nationally-ranked prep academies alongside deep public school talent. Central Florida (Orlando, Lakeland) is growing rapidly. Jacksonville and North Florida have proud basketball traditions but fewer options at the elite grassroots level. The Panhandle region (Tallahassee, Pensacola) operates with a more regional focus. Understanding your local market matters more than chasing statewide comparisons.
For official season dates and rules, visit the FHSAA Boys Basketball and FHSAA Girls Basketball pages.
Types of Florida Basketball Training Programs
Each type of program serves a different purpose. None is inherently better — they’re tools for different needs at different stages.
Private Trainers
Best For: Individual skill development, addressing specific weaknesses, building confidence before tryouts, off-season improvement
What to Know: Pricing in Florida varies widely — from $40/session for newer trainers to $150+ for established names in Miami, Orlando, or Tampa. Group sessions offer a more affordable entry point. Look for trainers who assess before they prescribe.
Basketball Camps
Best For: Immersive skill-building experiences, exposure to different coaching styles, team play in a structured environment, keeping active during summer
What to Know: Florida’s college camps (UF, FSU, UCF, FGCU) are solid options that also provide campus exposure. The City of Palms Classic in Fort Myers each December is a major national event. Distinguish between skill-development camps and competition-focused showcases.
AAU & Select Teams
Best For: Competitive game experience outside school season, exposure to college coaches, playing against higher-level competition, team development
What to Know: Florida’s AAU scene is among the most competitive in the nation, especially in South Florida. Programs range from local recreational teams to nationally-ranked organizations traveling to major exposure events. Costs vary dramatically — get the all-in number including tournament travel fees before committing.
Florida High School Basketball Rankings
Florida’s rankings are unique: they include nationally-ranked prep academies (Montverde, Prolific Prep, IMG Academy) alongside traditional FHSAA member schools. The FHSAA uses eight classifications — Rural, 1A through 7A — based on school enrollment. Below are the current top programs across all classifications.
What Rankings Actually Tell You
These rankings help understand the competitive landscape in Florida — they don’t define where your child should aim. A player from an unranked school can absolutely reach college basketball. Several Florida prep academies recruit nationally, making direct comparison with traditional public schools misleading. These are reference points, not ceilings.
Boys Top 10 (February 2026)
| # | School | City | Record |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Montverde Academy | Montverde | 13-4 |
| 2 | Prolific Prep The Crew | Fort Lauderdale | 23-3 |
| 3 | Calvary Christian Academy | Fort Lauderdale | 15-1 |
| 4 | Southeastern Prep | Florida | 18-7 |
| 5 | Columbus | Miami | 17-6 |
| 6 | Lake Highland Prep | Orlando | 26-1 |
| 7 | The Rock School | Gainesville | — |
| 8 | St. Thomas Aquinas | Fort Lauderdale | — |
| 9 | Saint Andrew’s | Boca Raton | — |
| 10 | Andrew Jackson | Jacksonville | 25-1 |
Source: High School on SI / On3 — February 2026. Includes prep academies and FHSAA member schools.
Girls Top 10 (February 2026)
| # | School | City | Record |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | DME Academy | Daytona Beach | 21-1 |
| 2 | Miami Country Day | Miami | 23-2 |
| 3 | Montverde Academy | Montverde | 15-3 |
| 4 | IMG Academy | Bradenton | — |
| 5 | Columbus | Miami | — |
| 6 | Lake Highland Prep | Orlando | 21-6 |
| 7 | Bolles | Jacksonville | 22-4 |
| 8 | St. Brendan | Miami | — |
| 9 | Bartow | Bartow | — |
| 10 | American Heritage | Plantation | — |
Source: High School on SI — February 2026
For complete FHSAA rankings by classification, visit the FHSAA Boys Basketball Rankings and FHSAA Girls Basketball Rankings pages.
Florida College Basketball Programs
Florida offers one of the deepest college basketball landscapes in the country — 13 NCAA Division I programs, 13 Division II programs, 9 NAIA programs, and 20+ junior college programs through the FCSAA/NJCAA system. Understanding these levels helps families set realistic timelines without creating unnecessary pressure.
