The first time I tried to volunteer with a youth football program, I was told I needed certifications before I could set foot on the practice field. I had played high school football. I knew the game. But I had no idea which certifications, where to get them, or in what order. Every website pointed somewhere different. A few coaches I asked shrugged and said “just contact your local association” — which isn’t an answer.
If you’re figuring out how to get into coaching football — whether that means running drills for eight-year-olds on Saturday mornings or eventually standing on a high school sideline on Friday nights — this guide gives you the actual path, not “follow your passion.” The specific steps, the certifications, and the honest truth about what it takes depending on where you’re starting from.
Table of Contents
- Which Situation Are You In?
- Find Your Coaching Path (Interactive Tool)
- Universal Requirements
- Certifications That Actually Matter
- Do You Need a Teaching Degree?
- State Requirements
- How to Land Your First Role
- The Football Coaching Career Ladder
- Start Coaching Football This Month
- Frequently Asked Questions
- Where to Go Next
Which Situation Are You In?
Before anything else, be honest about your starting point. “How to get into coaching football” looks completely different depending on whether you’re walking into a rec league program, a school athletic department, or transitioning from another coaching role. Most articles skip this and write one generic path — which is why most articles don’t actually help. Answer three quick questions below and you’ll get your specific first step instead of a generic one.
Find Your Coaching Path
Answer 3 questions to get your personalized first steps.
What’s your coaching experience right now?
Universal Requirements: What Almost Every Program Will Ask For
Regardless of which situation applies to you, the core football coaching requirements are close to universal. Not every program requires all of these, but if you show up without them, you'll be turned away or told to come back.
Background check. Any program working with minors will require one: youth leagues, school programs, everything. Most use services like SportsPilot or the LeagueAthletics background check system. Cost is typically $20–$40, and you'll need to renew every one to two years. Run this early because processing can take one to two weeks, and you can't be on a practice field until it clears.
One thing most guides skip: if you're coaching as a non-teacher volunteer rather than a school employee, verify whether the program's liability coverage extends to you. Some do; some don't. A personal volunteer coach liability policy through an organization like K&K Insurance runs $50–$150 a year and is worth having before you need it. Now, the certs.
Concussion training. This is the one that catches people off guard because it sounds optional until it isn't. Almost every organized youth and high school program now requires documented concussion education. You need a certificate you can show. The free option is the CDC's Heads Up online course, which takes about 30 minutes. USA Football also offers a concussion module as part of their Youth Coach Certification. Either works for most programs, so just make sure you get the certificate PDF at the end.
CPR / First Aid certification. High school programs and many organized youth leagues require current CPR/First Aid certification. The American Red Cross offers in-person and blended learning options for around $65–$85. It takes a few hours and is valid for two years. Some states require this specifically for school-based coaches.
Heat and hydration training. A growing number of state athletic associations now require heat illness prevention training, particularly in the South and Southwest. NFHS offers this as an online course, often free or under $15. Check your state's requirements. This is easy to miss and just as easy to complete before it becomes a problem.
Certifications That Actually Matter
Here's where most guides list every certification that exists and leave you to sort it out. I'm not doing that. Here are the ones worth your time and money, in order of priority.
| Certification | Who Needs It | Required vs. Recommended | Current Cost | Time |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| CDC Heads Up Concussion | Everyone | Required by most programs | Free | ~30 min |
| USA Football Youth Coach Certification | Youth/rec coaches | Required by USA Football leagues; strongly recommended otherwise | ~$24.50 | 4–6 hrs |
| NFHS Fundamentals of Coaching | School-based coaches | Required in many states for school coaching | Free–$35 | 3–4 hrs |
| NFHS Coaching Football | Anyone coaching at HS level | Required or strongly expected in most states | ~$75–$100 | 8–10 hrs |
| NFHS Level 1 (full bundle) | Serious HS candidates | Recommended; some states require for paid roles | ~$160–$200 | 15–20 hrs total |
| CPR / First Aid (Red Cross or AHA) | School-based coaches | Required in most states for school coaching | $65–$85 | 4–5 hrs |
| NFHS Heat Illness Prevention | School coaches in hot-climate states | Required in many Southern/Southwest states | Free–$15 | ~1 hr |
| State-specific courses | Varies by state | Varies — check your state athletic association | Varies | Varies |
If I were starting from zero today, I'd do the CDC Heads Up course first (free, 30 minutes), then the USA Football Youth Coach Certification before making a single call. Those two together cost under $25 and clear you for virtually any youth program in the country. Everything else — NFHS, CPR, state courses — you layer in once you know which path you're actually on. Don't spend money on certifications before you've confirmed what your specific program or state requires.
