Parent Resource Center
Youth hockey, honestly.
The most trusted resource for North American hockey families. Ten essential topics. Hundreds of stories. Zero hype. Built with sports psychologists, registered dietitians, college coaches and the parents who've already lived it.
Hockey families surveyed for our 2026 cost report
Average weekly hockey commitment for a 12U AAA family
Youth players who report sport-related anxiety symptoms
Of college commits who played a second sport into high school
Start with the Hockey Pathway
Not sure what comes next for your player?
The Hockey Pathway Hub shows every stage from Learn to Play through NCAA Division I — what coaches evaluate, common mistakes, and parent advice at each step.
Six words that change everything
The Car Ride Home
The most studied moment in youth sports. What to say, what to skip, and the one question Olympians say they wish their parents had asked.
- “I loved watching you play.”
- Silent rides aren't punishment — they're permission
- When to talk about the game (hint: not tonight)
Your role on this team
Hockey Parenting
How to be the parent your player needs at 8, 12 and 16 — without becoming the parent the coach dreads at the door.
- The sideline social contract
- Talking to coaches without burning bridges
- What 'support' actually looks like by age
What it really runs in 2026
Costs & Hidden Fees
Tuition, tournaments, travel, gear, off-ice, private lessons. We surveyed 3,400 families across 14 states — here's the real number, and where to save without shortchanging your kid.
- The true annual cost by age and tier
- Used-gear playbook (and what to never buy used)
- When AAA is — and isn't — worth it
The conversation hockey is finally having
Mental Health
Anxiety, perfectionism, identity, and the pressure of being 'the hockey kid.' Sports psychologists and clinicians on what to watch for and how to respond.
- Warning signs most parents miss
- Performance anxiety vs. clinical anxiety
- Finding a therapist who understands athletes
When too much is too much
Burnout & Year-Round Play
11-month seasons, three-sport summers and the science of de-loading. Why the best development models build rest into the calendar — and how to bring it home.
- The 60-day off-ice block, explained
- Multi-sport kids still win college roster spots
- How to spot burnout before it costs a season
Weekends that don't wreck the family
Travel & Tournaments
Tournament logistics, sibling sanity, hotel-room realities and a packing list that survives a 5:30 a.m. ice slot in February.
- The night-before-tournament checklist
- Road-trip nutrition that actually works
- Driving the carpool: ground rules
Fit before brand. Always.
Equipment
Skate sizing without the upsell, when a $90 stick is genuinely better than a $300 one, and the helmet questions every parent should ask before the next season.
- The skate-fit guide (parents edition)
- Sticks: flex, lie and the spec sheet decoded
- Helmet certifications that actually matter
Fueling, not dieting
Nutrition
Breakfast on game day, pre-practice plates, the rink-snack truth and what registered dietitians say about supplements for athletes under 18.
- Game-day fuel by age
- Post-practice recovery in the car
- The supplement conversation, simplified
Grades are part of the game
Balancing School
How elite junior and prep programs structure study time, the homework-on-the-road system that actually works, and what college coaches really look at in a transcript.
- The 20-minute road-trip study system
- Talking to teachers about ice time
- What college coaches read in a transcript
Siblings, partners and Sunday dinner
Family Life
How to keep a household — and a marriage — intact when one kid's calendar runs the whole house. Real strategies from families that have made it work.
- The non-hockey sibling playbook
- Splitting the load between partners
- Protecting one meal a week
The Spotlight Series
The car ride home is the most important coaching moment of the week.
In studies of NCAA and Olympic athletes, the post-game car ride is the single experience most often cited as the source of their love — or loss — of the sport. Yet it's the moment hockey parents prepare for the least.
“The six most powerful words a hockey parent can say after a game are: ‘I loved watching you play.’ Then say nothing else. Let your kid lead.”
- Don't review the game in the parking lot.
- Ask one question — about a teammate, not a play.
- Save coaching for tomorrow's drive to school.
- Match their energy. If they're quiet, be quiet.
Youth hockey, decoded each morning.
One email by 7am. The reporting, drills, recaps and recruiting news worth your time. Free, and read by 42,000+ hockey families.
