Iowa Basketball Training – Trainers, Teams, & Camps
Iowa offers 150+ basketball trainers, 75+ camps, 100+ select and AAU teams, and 40+ college programs across all divisions. That’s a lot of options — but not all answers. This page provides context, not direction — helping families ask better questions rather than rushing decisions.
Not sure where to start?
Why This Iowa Basketball Training Directory Exists
Iowa basketball runs deep — from the oldest girls’ high school tournament in America to a boys’ state tournament that’s been filling arenas since 1912. Caitlin Clark’s historic run at the University of Iowa reminded the entire country what Iowa families already knew: this state develops basketball players. But navigating the training landscape — from Des Moines AAU circuits to small-town skill sessions — can be overwhelming, especially when every program promises results.
This page exists to help Iowa families understand what’s available, when it happens, and what questions to ask before committing time and money. We’re not here to tell you which trainer is “the best” — we’re here to give you the framework to figure out what’s right for your family. Learn how BasketballTrainer.com works and read our editorial standards.
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. Iowa basketball training is not one-size-fits-all, and neither is the decision about where to invest your time.
Iowa Basketball Season Calendar: When Everything Actually Happens
This timeline exists to help you plan thoughtfully, not to create panic about deadlines. Iowa is unique — it’s the only state in the country with separate governing bodies for boys’ (IHSAA) and girls’ (IGHSAU) athletics, which means schedules don’t always align.
High School Season (IHSAA Boys / IGHSAU Girls)
- Mid-October: Practice begins for both boys and girls
- Late November: First games — girls typically start the week of November 21; boys follow shortly after
- December–February: Regular season — your school team’s primary focus
- Late February–Early March: Boys substates and girls regionals across Iowa
- March 2–7, 2026: Girls state tournament at Casey’s Center, Des Moines (5 classes: 1A–5A)
- March 9–13, 2026: Boys state tournament at Wells Fargo Arena, Des Moines (4 classes: 1A–4A)
AAU/Select Basketball Season
Here’s what surprises many Iowa families: AAU tryouts often start in late February and early March — while the high school season is still happening. Programs like All Iowa Attack, Team Iowa, Iowa United, and Kingdom Hoops want rosters set before spring tournaments begin.
- February–March: Tryouts happening (yes, during school postseason)
- March–April: Season launches immediately after state tournaments end
- April–May: Spring tournament season
- June–August: Peak summer tournaments — teams often travel to Kansas City, Minneapolis, Omaha, and Chicago
- August: Season winds down
Basketball Camps
- May–June: Early summer camps start
- June–July: Peak camp season across Iowa
- University of Iowa Hawkeye Basketball Camps (Iowa City)
- Iowa State Cyclone Basketball Camps (Ames)
- UNI Panther Basketball Camps (Cedar Falls)
- Drake Bulldog Basketball Camps (Des Moines)
- Breakthrough Basketball camps at various Iowa locations
- Private trainer camps throughout the state
- Late July–August: Final summer opportunities before fall training begins
Year-Round Training
- September–November: Fall skill development — trainers busiest preparing players for school tryouts in October
- March–July: The overlap season — AAU practices, tournaments, and camps all happening simultaneously. This is when Iowa families feel stretched.
- Anytime: Private training available year-round in Des Moines, Cedar Rapids, Iowa City, and the Quad Cities
Planning Timeline, Not Pressure Timeline
This calendar shows when programs typically run in Iowa — 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 Iowa Reality: If you’re in the Des Moines metro, Cedar Rapids, or Iowa City, you’ll have access to most of these options locally. If you’re in smaller communities — and Iowa has hundreds of them — you’ll likely drive 45 minutes to an hour for AAU tournaments and attend camps in hub cities. That’s not a failure — that’s Iowa geography. Council Bluffs families often tap into the Omaha, Nebraska basketball scene, and Quad Cities families access programs on the Illinois side. Plan accordingly.
For official season dates and rules, visit the IHSAA Basketball page (boys) and IGHSAU Basketball page (girls).
Types of Iowa Basketball Training Programs
None of these is inherently better than the others — they’re tools for different needs at different stages of development.
Private Trainers
Best For: Individual skill development, position-specific work, building confidence before tryouts, and addressing specific weaknesses in a player’s game.
What to Know: Iowa’s private training market is growing, especially in the Des Moines metro and Cedar Rapids corridor. Sessions typically run $40–$80/hour. Some trainers work out of facilities like Iowa Basketball Academy in Cedar Rapids; others rent gym space. Quality varies significantly — ask about coaching background, training philosophy, and what specific skills they focus on. Download our free trainer evaluation guide.
Basketball Camps
Best For: Exposure to different coaching styles, learning in group settings, fun basketball experiences during summer, and getting a feel for college campuses.