A note on the NFHS Coaching Football course: it's now integrated with USA Football content. The current course length and pricing are listed at nfhslearn.com — check before you enroll, as NFHS has updated both in recent years. Most people underestimate the time commitment regardless, so build a full day into your timeline, not an evening.
For a deeper breakdown of which certifications are worth it at each level, football coaching certifications worth getting covers each one including renewal schedules.
Do You Need a Teaching Degree to Coach Football?
No. But "no" needs specifics, because the answer looks different at each level.
At the youth and rec league level: teaching credentials never come up. You need a background check, the standard safety certs, and whatever the specific league requires. That's it.
At the high school level as a volunteer: most states allow non-teachers to volunteer as assistant coaches. The specific approval process varies: some schools require district or principal sign-off, some just need AD approval. But the path exists in most states without a teaching job.
At the high school level as a paid coach: this is where it gets complicated. Many schools prefer to hire coaches who also hold a teaching position because the teacher salary subsidizes what is typically a modest coaching stipend. You're not legally required to be a teacher in most states, but in practice, a school with ten applicants where eight already teach in the district will often default to those candidates.
I'll be direct about the limits of what I can tell you here: the paid-position landscape varies enough by district and state that anyone who gives you a universal answer is guessing. What I can say with confidence is that the teaching-credential question is less of a barrier at the entry level than most people assume — and more of a practical competitive reality at the paid level than most guides admit.
State Requirements: The Framework for Looking Yours Up
I'm not going to give you a 50-state table here, for one practical reason: state athletic association requirements change, sometimes annually, and a table in an article goes stale fast. What I can give you is the five-minute framework to find your specific requirements.
Search: "[your state] high school athletic association coaching requirements"
Every state has an athletic association that sets the rules for school-based coaching. The NFHS State Associations directory lists all 50 — click yours and look for a page called "Coaching Education" or "Coaching Requirements."
What you're specifically looking for:
- Whether your state requires NFHS Fundamentals of Coaching as a prerequisite
- Whether there are state-specific courses beyond NFHS
- Whether a teaching credential is required for paid positions
- Whether volunteer coaches have different requirements than paid coaches
States vary significantly. Some are open to non-teacher volunteers with just NFHS Level 1. Others require district-level approval for any non-teacher on a school sideline. Knowing your state's rules before you walk into an AD conversation is the difference between looking prepared and looking like you did five minutes of research.
How to Actually Land Your First Coaching Role
Most people get stuck between finishing their certifications and actually getting on a sideline. Here's what the transition actually looks like.
Start With Youth Football
For anyone wondering how to become a youth football coach, this is the answer: start here, at the youth level, as a volunteer. It isn't a consolation prize — it's the actual path. One season as a youth assistant gives you film to reference, relationships to name-drop, and proof that you can handle a practice without losing anyone. High school ADs ask "what's your coaching experience?" and "youth football volunteer, last season" is a real answer. Take it seriously at whatever level will have you.
To find youth programs: search your city or county name + "youth football league," or check USA Football's league finder. Pop Warner and local parks and rec programs are the most common entry points. Email or call the league coordinator and say you'd like to volunteer as a coach. Ask what their requirements are and what the timeline looks like.
Cold Outreach to High School ADs
Most assistant coaching roles are never posted publicly. They're filled by someone the head coach or AD already knows — or by someone who showed up and asked. If you want to move into a school program, you have to initiate. Here's the email that works:
Subject: Volunteer Coaching Interest — Football / [Your Name]
Hi Coach [last name], my name is [your name]. I played high school football at [school or "locally"] and have been coaching youth football for [X season(s)] with [league name]. I'm looking to step up to the high school level and would love to talk about any volunteer assistant opportunities you might have.
I have my background check, concussion certification, and [NFHS Fundamentals / NFHS Coaching Football] already completed. I'm available [evenings / weekends / both] and I'm not looking for compensation — I want to learn from a program that takes things seriously.
