Adults Program

Point Break is known for the quality of its training.

We are proud to have a strong team of highly experienced coaches and a deep bench of high-level belts on the mats. Our technical standard is high — and so is our commitment to humility, safety, and respect. This is a gym where skill and culture evolve together.

We specialise in Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu and Muay Thai, delivering precise, high-level instruction in a grounded, ego-aware environment. Some members train for competition. Others train for longevity, strength, and community. Both are equally valued.

Our training is ecological and adaptive. While we maintain a high technical standard, we are equally committed to integrating beginners with care and intention. No one is thrown in without support. Students learn to problem-solve under pressure rather than rely on memorisation alone, developing real understanding and adaptability.

Because of our culture of safety, humility, and openness, Point Break is a place where people feel confident to push their personal edges. You’ll be challenged — but never shamed. Supported — but never coddled.

Here, strength is developed through experience. Confidence is earned through consistency. And power is not just built physically — it is embodied.

While we don’t teach MMA as a standalone program, we actively support athletes who compete in MMA — helping them refine their Jiu-Jitsu, sharpen their ground game, and build the resilience required to perform at a high level.

If you’re looking for serious training in a respectful and grounded community, we’d love to welcome you to the mats.

Teens Program

The teenage years are a powerful threshold.

Strength increases. Identity forms. Confidence can either solidify or fracture.

Our Teens program bridges youth and adulthood intentionally. From age 14, students are gradually introduced into adult classes with care and guidance. This transition is purposeful — creating positive role modelling, mentorship, and real-world resilience.

For teenage boys, this means learning to measure their strength alongside disciplined adult men who model humility, control, and accountability.

For teenage girls, it means safely training with adult bodies — building embodied confidence, technical skill, and the lived experience of their strength in a supportive environment.

This is a grounded rite of passage within martial arts culture. Teens learn not only how to sharpen their skills, but how to communicate clearly, set healthy boundaries, and carry their increasing strength with integrity and responsibility.

They are not rushed. They are not thrown in. They are guided.

And through that guidance, they grow into capable, resilient young adults.