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Martial Arts Training in March
4 destinations in season, cheapest first.
Chiang Mai
THChiang Mai is where Muay Thai training stops being a tourist add-on and becomes a lifestyle. The city hosts dozens of gyms, from raw fighter-focused camps on the outskirts to polished operations with English-speaking trainers, and the cost of living lets you train twice a day for weeks without straining your budget. The fight scene is active year-round, so dedicated students can test themselves in a real stadium bout. Between sessions, you are in one of Southeast Asia's most liveable cities: old-city temples, mountain air, and a community of long-stay travelers who came for a week and stayed for a season.
Why here →Rio de Janeiro
BRBrazilian jiu-jitsu was codified in Rio by the Gracie family, and the city remains the densest concentration of elite BJJ practitioners on earth. Gracie Barra headquarters in Barra da Tijuca is the organizational center of one of the largest BJJ networks globally. Elsewhere in the city, Ipanema and Tijuca have academies running under instructors in direct lineage from the founding families. Rolling in Rio means rolling with practitioners for whom BJJ is not a gym activity but a cultural practice. The caliber of training partners, the competition calendar, and the city's energy make extended training stays a full lifestyle.
Why here →Okinawa
JPKarate was born in Okinawa, developed in the Ryukyu Kingdom before Japan annexed the islands in 1879, and the traditional schools here carry lineages that predate the versions exported to the mainland and the world. The Okinawa Karate Kaikan, opened in 2017 with government backing, provides a formal practice space and orientation point, but the real value is in the traditional dojos scattered across Naha and the central island: Shorin-ryu practitioners at Shuri-te lineage dojos, Goju-ryu practitioners at schools tracing back to Miyagi Chojun. This is where you come to study the source material.
Why here →Tokyo
JPTokyo is where the founding institutions of Japanese martial arts are based. The Kodokan Judo Institute in Bunkyo is the global authority on judo, founded by Jigoro Kano in 1882 and still running daily practice sessions open to visiting practitioners. The Aikikai Hombu Dojo in Shinjuku is where Aikido was systematized and is still operated by the Ueshiba family. The Japan Karate Association headquarters runs classes for serious practitioners. For anyone who cares about lineage and source material in a Japanese art, training in Tokyo means training where the curriculum was written.
Why here →