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Swimming is one of the most universally accessible sports in Tasmania, available to children and adults alike at public pools spread across the state. Whether your goal is fitness laps before work, a competitive swimming career or simply finding a warm, enclosed pool during a Tasmanian winter, the state's aquatic facilities and swim clubs have you covered.
The major public pool facilities in Hobart include the Doone Kennedy Hobart Aquatic Centre, which features a 50-metre indoor pool suitable for lap swimming and is home to squad training programs run by affiliated swimming clubs. In Launceston, the Launceston Aquatic Centre similarly provides year-round indoor swimming for recreational and competitive users. Both facilities are operated by their respective councils and offer casual entry, lap swim sessions and learn-to-swim programs for all ages.
Swimming Tasmania oversees competitive swimming across the state and is affiliated with Swimming Australia. Clubs affiliated with Swimming Tasmania operate training squads out of pools in Hobart, Launceston and several regional centres, catering to junior competitors from around eight years old through to masters swimmers. Competitive swimmers can progress through regional carnival pathways to state championships and, for the most talented, national-level competition. The Swimming Tasmania website carries information on affiliated clubs and how to register.
For children just starting out, learn-to-swim programs at council aquatic centres run year-round and use a structured curriculum to take children from water confidence through to independent swimming. These programs are often the pipeline into junior club swimming, and many clubs actively recruit from learn-to-swim graduates. Gentle adult learn-to-swim and technique improvement programs also exist for older beginners.
Open-water swimming has a passionate following in Tasmania, with the calm bays and inlets around Hobart and the east coast providing beautiful venues for those who enjoy swimming outside the lane ropes. Several swimming clubs organise regular ocean swims through the warmer months, and the swimming community around events like the Point to Pinnacle reflects the broader appetite Tasmanians have for outdoor sport in a remarkable natural environment.
Covering sport in Tasmania. This article was generated by AI from the linked sources, under human oversight and our editorial standards. Sensitive material is held for human review before publication. See our editorial standards.
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