Finding the right in-person DJ classes for beginners is harder than it looks.
You learn by standing in front of two decks, trying something, hearing it sound terrible, and having someone next to you who can fix it in under a minute. That’s the case for in-person DJ classes, and it’s why the search “DJ school near me” usually leads somewhere worth going.
The hard part is choosing. Beginner DJ courses have exploded over the last few years, and most pages all read the same: “learn to mix on industry-standard gear.” Cool. So how do you actually pick one?
This guide cuts through that. We’ll lay out the criteria that separate a good beginner course from a forgettable one, then walk through seven types of in-person DJ classes worth your time in 2026, who each one is for, and how to start.
How we evaluated beginner DJ classes
Before the list, here’s the rubric. Use it for any DJ school you’re considering, not just the ones we name.
- Real gear, not a phone app. A serious beginner class puts you on CDJs, a club-standard mixer, or proper DVS turntables. Phone-app DJ “classes” are not a substitute. Your skills need to transfer to a real booth on day one.
- Hands-on time, not lecture hours. Total course length matters less than how many minutes you actually spend mixing. A 6-hour weekend with 4 hours of stick time beats a 12-hour course that’s half slides.
- Small class size. Look for a 4 to 6 student cap. Above that, you’re sharing one CDJ with too many people and the instructor stops being able to give you feedback.
- A working DJ at the front of the room. Teaching matters, but so does proof of work. The instructor should have a current gig calendar, not just a bio from 2014.
- A clear next step. A good beginner course tells you what to take next. If the school’s catalog ends at “Intro to X” with no obvious continuation, you’ll plateau fast.
- Location and schedule that actually fit your life. “DJ school near me” is a real filter. A class on the other side of the city you can only attend twice before quitting is worse than a slightly less prestigious one you can finish.
- A path toward gigging, not just hobbying. Even if your goal is just to mix at parties, choose a program where the curriculum is designed by people who play out. The fundamentals are the same; the framing is sharper.
With those in mind, here are the seven options.
1. The Intro Weekend Course
Best for: Curious beginners who want to know if DJing is actually for them before committing to anything bigger.
Format: One to three sessions over a weekend or short window. Usually 6 to 12 hours total.
What you’ll learn:
- Beatmatching by ear and with sync
- Reading a track structure (intro, drop, outro)
- Basic EQing and gain staging
- A first transition between two records
Why it works for beginners: Low commitment. Low cost. You walk in cold and walk out with a 30-second mix that actually sounds like a mix. If you love it, you have a clear ramp into something longer. If you don’t, you’ve lost a weekend instead of $2,000.
Where to start at Sound Collective: Intro to CDJs is our most-attended beginner course for a reason. Six-student cap, working DJs as instructors, and the same Pioneer setup you’ll find at most NYC clubs.
2. The Genre-Specific Intro (Open Format, Hip-Hop, House)
Best for: Beginners who already know what music they want to play. You don’t want a generic class. You want to learn to mix the genre you already love.
Format: A multi-week course built around the conventions of one style.
What you’ll learn:
- Genre-specific BPM ranges and key relationships
- Crowd reading for that genre’s typical rooms
- Track selection (often the harder skill than the mixing itself)
- Tools that fit the format: Serato for open-format and hip-hop, CDJs and Rekordbox for house and techno
Why it works for beginners: Most “intro to DJing” curricula are generic on purpose, which means you spend weeks learning skills you’ll have to re-learn in your actual genre. Starting genre-first means every drill is the kind of mix you’ll actually do. You build muscle memory for the music you’ll play.
Where to start at Sound Collective: Intro to Serato for open-format and hip-hop foundations. Pair it with one of our genre-led in-person dj classes on the schedule for a focused build.
3. The Multi-Section In-Person DJ Program
Best for: Beginners who already know they want to take this seriously. You’re past “should I try this” and into “how do I actually get good.”
Format: A structured curriculum split into sections, usually progressing from fundamentals to performance technique to advanced effects and live remixing.
What you’ll learn:
- All of the basics from sections 1 and 2 above
- Advanced harmonic mixing and key matching
- Effects, loops, hot cues, and creative transitions
- Set construction and reading a longer arc, not just a 4-track mix
- Performing in front of an audience
Why it works for beginners: This is where most DJs find their voice. A multi-section program forces you through the parts of the craft you’d otherwise skip on your own. By the time you finish, you have something a one-off weekend course cannot give you: range.
Where to start at Sound Collective: Our DJ Programs cover the full progression with payment options across full or section-by-section enrollment. Most students start at Section 1 even with prior experience because the foundation matters.
4. Private DJ Lessons
Best for: Beginners who can’t commit to a fixed weekly schedule, learn faster 1:1, or want to focus on one specific skill.
Format: One-on-one sessions, scheduled around your availability. Pay per session or in packages.
What you’ll learn: Whatever you ask for. That’s the point.
Why it works for beginners: Group classes are more efficient per dollar, but they move at the median pace. If you’re behind, you fall further behind. If you’re ahead, you stall. Private lessons let you spend two full hours on the one skill that’s blocking you. For some students, that’s the difference between giving up and breaking through.
