
Apply advanced movement skills to more complete acrobatic flying with greater precision, control and leadership. This stage brings together acrobatic sequences, flare control, base flying and technical responsibility before progressing into larger suits or break-out pathways.
Apply advanced movement skills to more complete acrobatic flying with greater precision, control and leadership. This stage brings together acrobatic sequences, flare control, base flying and technical responsibility before progressing into larger suits or break-out pathways.
Stage 5 is where technical movement begins to come together in a more complete acrobatic context. Building on the transitions, backflying and manoeuvre control developed in Stage 4, this stage introduces more refined acrobatic sequences, flare use, base flying and greater responsibility within technical group jumps.
This is the final core stage within the beginner suit pathway, designed to help pilots demonstrate not just skill, but control, judgement and repeatability before considering progression into a larger suit.
Stage 1
First Flight
Course
Stage 2
Essential Wingsuit
Techniques
Stage 3
Aerodynamic Wingsuit
Proficiency
Stage 4
Wingsuit Transitions
& Backflying
Stage 5
Precision Wingsuit
Acrobatics


Stage 5 is about taking advanced movement skills and applying them in a more complete, disciplined and purposeful way. It is no longer just about being able to transition or backfly well. It is about combining those skills into cleaner acrobatic flying, using flare control effectively, and showing the awareness and maturity needed to support more technical jumps.
This stage also introduces a wider sense of responsibility. Pilots begin to understand what it means to act as a stable base, support the group through better planning, and fly in a way that builds confidence rather than uncertainty in those around them.
Safety emphasis
As acrobatic complexity increases, the margin for error narrows. Good Stage 5 progression is built on smooth execution, clear break-off planning, strong altitude awareness and the discipline to prioritise safety over completing a sequence. Control and judgement matter more than trying to make the jump look impressive.
Build the ability to link advanced movements together in a way that remains smooth, precise and controlled.
Refine manoeuvres from the dive pool with greater emphasis on timing, alignment and consistency.
Develop a more deliberate understanding of suit flare dynamics to reduce forward speed while maintaining stability and awareness.
Begin taking greater responsibility for planning, role clarity and safety within more technical jumps.
Focus on flying in a way that looks and feels deliberate, rather than rushed, reactive or over-flown.


01- Ground review of acrobatic sequences and movement timing
02 – Progressive work through dive-pool style manoeuvres
03 – Flare drills focused on reducing speed without losing stability
04 – Leadership exercises involving jump planning, role setting and safety management
05 – Debriefs focused on movement quality, sequencing, awareness and decision-making

Once Stage 5 has been completed, pilots may choose to transition to a larger or intermediate suit. If they do, the progression path starts again at Stage 3, allowing them to rebuild precision, performance and movement quality in the new suit.
For those staying within their current suit, this stage also opens the door to break-out pathways such as dynamic flying, vertical flying and other specialist disciplines.
Guides get you the framework. A coach gets you the reps. Find someone for where you are in your flying.
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