What to Know: Iowa’s four D1 programs — Iowa, Iowa State, UNI, and Drake — all run summer camps. These are great for younger players to experience a college environment. Specialized skill camps tend to be smaller and more intensive. Day camps vs. overnight camps serve different purposes and age groups. Download our camp selection guide.
Select & AAU Teams
Best For: Competitive game experience beyond school season, exposure to college coaches at tournaments, playing against unfamiliar opponents, and team development.
What to Know: Iowa’s AAU scene includes programs like All Iowa Attack, Team Iowa, Iowa United, Kingdom Hoops, and Iowa Battlers. Costs vary widely — budget $500–$2,500+ per season depending on travel. Iowa teams typically travel to tournaments in Kansas City, Minneapolis, Omaha, and Chicago. The time commitment is significant, especially during the March–July overlap. Download our AAU/select team evaluation guide.
Iowa High School Basketball Rankings (2025-26)
What Rankings Actually Tell You
These rankings help you understand Iowa’s competitive landscape — they don’t define where your child should aim. Kyle Korver came from Pella, a small Iowa town. Keegan Murray emerged from Cedar Rapids. Harrison Barnes grew up in Ames. Rankings are reference points for competitive context, not ceilings for individual potential.
Iowa’s unique dual-governance means boys and girls have separate ranking systems. The IHSAA ranks boys in four classes (1A–4A); the IGHSAU ranks girls in five classes (1A–5A). Both use committee-based rankings that factor into postseason seeding.
Boys Basketball — IHSAA Final Rankings
Source: IHSAA Official Rankings, Feb. 23, 2026
| Class | #1 Team | Notable Contenders |
|---|---|---|
| 4A | Cedar Falls (20-0) | Waukee, Waukee Northwest, W. Des Moines Dowling |
| 3A | Huxley Ballard | Carroll, Clear Lake, Solon, Pella |
| 2A | Unity Christian (Orange City) | Kuemper (Carroll), Iowa City Regina |
| 1A | Ft. Dodge St. Edmond (19-2) | Marcus MMCRU, Algona Garrigan, Burlington Notre Dame |
View complete rankings at IHSAA.org
Girls Basketball — IGHSAU Final Rankings
Source: IGHSAU Official Rankings, Feb. 18, 2026
| Class | #1 Team | Notable Contenders |
|---|---|---|
| 5A | Johnston (22-0, 70+ win streak) | Dowling Catholic, Waukee Northwest |
| 4A | Sioux City Bishop Heelan (21-0) | Dallas Center-Grimes, Norwalk, Clear Creek-Amana |
| 3A | Mount Vernon | Maquoketa, Des Moines Christian |
| 2A | Hinton | Rock Valley, Iowa City Regina |
| 1A | Algona Bishop Garrigan | Council Bluffs St. Albert (defending champs) |
View complete rankings at IGHSAU.org
Iowa College Basketball Programs
College Basketball Is One Possible Outcome — Not an Expectation
Iowa has 40+ college basketball programs across all levels. Understanding what’s available helps families set realistic timelines and goals — without creating pressure. Most youth basketball players won’t play in college, and that’s perfectly fine. The skills, discipline, and friendships built through basketball have value regardless of what happens at the next level.
NCAA D1
NCAA D2
NCAA D3
NAIA
NJCAA
NCAA Division I
| School | City | Conference | Men’s | Women’s |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| University of Iowa | Iowa City | Big Ten | Men’s Basketball | Women’s Basketball |
| Iowa State University | Ames | Big 12 | Men’s Basketball | Women’s Basketball |
| University of Northern Iowa | Cedar Falls | Missouri Valley | Men’s Basketball | Women’s Basketball |
| Drake University | Des Moines | Missouri Valley | Men’s Basketball | Women’s Basketball |
NCAA Division II
| School | City | Conference |
|---|---|---|
| Upper Iowa University | Fayette | Great Lakes Valley |
NCAA Division III
| School | City | Conference |
|---|---|---|
| Buena Vista University | Storm Lake | American Rivers |
| Central College | Pella | American Rivers |
| Coe College | Cedar Rapids | American Rivers |
| Cornell College | Mount Vernon | Midwest |
| Grinnell College | Grinnell | Midwest |
| Loras College | Dubuque | American Rivers |
| Luther College | Decorah | American Rivers |
| Simpson College | Indianola | American Rivers |
| University of Dubuque | Dubuque | American Rivers |
| Wartburg College | Waverly | American Rivers |
NAIA
| School | City | Conference |
|---|---|---|
| Briar Cliff University | Sioux City | GPAC |
| Clarke University | Dubuque | Heart of America |
| Dordt University | Sioux Center | GPAC |
| Graceland University | Lamoni | Heart of America |
| Grand View University | Des Moines | Heart of America |
| Morningside University | Sioux City | GPAC |
| Mount Mercy University | Cedar Rapids | Heart of America |
| Northwestern College | Orange City | GPAC |
| St. Ambrose University | Davenport | Heart of America |
| Waldorf University | Forest City | NSAA |
| William Penn University | Oskaloosa | Heart of America |
NJCAA / Junior College
Iowa’s community college basketball scene is among the strongest in the country. The Iowa Community College Athletic Conference (ICCAC) features 15+ programs competing in NJCAA Region 11. Kirkwood Community College in Cedar Rapids won the 2025 NJCAA Division II national championship. Indian Hills Community College in Ottumwa has been a longtime NJCAA powerhouse. DMACC won the DII national title in 2021. These programs serve as genuine development pathways — many players transfer to four-year schools after two years.
