Pole fitness attire shifts at every level because the grip requirements shift. Level 1 is mostly floor work, so coverage is fine. Level 2 introduces climbs, which means inner-thigh skin contact. By Level 4 and above, students wear pole-specific shorts and sports bras for full grip surface. Here is the level-by-level guide.
Level 1 pole introduces the floor warm-up, basic spins from the floor, the chair grip, the pole sit on the floor, and the very first standing spins. None of these moves require above-knee skin contact with the pole. That means you can dress for comfort:
Most Level 1 students arrive in leggings and a fitted tank, do their first few classes that way, and then start swapping in shorts once the instructor introduces the first climb. Bring shorts to your second class so you can switch mid-session if needed.
Skin contact is not the priority yet. Familiarity with the pole, the floor sequences, and the studio etiquette is the priority. Dress so you can focus on the technique.
Level 2 introduces the basic climb, the seated pole sit (above the floor), and the first inverts. Every one of these moves requires inner-thigh skin grip on the pole. Leggings stop working here.
The Level 2 standard:
This is the level where most students buy their first pair of pole-specific shorts. The difference between general athletic shorts and pole shorts is the cut: pole shorts are higher cut at the hip and tighter at the inner thigh, so they stay in place during a knee hook or a basic invert.
If your studio sells branded shorts, this is the level to invest in a few pairs. You will wear them every class for the next year of training.
Bear Grips Pro Shops: Custom Apparel for Your Team. No Minimums. Free Shipping.Level 3 moves into aerial inverts (inverting from a climb without touching the floor), shoulder mounts, and the first variations of the basic spins from aerial position. Side body grip and underarm grip both become important.
Level 3 attire:
This is the level where many students start asking instructors about specific pole apparel brands and what works for advanced grip. The honest answer is: anything that stays put and exposes the grip zones. Pole-specific brands work, athletic brands with the right cut work, and increasingly studio-branded apparel works because it is designed by people who teach pole.
Level 4 and above includes drops, advanced inverts, deadlifts, handsprings, and pole choreography. At this level the attire is functionally minimal:
Advanced students often have a specific pair of pole shorts for showcases and a separate pair for training. Showcase shorts are usually the studio's branded apparel or a specific competition-style pair. Training shorts can be more casual.
The advanced wardrobe also includes a heavier emphasis on the warm-up layer: most advanced students wear long pants or joggers and a hoodie until the technique portion starts. Bodies need to be warm before the high-load aerial work, so the warm-up layer matters more at this level.
Heels classes are a separate track that runs alongside the pole fitness levels. The apparel is more stylized:
Heels classes often include a choreography or freestyle portion at the end, which is where the more stylized pieces come out. The technique portion of the class still follows the same grip rules as your fitness level.
Studios that teach both pole fitness and heels usually offer branded apparel that works for both contexts: pole shorts, sports bras, and crop tops that members can mix with their own stylized pieces. Owners interested in the full setup can see our branded merch guide for pole studios.
Open a Pro Shop for your pole studio. Stock shorts, sports bras, crop tops, hoodies, and leggings for every level. Members order direct, you earn a margin on every piece.
Start FreeStarting at Level 2, when the curriculum introduces climbs. Climbs need inner-thigh grip and leggings prevent that. Most students switch to shorts by their third or fourth class.
Only for warm-up and floor work. Any inversion, climb, or aerial move at Level 2 and above requires bare-thigh contact with the pole. Leggings are the warm-up layer, not the technique layer.
Pole shorts are cut higher at the hip, tighter at the inner thigh, and shorter on the leg. They stay in place during inverts and leg hangs. Regular athletic shorts ride up and shift during climbs.
The shorts and top requirements are the same. Heels class adds pole heels and often knee pads, plus optional stylized pieces (mesh tops, fishnet sleeves) for the choreography portion at the end.