College Basketball Is One Possible Outcome
College basketball is one possible outcome of youth development — not an expectation. Florida’s 75+ college programs across all levels mean there are more pathways than most families realize. Understanding the landscape helps set realistic timelines and goals without creating pressure. D2, D3, NAIA, and JUCO programs offer meaningful competitive experiences and, in many cases, scholarship opportunities.
Florida College Basketball at a Glance
NCAA D1
NCAA D2
NAIA
NJCAA/JUCO
NCAA Division I Programs (13)
| School | City | Conference | Links |
|---|---|---|---|
| University of Florida | Gainesville | SEC | Men · Women |
| Florida State University | Tallahassee | ACC | Men · Women |
| University of Miami | Coral Gables | ACC | Men · Women |
| University of Central Florida | Orlando | Big 12 | Men · Women |
| University of South Florida | Tampa | AAC | Men · Women |
| Florida Atlantic University | Boca Raton | AAC | Men · Women |
| Florida International University | Miami | Conference USA | Men · Women |
| Florida Gulf Coast University | Fort Myers | ASUN | Men · Women |
| University of North Florida | Jacksonville | ASUN | Men · Women |
| Jacksonville University | Jacksonville | ASUN | Men · Women |
| Stetson University | DeLand | ASUN | Men · Women |
| Bethune-Cookman University | Daytona Beach | SWAC | Men · Women |
| Florida A&M University | Tallahassee | SWAC | Men · Women |
NCAA Division II Programs (13)
| School | City | Conference |
|---|---|---|
| Barry University | Miami Shores | Sunshine State |
| Eckerd College | St. Petersburg | Sunshine State |
| Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University | Daytona Beach | Sunshine State |
| Flagler College | St. Augustine | Peach Belt |
| Florida Southern College | Lakeland | Sunshine State |
| Florida Tech | Melbourne | Sunshine State |
| Lynn University | Boca Raton | Sunshine State |
| Nova Southeastern University | Fort Lauderdale | Sunshine State |
| Palm Beach Atlantic University | West Palm Beach | Sunshine State |
| Rollins College | Winter Park | Sunshine State |
| Saint Leo University | St. Leo | Sunshine State |
| University of Tampa | Tampa | Sunshine State |
| University of West Florida | Pensacola | Gulf South |
NAIA Programs (9)
| School | City | Conference |
|---|---|---|
| Ave Maria University | Ave Maria | Sun Conference |
| Edward Waters University | Jacksonville | Gulf Coast Athletic |
| Florida College | Temple Terrace | Continental Athletic |
| Florida Memorial University | Miami Gardens | Sun Conference |
| Keiser University | West Palm Beach | Sun Conference |
| Southeastern University | Lakeland | Sun Conference |
| St. Thomas University | Miami Gardens | Sun Conference |
| Warner University | Lake Wales | Sun Conference |
| Webber International University | Babson Park | Sun Conference |
NJCAA/Junior College Programs (FCSAA — 20+)
Florida operates one of the strongest junior college basketball systems in the nation through NJCAA Region 8 and the Florida College System Activities Association (FCSAA). These programs serve as a proven development pathway — offering scholarship opportunities, immediate playing time, and a bridge to four-year programs. Notable FCSAA basketball programs include Chipola College (Marianna), Indian River State College (Fort Pierce), Eastern Florida State College (Brevard County), Florida SouthWestern State College (Fort Myers), Northwest Florida State College (Niceville), Miami Dade College, Tallahassee Community College, and Florida State College at Jacksonville.
Understanding College Basketball Levels
NCAA Division I represents the highest level of college basketball with full athletic scholarships. Florida has 13 D1 programs across major conferences (SEC, ACC, Big 12, AAC, ASUN, SWAC, Conference USA). Division II offers partial athletic scholarships with a strong balance of athletics and academics. Division III (Florida has none) provides competitive basketball without athletic scholarships. NAIA programs can offer athletic scholarships and often provide more playing time and individual attention. NJCAA/JUCO programs offer two-year pathways with scholarships — Florida’s FCSAA system is one of the strongest in the nation and regularly sends players to D1 programs.
