Find your people, nearby.
Community members and teachers near you, filterable by role, skill level, and what they're working on. Reach out, train, learn.
AcroLinq
AcroLinq is a free app that helps the acro community discover skills, track progress, find events, and connect with others around the world.
One email when we launch. No spam, ever.
Everything you'd otherwise stitch together from group chats, screenshots, and Instagram DMs — collected into one calm space, made for how acro actually moves.
Community members and teachers near you, filterable by role, skill level, and what they're working on. Reach out, train, learn.
A global feed of jams, classes, festivals, and retreats — community-submitted, reviewed before they appear.
Hundreds of acro and acroyoga skills by discipline, base family, and level. Track your own. Find others on the same trick.
More on the support page — but these are the ones most people ask first.
A community app for the acrobatics and acroyoga world. Discover events near you, find practice partners and teachers, track your skill progress, and connect with other acrobats — all in one place.
Pre-launch right now. iOS first, Android in time. Free to join — no subscriptions or paid tiers planned for the core experience. You'll get one email the day the app goes live on the App Store. Nothing before, nothing after.
Community submissions, reviewed by us before they appear publicly. You can add events you know about, and event organizers can claim or manage their own. Listed types include classes, jams, workshops, training sessions, festivals, and retreats.
You choose. Your general area is only visible based on the visibility settings you control. A more precise location can be shared with Close Friends — and only with people you've added to that list yourself. Your location is never public by default.
Both. Skill tracking starts at "Want to learn" — beginners are first-class in the system. Teachers get a dedicated Teacher Tools section to share offerings, availability, and lesson details. Find people at your level, find someone to learn from, or be the one teaching.
A starter set — not an empty shell, not a finished library either. We've imported events from across the acro community so you'll find real things happening near you on day one. The skill library is growing more slowly, with a focused set of core moves and the taxonomy in place. From there, the community adds events we missed, submits skills, and contributes perspectives. The more practitioners join, the richer it gets.
I built AcroLinq because I wanted a better way to track my training. I was keeping lists in my phone of the skills I wanted to try, ones I was working on, ones I’d gotten solid. Without local classes nearby, I had to figure out every session myself: what to try next, what to drill, when to stop pushing.
Traveling made the other half clear. So much of the acro world lives across group chats, Instagram saves, word of mouth, and chance encounters. Every new city, I’d find myself searching for the same things: a jam I might miss, a teacher I’d want to learn from, someone to train with that week.
I’ve never had a steady acro partner either. My partner in life doesn’t do acro, so every session has meant finding someone at the right level, working on the same things, free that night. Festivals are when it’s even harder; everyone seems to arrive paired up, and even the few who don’t, you can’t tell who’s safe to work with. In acro, that mismatch isn’t just awkward; it can hurt people.
So I’m building AcroLinq. Not as a replacement for teachers or classes, but as a way to make the people doing the work findable, if they want to be. A way to pull workshops, festivals, and jams into one place. A way to put spotting and safety guidance within reach of small communities and anyone trying something new.
We'll send one email the day AcroLinq goes live on the App Store. Nothing before. Nothing after.
Get on the launch listFree · iOS first · Android in time