The catch: Privates can become expensive fast and they’re easier to skip than a class with classmates expecting you. Most students do best with a hybrid: a structured group course plus monthly privates for targeted work.
Where to start at Sound Collective: Book a private DJ lesson with a working instructor. Tell us what you want to fix. We’ll match you to the right teacher.
5. The Summer Immersive
Best for: Beginners with a flexible summer window. Students under 18. Anyone who learns better in a concentrated burst than spread across months.
Format: A full-time or near-full-time program over one to four weeks of summer. Mornings and afternoons in the studio. Practice time built in.
What you’ll learn:
- The same fundamentals as a multi-week course, accelerated
- Daily practice habits (the part most beginners never build)
- Group performance skills, often ending in a showcase
Why it works for beginners: Most students drop off DJ training because they only practice once a week. A summer immersive solves that. By the third day, you’ve done more reps than a normal student does in a month, and the muscle memory sticks. The end-of-program showcase also gives you a forcing function: you have to perform, so you actually finish what you start.
Where to start at Sound Collective: Our summer camp programs run for both youth and adults. Limited seats. Registration opens early.
6. Custom Group Programs (Schools, Nonprofits, Workforce)
Best for: Educators, after-school program directors, school administrators, and youth-serving organizations placing a group of beginners into DJ training together.
Format: A program built around your group, your timeline, and your budget. Can run on-site, off-site, or hybrid.
What you’ll learn: Custom curriculum mapped to the goals of your program, whether that’s introductory exposure, a multi-week residency, or a feeder pipeline into more serious training.
Why it works for beginners: Group learning at this age and stage is enormously effective. Students who train alongside their peers are more likely to stick with it, more likely to share equipment outside class, and more likely to keep going after the program ends.
Where to start at Sound Collective: Our custom NYC music programs work with DOE schools, nonprofits, and private institutions. Reach out for a scoping conversation.
7. The Full-Time Career Track
Best for: Beginners who want to be working DJs. Full stop. You’re not learning this as a hobby. You want gigs, residencies, and eventually income.
Format: A multi-month, cohort-based program covering DJing, production, performance, and the business side of the craft. Significant investment, significant outcome.
What you’ll learn:
- Everything in the multi-section program above
- Music production fundamentals (today’s working DJs almost always produce)
- Brand, social media, and how to build an audience
- Performance under pressure, repeatedly
- A finished portfolio: mixes, original tracks, performance footage
Why it works for beginners: The students who succeed at DJing as a career almost never get there one short course at a time. They go through an environment where the expectation is that you’re putting in serious work and surrounded by people doing the same. A full-time program is that environment.
Reality check: Not for everyone. If you’re not willing to practice between sessions, this is the wrong path. The qualifying question is simple: are you going to put in reps outside of class? If yes, this is the most direct route. If no, start with one of the courses higher on this list.
Where to start at Sound Collective: Talk to our team about the Full-Time Program. Cohorts are small and applications matter. The conversation is free and there’s no pressure to enroll.
How to choose
If you’re stuck between options, here’s the short version:
- You’re not sure DJing is for you yet: Start with #1, the intro weekend.
- You know your genre and want to mix that music specifically: #2.
- You’re ready to take it seriously over a few months: #3.
- Your schedule is unpredictable, or you want personalized pacing: #4.
- You have a summer window and learn well in bursts: #5.
- You’re placing a group, not enrolling as an individual: #6.
- Career track. You want this to be your work: #7.
Most beginners do best by combining two of these. A multi-section program plus monthly privates. A summer immersive followed by a structured fall course. The point is to keep going past the first 30-second mix.
FAQs
How long does it take to learn to DJ? Most people can complete a clean two-track mix within their first few hours of a real beginner course. Getting to the point where you can confidently play a 60-minute set takes 3 to 6 months of consistent practice. Becoming a working DJ takes years.
Do I need to own gear before I take an in-person class? No. A reputable in-person DJ class provides the gear. You’ll spend the first month or two on the school’s setup, which gives you time to figure out what to buy for home practice without rushing.
Are online DJ courses just as good? Online courses are useful as supplements. They are not a substitute for hands-on time on real gear with a working DJ giving you live feedback. Use them to deepen specific skills between in-person sessions, not as your main path.
How much should a beginner DJ course cost? Short intro courses run a few hundred dollars. Multi-section programs run into the low four figures. Full career-track programs are five-figure investments. Price is a poor proxy for quality. Class size, instructor experience, and gear are better signals.
What’s the best DJ school near me in NYC? We’re biased, but we built Sound Collective at 28 Broadway specifically for the kind of beginner-to-working-DJ pipeline this list describes. Come tour the space and decide for yourself.
Ready to start?
The hardest part of learning to DJ isn’t the gear. It’s getting yourself into the room the first time.
If you’re in NYC, book a tour of Sound Collective. We’ll show you the studios, walk you through the right course for where you are, and answer anything this guide didn’t cover. There’s no pressure to enroll. Most of our students take the tour, go home and think about it, and come back when they’re ready.
If you’re not in NYC, use the criteria at the top of this article to evaluate any school you’re considering. Real gear, hands-on hours, small class size, working instructors, a clear next step. If a school can’t show you those four things on a tour, keep looking.
Either way, start.