What to Ask and Look For in Florida
Florida’s basketball market is massive, diverse, and competitive. The questions you need to ask depend on where in the state you are and what level your player is pursuing. Here are state-specific evaluation criteria that matter.
Questions for Trainers
- In South Florida’s saturated trainer market, how do you differentiate from the dozens of other trainers advertising on Instagram? What specific development methodology do you follow?
- Florida allows first practice October 24 — what’s your approach to pre-season preparation vs. in-season maintenance training?
- Do you work with players at local FHSAA programs, prep academies, or both? The skill gaps between a 7A public school player and a Montverde-level recruit are significant — how do you adjust?
- What’s your all-in cost per month? In Miami and Fort Lauderdale especially, session prices vary from $40 to $200 — what exactly does each session include?
Questions for AAU/Select Teams
- Which specific circuits and tournaments do you compete in — On The Radar Hoops, Prep Hoops Florida, AAU nationals? Are any NCAA-certified?
- Florida AAU teams regularly travel to Orlando, Atlanta, and Las Vegas for major exposure events. What’s the total all-in season cost including all tournament fees, travel, hotels, and uniforms?
- How do you handle roster balancing between players from South Florida (where competition for roster spots is fierce) and those developing from smaller markets?
- Many Florida AAU tryouts happen in January–March while high school season is still active. How do you handle that overlap without pressuring families to prioritize AAU over school basketball?
Questions for Camps
- Is this a skill-development camp or a competition/exposure showcase? The City of Palms Classic and many South Florida events are exposure-focused — that’s different from a fundamental skills camp at UF or FGCU.
- What’s the coach-to-player ratio? Some Florida camps pack 200+ kids into a gym — if individual attention matters to you, smaller is better.
- For college-run camps (UF, FSU, UCF), are current college coaching staff involved, or is it primarily run by graduate assistants?
Florida-Specific Red Flags
- Guaranteed exposure claims: Florida programs sometimes promise “college coach exposure” at events where college coaches don’t actually attend. Ask which specific coaches and schools have attended their events in the past two years.
- Prep academy pressure: Florida’s prep academy scene (Montverde, IMG, etc.) creates a pressure ecosystem where families feel their child must transfer to a basketball academy to compete. For the vast majority of players, strong public school programs at the 4A–7A level provide excellent competition and development.
- Year-round commitment demands: Florida’s warm weather means some programs push year-round training with no off-season. Players — especially young ones — need rest periods. A program that demands 12-month commitment should raise questions.
- Social media hype over development: In South Florida especially, some trainers and programs invest more in Instagram content than actual player development. Flashy highlight videos don’t equal coaching quality.
- Hidden travel costs: A $1,500 AAU season fee can quickly become $5,000+ when you add Orlando, Atlanta, and Las Vegas tournament travel. Always get the total projected cost before committing.
Typical Florida Training Costs
Florida pricing varies significantly by region — South Florida (Miami, Fort Lauderdale) tends to be the most expensive market, while Central Florida and North Florida are generally more moderate.
- Private training: $40–$200/session (group sessions: $20–$50/player)
- Basketball camps: $150–$600/week (overnight college camps: $400–$800)
- AAU/select teams: $500–$3,000+ per season (plus $1,000–$5,000 in travel and tournament fees)
Want Help Evaluating Programs?
Our free guides give you specific questions to ask any trainer, camp, or AAU program.
Florida Basketball Training by City
Florida’s basketball landscape varies dramatically by region. South Florida dominates at the national level, but training options exist across the state. Here’s what each major city offers for basketball families.
Jacksonville
Pop. 978,000
Ribault HS holds a state-record 12 girls basketball championships. Andrew Jackson HS finished 25-1 this season and is a perennial Class 3A boys contender under coach Byron Shemwell. Now the home of FHSAA state championships at UNF Arena. Two D1 programs (UNF, Jacksonville University) and Florida State College at Jacksonville NJCAA program.
Miami
Pop. 460,000
Florida’s basketball epicenter. Columbus HS is 4-time defending 7A boys state champ. Miami Country Day is defending 2A girls champ. Udonis Haslem (Miami Senior High), Mitch Richmond, and Trevor Ariza all from Miami. University of Miami (ACC) and FIU (C-USA) provide D1 pathways. South Florida grassroots scene is among the most competitive nationally.
