K-pop dance has exploded in Singapore over the past five years. Most parents we talk to first hear about it from their daughter, usually after she’s been watching BLACKPINK or NewJeans on YouTube and started copying the choreography in her bedroom.

The natural question: is a K-pop dance class actually a good idea for a 9-year-old? Or is it more of an adult thing?
Here’s the honest read.
Kids K-pop and adult K-pop are not the same product
In Singapore’s dance studio scene, “K-pop class” can mean very different things depending on the studio and the age group:
Adult K-pop class (typically 18+ open class): – Choreography drills of full music videos – Fast pace, expectation that students learn quickly – Heavy on isolations, sharp footwork, hip work – Some choreography may include moves that are mature/sensual
Kids K-pop class (typically ages 6-14): – Age-appropriate song choices (avoiding overly sexual choreography) – Slower learning pace, more repetition – Focus on coordination, timing, having fun – Often a softer choreographic interpretation of original videos
Some studios run “kids K-pop” classes that are basically adult K-pop with younger kids in them. That’s not great. Look for studios that have dedicated kids K-pop curriculum, not just open classes thrown at younger students.
What K-pop dance actually develops in kids
Beyond the obvious fun factor, K-pop classes build:
- Sharp coordination — K-pop choreography is detailed and precise; this trains attention to body details
- Rhythm and musicality — K-pop tracks have clear, layered rhythms that teach kids to hear and dance multiple musical layers at once
- Performance presence — K-pop performers face the camera deliberately; this teaches “performance face” which transfers to school showcases, SYF, and beyond
- Group sync — K-pop is almost always group choreography; kids learn to dance with others, not just next to them
These are real skills. K-pop class is not just “let her have fun” — it’s legitimate dance education with specific strengths.
Ages and what to expect
Ages 6-8: Class should be 30-45 minutes, with breaks. Choreography is short, repeated many times. The goal is the joy of moving to music they love. Don’t expect technique depth at this age.
Ages 9-11: This is the sweet spot. Kids at this age can hold longer choreography, work on technical details (isolations, footwork), and start performing what they learn. Most studios have their best kids K-pop programmes here.
Ages 12-14: Approaching teen. Some studios start having mixed teen/adult classes, which can be great if your daughter is mature enough, or stressful if she’s still very much a kid. Trial-class first.
Ages 15+: Open adult K-pop is fine and often where serious K-pop dancers progress.
What to watch out for
1. Inappropriate choreography: Some K-pop videos have moves that are fine for adult performers but uncomfortable in a kids class. A good kids K-pop coach modifies these. A bad one doesn’t. If you watch the end-of-term performance and feel uncomfortable, that’s worth a conversation.
2. Performance-only focus: Some K-pop schools push kids toward stage performance very early. Performances are great if your child wants them; they’re stressful if she doesn’t. Don’t sign up for a “performance team” before you’ve done a regular term.
3. Studio comparison shopping: K-pop class quality varies wildly. The expensive studio isn’t necessarily better than the local one. Trial-class 2-3 options.
Is K-pop better than hip-hop for kids?
Common parent question. Honest answer: they teach overlapping but different things.
- Hip-hop teaches groove, freestyle confidence, foundational urban dance vocabulary
- K-pop teaches precision, group choreography sync, and performance presence
Kids who do both for a while tend to be the most well-rounded street/urban dancers we see by age 14. If your daughter loves K-pop specifically, start there. She’ll pick up hip-hop foundation along the way.
What we offer
EV Dance teaches K-pop as part of our Kids Dance Programme with dedicated kids choreography (not adult-class-with-kids). Our K-pop coaches are MOE-approved and trained to teach age-appropriate variations of popular choreography.
If your daughter wants to try K-pop class, WhatsApp us — first trial class is something we’ll discuss with you in advance based on her age and experience level.