9. US Olympic Team
The tip of the pyramid, refilled every four years: the top two finishers in each individual event at Trials (plus relay depth in the 100 and 200 freestyle) earn a roster spot.
Find a swimmer by name — try “Last” or “First Last”.
How USA Swimming meets stack up, from the neighborhood pool to the Olympic team. Click a level for the details.
The tip of the pyramid, refilled every four years: the top two finishers in each individual event at Trials (plus relay depth in the 100 and 200 freestyle) earn a roster spot.
Held once every four years, with its own published cuts. Given the depth of American swimming, making a final here is often called as hard as making an Olympic final — dozens of swimmers chase two seats per event.
The Phillips 66 National Championship — the fastest annual meet on the ladder, open to any age with the cut. Placing here selects US rosters for Worlds, Pan Pacs, and other international teams.
2026 example cut — girls 100 free (LCM, 17): 56.69
An international-level championship (historically “Senior Nationals”) swum in winter. All ages race together; the field mixes pros, college stars, and juniors chasing senior-level competition.
2026 example cut — girls 100 free (LCM, 17): 56.79
The national championship for swimmers 18-and-under, with a summer edition and a Winter Juniors in December. Cuts are faster than Futures; this is where the country’s best age-groupers race each other.
2026 example cut — girls 100 free (LCM, 17): 57.69
The bridge between Sectionals and the national meets, swum each summer at several regional sites. It gives swimmers who have outgrown Sectionals a bigger stage before they hold a Junior/Senior National cut.
2026 example cut — girls 100 free (LCM, 17): 59.29
The first national-tier rung: no age brackets — any swimmer with the qualifying time can enter. Meets run regionally within each zone (our data tracks nine regional editions) across both the short-course and long-course seasons.
2026 example cut — girls 100 free (LCM, 17): 1:04.39
Each Local Swimming Committee (60 across the country) crowns age-group and senior champions, usually behind its own LSC cuts. Zone all-star meets then match the best of neighboring LSCs within the four zones.
Where everyone starts: club dual meets, invitationals, and open meets with no qualifying times. USA Swimming’s motivational standards (B through AAAA) grade every time by age — the colored chips you see on swimmer pages here.
Swimmers don’t have to climb in order — some skip rungs entirely. On every swimmer page, the Sectionals ✓-style chips show where each personal record sits on this ladder for the swimmer’s zone and age group; example cuts above come from the current season’s published qualifying times and update with them.