How Youth Basketball Is Organized on Long Island

Long Island youth basketball runs across three distinct tiers: recreational town leagues, club/travel programs, and elite AAU. Understanding which tier your child belongs in — and when to move up — is the most important decision you'll make as a basketball parent.

Recreational Tier: CYO, PAL, and Town Leagues

Most kids start here. CYO (Catholic Youth Organization) and PAL (Police Athletic League) programs run through parishes and community centers across Nassau and Suffolk. Games are local, seasons are short (November–March), and the focus is fun and fundamentals. Age groups typically follow school grades.

Age Group Breakdown

Age GroupTypical GradeLevelKey Programs
6U / RookiesK–1InstructionalYMCA, CYO, PAL
8U2–3RecCYO, PAL, town leagues
10U4–5Rec/TravelCYO, AAU entry level
12U6–7Travel/AAULevel Up, Lightning
14U8–9AAU TravelLevel Up, Pro Skills
16U / 17U10–11Elite AAUIsland Garden, DEVELUP
17U / 18U11–12Elite AAURecruiting exposure events

CYO vs PAL vs AAU — What's the Difference?

CYO runs through Catholic parishes. You don't have to be Catholic to play at most chapters. Games are typically Saturday mornings, very low cost, and heavily volunteer-run. Great for 8U–12U players new to the game.

PAL (Police Athletic League) programs operate similarly — community-based, town-level competition, affordable. Nassau PAL and Suffolk PAL each run their own basketball leagues with dozens of member programs.

AAU travel basketball runs fall through spring and involves regional and national tournament competition. Programs like Level Up Basketball LI and Island Garden Lightning are among the top AAU clubs in the tri-state area. Expect tryouts, year-round commitment, and significantly higher costs ($500–$3,000/year).

Parent tip: Most coaches recommend keeping kids in recreational basketball until at least 5th grade (10U). Early specialization in AAU before that age rarely provides a developmental advantage and often leads to burnout.

When Should My Child Try Out for Travel Basketball?

Most Long Island travel clubs hold tryouts in April–May for the following fall season. Look for programs that emphasize development over winning at the youth level. Ask coaches how many players from each team move up to the next age group each year — that's your best indicator of whether a program actually develops players.

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