Notable NJCAA programs include Indian Hills (Ottumwa), Kirkwood (Cedar Rapids), Iowa Western (Council Bluffs), DMACC (Boone), Iowa Central (Fort Dodge), Iowa Lakes (Estherville), Southeastern (West Burlington), and Hawkeye (Waterloo).
Understanding Division Levels
NCAA D1 programs offer full athletic scholarships and compete at the highest level. NCAA D2 offers partial athletic scholarships with competitive play. NCAA D3 doesn’t offer athletic scholarships but provides excellent academic-athletic balance — Iowa’s 10 D3 schools are mostly strong liberal arts colleges. NAIA programs offer athletic scholarships and are comparable to D2/D3 competition — Dordt’s women’s team won back-to-back NAIA national championships in 2024 and 2025. NJCAA community colleges offer two-year programs with potential transfer to four-year schools.
Evaluating Iowa Basketball Training Programs
We don’t tell you who to pick — we help you know what to ask. Better questions lead to better decisions for your family.
Questions About Training Quality
- Does this trainer have experience with Iowa high school basketball — do they understand IHSAA/IGHSAU rules and the classification system?
- Can they point to specific players they’ve developed who went on to play at Iowa, Iowa State, UNI, Drake, or any D2/D3/NAIA program?
- What’s the training philosophy — is it system-specific or adaptable to whatever offense/defense your school team runs?
- For group trainers in the Des Moines or Cedar Rapids market, what’s the player-to-coach ratio?
Questions About AAU/Select Programs
- Iowa AAU costs vary wildly — get the all-in number including travel to Kansas City, Minneapolis, and Omaha tournaments before committing
- How many games vs. how many practices? Some Iowa programs play 60+ games in a summer with minimal practice time
- For programs like All Iowa Attack or Kingdom Hoops, ask which specific tournaments they attend and what level of college coaches actually show up
- How does the program handle the overlap between AAU season and school commitments?
Questions About Camps
- Iowa’s D1 camps (Iowa, ISU, UNI, Drake) are great experiences — but they’re not recruiting events for most young players. Know the difference.
- What’s the camper-to-coach ratio? A camp with 200 kids and 10 coaches is a very different experience than 30 kids and 5 coaches.
- Is the college coaching staff actually involved, or is it run entirely by student-athletes and graduate assistants?
Red Flags in Iowa’s Market
- Any AAU program that guarantees “college exposure” without specifying which tournaments they attend — Iowa teams playing only local events won’t get your child seen by college coaches
- Trainers who promise a spot on the IHSAA or IGHSAU rankings — no trainer controls that
- Programs that create urgency around tryouts (“only 2 spots left!”) while high school postseason is still happening
- Anyone claiming your 8th grader needs to be on a “national exposure” team — the vast majority of Iowa players are recruited through high school and regional AAU circuits
Iowa Basketball Training Pricing Ranges
| Program Type | Typical Cost Range | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Private Training (per session) | $40–$80 | Higher in Des Moines metro; lower in smaller markets |
| Group Training (per month) | $80–$200 | Often includes 2–4 sessions per week |
| Day Camp (per week) | $150–$350 | D1 college camps on higher end |
| Overnight Camp | $300–$600 | Iowa, Iowa State, UNI camps |
| AAU/Select Team (per season) | $500–$2,500+ | Travel costs to KC, Mpls, Omaha add significantly |
Ready to evaluate Iowa basketball training options?
Iowa Basketball Training by City
Iowa’s basketball landscape varies significantly by region. Here’s what the training scene looks like in the state’s major population centers.
Des Moines
Pop. 212,421
Iowa’s basketball hub. Home to Caitlin Clark’s alma mater Dowling Catholic, consistently dominant Johnston (currently riding a 70+ win streak in girls basketball), and Drake University’s D1 program. Major AAU operations like Kingdom Hoops and Iowa United are based here. The Des Moines metro suburbs (West Des Moines, Ankeny, Urbandale, Waukee) create one of the state’s most competitive basketball corridors.