Tampa
Pop. 402,000
Home to Gilbert Arenas and Jordan Clarkson. Blake HS (Yellow Jackets) consistently ranked in state top 25. USF Bulls (AAC D1) and University of Tampa (D2) provide college options. Hillsborough Community College runs an NJCAA program. Tampa Bay area AAU scene growing rapidly with increasing national-level competition.
Orlando
Pop. 320,000
Lake Highland Prep dominates with both boys (26-1) and girls (21-6) programs ranked in the state top 10. Evans HS is a strong public school contender. Amar’e Stoudemire played at nearby Cypress Creek HS. UCF Knights (Big 12 D1) and Rollins College (D2) provide college pathways. Orlando hosts many AAU and exposure tournaments year-round.
Fort Lauderdale
Pop. 183,000
The epicenter of Florida prep academy basketball. Calvary Christian Academy (defending 3A champ), Prolific Prep (relocated from California for 2025-26), St. Thomas Aquinas, and Cardinal Gibbons are all powerhouses. Stranahan HS won the 2025 4A title. Nova Southeastern (D2) and Broward College (NJCAA) round out the college options.
St. Petersburg
Pop. 263,000
Gibbs HS reached the 2025 4A state semifinals and maintains a strong basketball tradition. Eckerd College provides a D2 option. St. Petersburg College runs an NJCAA program. The Tampa Bay area’s combined metro population creates a deep training market shared with Tampa.
Tallahassee
Pop. 202,000
Home to two D1 programs: Florida State University (ACC) and Florida A&M University (SWAC). Tallahassee Community College offers a strong NJCAA pathway. The state capital has competitive public school basketball with programs like Godby and Leon providing strong regional competition. Fewer grassroots options than South Florida, but quality training is available.
Gainesville
Pop. 145,000
Home to the University of Florida Gators (SEC D1), who won back-to-back national championships in 2006 and 2007. Vernon Maxwell is from Gainesville. The Rock School is a nationally-ranked prep program. Santa Fe College offers an NJCAA option. The FHSAA is headquartered here in Gainesville.
Fort Myers
Pop. 97,000
Hosts the City of Palms Classic each December — one of the most prestigious high school basketball events in the nation, drawing nationally-ranked teams. FGCU Eagles (ASUN D1, famous for “Dunk City” in 2013 March Madness). Florida SouthWestern State College provides an NJCAA pathway. A growing Southwest Florida basketball market.
Daytona Beach
Pop. 75,000
Home to DME Academy, the #1 ranked girls basketball team in Florida this season. Vince Carter — the highest-scoring Florida-born NBA player in history — is from Daytona Beach. Bethune-Cookman University (SWAC D1), Embry-Riddle (D2), and Daytona State College (NJCAA) provide college options at every level.
Boca Raton
Pop. 100,000
Saint Andrew’s HS is consistently ranked in the state top 10 for boys basketball. FAU Owls (AAC D1) made a Cinderella Final Four run in 2023 and continue to build their program. Lynn University (D2) provides another college option. Part of the deep South Florida basketball corridor between Miami and West Palm Beach.
Getting Started with Florida Basketball Training
With this many options, the best approach is methodical, not rushed. Here’s a simple framework.
Understand Your Goals
Is your player looking to make the school team, develop specific skills, gain competitive experience, or explore college pathways? Different goals require different programs. Don’t let Florida’s intense basketball culture push you into commitments that don’t match your family’s actual situation.
Research Your Local Market
Florida basketball training varies by region. Start with your city page to understand local options. Compare programs using the evaluation questions above. Talk to other families in your area — not just online reviews. Visit facilities and watch sessions before committing financially.
Start Small, Then Adjust
Try a few sessions or a single camp before committing to an expensive year-long program. The best trainers and programs welcome trial periods because they know their quality speaks for itself. If a program requires a large upfront financial commitment before you’ve seen their work, consider that a yellow flag.
Ready to Find Florida Basketball Training?
Start with our free evaluation guides — they work for any trainer, camp, or team in the state.




