Identify Karate Belts

Modern students of karate display their rank by a system of different colored belts, or obi. As students advance in their training, they swap out their previous belt for one of a new color to signify their progress. Each karate style has its own ranking system and within those are variations between organizations and even individual dojo. However, there are some general rules one can learn to get a better idea of what a particular karate belt may mean.

Steps

  1. Start with a white belt. Martial artists did not adopt the colored belt system until the 20th century, and it's common for each school to use its own variation.[1] Almost every school starts the beginners with a white belt.
    • A karate student begins at 10th kyu (student rank).
  2. Move up to yellow belt. If students train regularly, they get to take a test every few months to progress to the next kyu. At certain milestone ranks, the student gets a new belt. Yellow is usually the second belt a student wears, at 8th kyu.[2]
  3. Advance through darker and darker belts. This is the part that varies the most between schools. In general, students spend their first year advancing to darker and darker belts.
    • A typical progression is orange (around 7th kyu), green, blue, and purple (around 4th kyu). Many schools use a slightly different order, or one fewer color.[3]
  4. Complete kyu advancement with brown belt. The highest ranking in the kyu system is almost always the brown belt. The student typically earns this around 3rd kyu, and continues to wear it as they advance to 1st kyu.
    • The student has typically been training for over a year by the time they reach the brown belt. Many students continue to wear the brown belt for another two years after that, although they do get to progress from 3rd kyu brown belt to 1st kyu brown belt.[2]
  5. Achieve black belt. The famous black belt is a student's great achievement. Contrary to popular understanding, though, this doesn't mean the student is a master. Completing a bachelor's degree is a good analogy: a new black belt has a broad understanding and competence, and may be qualified to teach others.[4]
    • Karate artists can still advance from this point, but the belt color remains black. They now use the dan ranking system, starting from the 1st stage (Sho Dan) and moving upward. (Note this is the opposite of the highest to lowest kyu system.)
  6. Identify stripes on belts. Some schools use striped belts in addition to solid colors. These stripes typically show that a student is further along than the solid belt, but not yet to the next color. These stripes are usually either white or the next highest color in the ranking system.
    • For example, if a student belongs to a school where the color order goes from yellow to orange, they may have a solid yellow belt. A few months later they may attain a yellow belt with orange stripes, and eventually move on to solid orange.
    • Some dojo signify dan levels (black belt ranks) with white or red stripes on the black belt. White or red tips or ends are also sometimes used.
  7. Ask the martial artists for details. You may need to know the practitioner's home dojo to understand whether blue is higher than green, or what a more complicated system of stripes means. Also keep in mind that each school has its own requirements and standards for moving along in rank. A student considered a 7th kyu at one dojo may have actually studied longer than a 5th kyu at a different dojo. Talk to the instructors, also called sensei, who teach at the dojo to find out more. Many schools and organizations explain their ranks and belt colors on their websites.

Tips

  • One way to remember the light to dark color order is to keep in mind its possible origins in WWII-era Japan. In these times of scarcity, students may have dyed the same belt darker and darker rather than purchase a new one. Another fun story claims that the belts were never washed, and eventually turned black with grime — but this one is definitely an urban legend.[5][4]
  • There are dozens of different karate styles, each with its own unique organizations and traditions. Remember that belt color ranking systems vary widely between dojo. The explanations given here are only a general guide.
  • In World Karate Federation tournaments, competitors wear red or blue belts. These do not signify rank.[6]

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Sources and Citations

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