Cedar Rapids
Pop. 137,264
Iowa’s second city and home to NBA player Keegan Murray. Coe College (D3) and Kirkwood Community College — the 2025 NJCAA DII national champions — are both here. Cedar Rapids Prairie and Xavier are perennial contenders. Iowa Basketball Academy provides dedicated training space. Team Iowa AAU operates out of this area. The Cedar Rapids-Iowa City corridor forms a strong basketball pipeline.
Iowa City
Pop. 75,752
Home to the University of Iowa Hawkeyes — where Caitlin Clark became a household name. Iowa City Liberty and Iowa City West are strong high school programs. Iowa City Regina consistently competes in Class 2A state rankings. The Hawkeye basketball camps are major summer draws, and the university’s presence creates a basketball-aware community with access to high-level training resources.
Davenport / Quad Cities
Pop. 100,913
The Quad Cities straddle Iowa and Illinois, giving families unique access to programs in both states. St. Ambrose University (NAIA) is based here. Davenport North and Pleasant Valley are consistently strong high school programs. The Quad Cities AAU scene blends Iowa and Illinois competition, which means more tournament options and exposure to different styles of play.
Sioux City
Pop. 86,101
Home of NBA veteran Kirk Hinrich and currently dominant Bishop Heelan girls basketball (21-0, ranked #1 in 4A). Morningside University and Briar Cliff University (both NAIA) provide college basketball here. Western Iowa Tech runs an NJCAA program. Northwest Iowa’s small-school basketball tradition — with powerhouses from nearby communities like Orange City, Sioux Center, and Le Mars — creates a passionate basketball culture.
Ames
Pop. 66,400
Home of Iowa State University and the legendary Hilton Coliseum — “Hilton Magic” is real. Harrison Barnes grew up here. The ISU basketball camps are a major summer draw. Ames High School competes in 4A. Ames is uniquely positioned as a college town where kids grow up watching Big 12 basketball, and the training infrastructure benefits from the university presence.
Ankeny
Pop. 72,000
Iowa’s fastest-growing suburb and a basketball hotbed. Ankeny and Ankeny Centennial compete in 4A and 5A respectively, and Centennial is currently ranked in the girls 5A top 5. The city’s rapid growth means the training market is expanding quickly. Families here access Des Moines metro programs easily while also having a strong local basketball identity.
Council Bluffs
Pop. 62,800
Sitting right across from Omaha, Council Bluffs families have unique access to both Iowa and Nebraska basketball scenes. Council Bluffs St. Albert is the defending 1A girls state champion. Iowa Western Community College runs an NJCAA program. Council Bluffs Lincoln has emerged as a competitive boys program. The Omaha metro connection means more AAU options than you’d expect for this market size.
Waterloo / Cedar Falls
Pop. 67,000 / 42,000
Cedar Falls is currently the top-ranked boys basketball team in Iowa at 20-0 in Class 4A — and it’s home to the University of Northern Iowa. Hawkeye Community College runs an NJCAA program in Waterloo. The Cedar Valley’s basketball culture is strong, with Wartburg College (D3) in nearby Waverly adding another college option. Waterloo has a rich basketball tradition and produces competitive players.
Dubuque
Pop. 59,000
Eastern Iowa’s tri-state city with three college basketball programs: University of Dubuque (D3), Loras College (D3), and Clarke University (NAIA). Dubuque Wahlert and Dubuque Senior are consistently ranked in boys basketball. The city’s location on the Mississippi River means families can also access Wisconsin and Illinois programs, though Iowa’s training scene is strong enough locally.
West Des Moines / Waukee
Pop. 68,700 / 27,000
The western Des Moines suburbs are basketball powerhouses. Waukee and Waukee Northwest have both been ranked in the boys top 5 simultaneously — a testament to the area’s depth. West Des Moines Dowling Catholic (alma mater of Caitlin Clark) is a perennial boys and girls contender. The suburban growth here has fueled investment in training facilities and youth programs. Colin Rice and Landon Davis of Waukee Northwest are among Prep Hoops’ top-ranked Iowa players.
Getting Started with Iowa Basketball Training
Here’s a simple framework — not a rigid prescription — for approaching basketball training decisions in Iowa.
Understand Your Goals
Are you trying to make the school team, develop specific skills, play competitively in the offseason, or explore college opportunities? Different goals lead to different programs. There’s no wrong answer.
Research Options
Use this page, talk to other families, attend open gyms, and ask questions using our trainer evaluation guide. Don’t commit based on social media marketing alone — observe a session first.
Start Small, Adjust
Try one program before committing to multiple. Pay attention to whether your child enjoys it and is developing. It’s okay to change course. Iowa has enough options that you can find the right fit without rushing.
Download our free guides to evaluate any program with confidence.




