How does masters swimming in the US work?

Former Member
Former Member
Ok, so a little about me - I grew up in the UK, swam age group up to 18, took a break then retuned as a master about 10 years ago. I swam on & off during that time as marriage, kids and a move to the US all got in the way. Now in the UK all competitive swimmers (all age group standards, masters etc) must register with the ASA for insurance purposes etc and it is all done through the club. So what happens here as there seems to be so many different swimming "bodies"? Right now I cannot fathom being on a poolside 30 mins from home at 5.15am, so am going it alone.....If sometime in the future I wanted to enter a meet do I need to register with USMS? Am I allowed to, not being a US citizen? And how does this interact with the summer swimming teams? I will likely register with TAAF to swim this summer (due to an unfortunate deal with my 6 year old) so would being part of USMS mean that I'm considered "year round" and render me ineligible for the summer meets in the future? Thanks in advance (and for reading this far :blush:)
Parents
  • Former Member
    Former Member
    TAAF did have rules for USAS swimmers swimming in TAAF meets. I am not sure if it applies to the older age groups or for USMS swimmers. Best to check with them. They wanted to keep the playing field level for their summer-only swimmers. TAAF's niche is to provide a fun swim team experience for recreational swimmers, not for those serious enough to swim year-round.
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  • Former Member
    Former Member
    TAAF did have rules for USAS swimmers swimming in TAAF meets. I am not sure if it applies to the older age groups or for USMS swimmers. Best to check with them. They wanted to keep the playing field level for their summer-only swimmers. TAAF's niche is to provide a fun swim team experience for recreational swimmers, not for those serious enough to swim year-round.
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