I'd be happy to come watch a practice or meet whenever works for you. [Your name] / [Phone number]
You named your certifications proactively (ADs don't want to track that down), you named your availability, and you made it easy to say yes with zero obligation. Send this to every high school within a reasonable distance. Expect to hear back from maybe 20–30%. That's fine — you only need one yes.
What to Do at Your First Practice
Show up early. Stay late. Do whatever the head coach asks without needing it explained twice. In my experience, the coaches who get invited back — and eventually get paid — are the ones who made everyone's job easier, not the ones who had the best football opinions. Don't offer your X's and O's opinions the first week, or the first month. Ask questions when you're not in the middle of a drill. Take notes on things that surprise you. Your job in the first season is to learn, not to be noticed.
The Football Coaching Career Ladder
Here's the realistic progression from first-time volunteer to head coach. Most coaches spend 2–4 years at each level, but the timeline compresses if you're building relationships intentionally — the coaches who move fastest are usually the ones who treated their volunteer season like an audition, not a placeholder.
| Stage | Role | Typical Timeline | What Moves You Up |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Youth volunteer assistant | Season 1–2 | Showing up, getting certified, building a reference |
| 2 | Youth head coach or HS volunteer assistant | Season 2–4 | Taking initiative; AD relationship; sustained reliability |
| 3 | JV or freshmen assistant (paid stipend) | Year 3–6 | Position-specific expertise; film work; staff trust |
| 4 | Varsity assistant / position coach | Year 5–10 | Scheme development; on-field results; reputation |
| 5 | Coordinator (OC or DC) | Year 8–15 | Scheme development; leadership; wins |
| 6 | Head coach | Year 10–20+ | Coordinator experience; community relationships; application process |
High school assistant coaches in most states earn between $2,000 and $8,000 per season. Head coaches at strong programs earn $5,000–$18,000+, with some Texas and Georgia programs significantly higher. These stipends typically supplement a teacher's salary, which is why non-teacher coaches often take longer to become the financial priority in a school's hiring decisions.
One move that accelerates the timeline regardless of your starting level: attend a coaching clinic. The Glazier Clinics and the AFCA (American Football Coaches Association) conventions run annually and are open to coaches at all levels. They're the fastest way to meet ADs, coordinators, and head coaches outside your immediate geography — and the networking there is worth more than any certification.
For a detailed breakdown of how to move from volunteer to paid position, including what ADs actually look for in a coaching hire, the youth sports coaching jobs guide covers that path specifically.
Start Coaching Football This Month: Your Action Plan
Work through this week by week. If you get to week four and nothing has moved, the answer is almost always more volume: reach out to more programs. The youth football landscape has constant turnover. Someone nearby needs a coach right now; they just don't know you exist yet.
Week 1 — Build the foundation: Complete the CDC Heads Up Concussion course (free, 30 minutes) at headsup.cdc.gov. Initiate your background check through your local youth league or SportsPilot. Identify 3–5 local youth football leagues and note their volunteer requirements. Look up your state's high school athletic association coaching requirements.
Week 2 — Get certified: Complete the USA Football Youth Coach Certification (~$24.50) if you're targeting youth football. Begin NFHS Fundamentals of Coaching if you're targeting school programs. Schedule your CPR/First Aid course if your state or target program requires it. Confirm your background check is processing.
Week 3 — Make contact: Email at least one youth football league coordinator expressing interest in volunteering. If targeting high school: send the outreach email above to 3–5 local high school ADs. Ask any coaches you know personally who they'd recommend reaching out to.
Week 4 — Show up: Attend a practice or meeting with whatever program responds first. Complete any remaining certifications while you're waiting. Follow up (once, professionally) with any ADs who haven't responded.
Frequently Asked Questions
Getting certified gets you on the field — building the right coaching mindset is what determines how long you stay and how far you grow. Once you're running practices, the football drill equipment guide covers what you actually need in year one versus what can wait.
Where to Go Next
The path to getting into coaching football is less complicated than the internet makes it look, and more relationship-dependent than most guides admit. Get your certifications in order, show up somewhere and start learning, and take every season seriously regardless of level. The coaches who advance are almost always the ones who made themselves indispensable wherever they started.
- Youth Sports Coaching Jobs: How to Find and Land Your First Role — the hiring process, what organizations look for, and how to build a coaching resume from zero.
- Coaching Certification Online: The Best Options for Football Coaches (2026) — NFHS, USA Football, and state-specific requirements with honest assessments of what's worth the money at each level.