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Medford Soccer Club

The Official Medford Soccer Club of Medford, NJ

Soccer Age Update for 2026. 

Age Group Tool

Beginning with the Fall 2026–Spring 2027 season, national youth soccer organizations are shifting from birth year (January 1 – December 31) to a new age grouping based on the academic year (August 1-July 31). The stated purpose of this change is to better align soccer teams with school-year groupings and maximize the number of players who participate in soccer programs with their school-year friends. Please read the official statement from US soccer:  

https://usclubsoccer.org/age-group-cut-off-update-for-2026-27-season/

 

 

What This Means for Medford Soccer

 

Tryouts for the Fall 2026/Spring 2027 season will be based on the new grade year system.  As reflected above, teams will now include players with birthdates from August 1 to July 31 and no longer be limited to calendar birth years.  This means that teams will include players across two calendar birth years, e.g. 8/1/2015 through 7/31/2016.

 

Recognizing that US Soccer does not perfectly align with the NJ October 1st grade system, we will have “trap players” who are born in August or September and are “grade up” meaning they were 5 when starting kindergarten.  This essentially means that the player’s school grade does not match their soccer division.

 

Medford Soccer will allow these “Trap Players” to have the option to either try out "Up" and follow their current grade, or "Age-appropriate" based on the US Soccer August–July date range.  See below Table.  It is critically important to understand that approval for these trap players to play up will be a technical staff decision made in the player’s best developmental interest. Grade alone will not guarantee a play up approval.

 


Fall 2026/Spring 2027 - US Soccer Age Breakdown

Age Group

Birthdate Start

Birthdate End

Graduation Year

Trap Year Start

Trap Year End

Trap Required Grade

U8

8/1/2018

7/31/2019

2037

8/1/2019

9/30/2019

2

U9

8/1/2017

7/31/2018

2036

8/1/2018

9/30/2018

3

U10

8/1/2016

7/31/2017

2035

8/1/2017

9/30/2017

4

U11

8/1/2015

7/31/2016

2034

8/1/2016

9/30/2016

5

U12

8/1/2014

7/31/2015

2033

8/1/2015

9/30/2015

6

U13

8/1/2013

7/31/2014

2032

8/1/2014

9/30/2014

7

U14

8/1/2012

7/31/2013

2031

8/1/2013

9/30/2013

8

U15

8/1/2011

7/31/2012

2030

8/1/2012

9/30/2012

9

U16

8/1/2010

7/31/2011

2029

8/1/2011

9/30/2011

10

U17

8/1/2009

7/31/2010

2028

8/1/2010

9/30/2010

11

U18

8/1/2008

7/31/2009

2027

8/1/2009

9/30/2009

12




US Soccer Announcement

 

CHARLESTON, S.C. (June 10, 2025) – US Club Soccer, US Youth Soccer and AYSO have announced an adjustment to the previously announced age group cut-off decision. While the age group formation is currently based on a Jan. 1-Dec. 31 timeframe (“birth year”), these organizations announced in March an anticipated change to Sept. 1-Aug. 31 to be effective as of the 2026-27 season. Now, after additional information and feedback, we are revising that to an Aug. 1-July 31 timeframe. The implementation timeframe of each Organization Member’s 2026-27 season/registration year remains the same.

 

Why is the age group cut-off changing from January 1 (birth year ages)?

 

There are multiple reasons for this change.

 

First, the Aug. 1 age group cut-off most effectively reduces the number of “trapped players” in youth soccer and reduces negative impacts on these players at multiple stages of their career. “Trapped” players are those who, due to soccer age group cut-offs, are in an older soccer age group than their school year. Trapped players have significantly reduced competition opportunities and disrupted training experiences in 8th grade (when most of their team is in high school) and are similarly negatively impacted four years later when players from the older soccer age group, but who are still in high school, are moved down into the same soccer age group.

 

“Youth soccer has been talking about January 1 vs. August 1 for years,” said Mike Cullina, US Club Soccer CEO. “From my experience managing two clubs and a league in Virginia, a range of 2-5 players per team were negatively impacted by a Jan. 1 cut-off date in their eighth grade and high school senior years. US Club Soccer’s staff and board of directors regularly communicate with our leagues and clubs, and we’ve determined that that range remains accurate today.

“That’s a huge number of kids who have been adversely affected by the January 1 cut-off date. While coming to this decision has taken additional time, improving the experiences of hundreds of thousands of players was worth the extra time to gather research – particularly team rosters with graduation years and school start dates – and most importantly, listen to the youth soccer community.”

 

Second, an Aug. 1 age group cut-off best aligns soccer age groups with school year ages, maximizing the number of players who participate in soccer programs with their school-year friends. This alignment has a positive correlation with increased numbers of youth players entering and staying in the sport. This decision to move to the Aug. 1 cut-off reverts to the same age group cut-off used prior to 2017, when U.S. Soccer mandated a Jan. 1-Dec. 31 timeframe. U.S. Soccer removed this mandate in late 2024, empowering its Organization Members to make the most appropriate age group formation decision for their members. US Club Soccer, US Youth Soccer and AYSO – the three largest youth soccer organizations in the country – have remained in lockstep in making these decisions, recognizing the importance of consistency across the landscape.

 

Why is Aug. 1 a better age group cut-off than Sept. 1?

Initially, US Club Soccer, US Youth Soccer and AYSO had determined to use a Sept. 1 age group cut-off instead of Aug. 1. After receiving significant feedback and identifying missing information in Department of Education school year cut-off lists, it has been determined that the Aug. 1 cut-off best reduces misalignment between age and school year. The Aug. 1 cut-off reduces not only the trapped player effect, but it also reduces the number of “force-ups,” a term referring to players in a younger soccer age group but older school year who must play up an age group in order to be with their school-year friends.

 

US Club Soccer believes:

  1. An Aug. 1 age group cut-off best balances the desire to reduce both the number of “trapped” players and the number of “force-ups” in youth soccer.
  1. A Jan. 1 age group cut-off creates the highest number of trapped players and negatively impacted youth players.
  1. No age group cut-off will eliminate all trapped players or force-ups. States and counties throughout the country have widely different school year cut-offs, and this variance will always result in some number of trapped players or force-ups regardless of age group cut-off date.
  1. There is no soccer developmental benefit to any specific age group cut-off, and no age group cut-off reduces concerns of relative age effect or changes the number of players impacted by relative age effect. Relative age effect is the phenomenon of players born in the first three months after an age group cut-off to be over-represented in identification programs due to early maturation compared to their age-group peers.
  1. Age group cut-offs have no correlation or relationship with level of play or level of soccer aspiration. Various soccer age group cut-offs are used across the world in youth soccer, in both amateur and professional programs.

 

Again, please note that this decision is effective beginning with each Organization Member’s 2026-27 season/registration year.


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Medford Soccer Club

291 Medford Mt Holly Rd 
Medford, New Jersey 08055

Email: [email protected]

Medford Soccer Club

291 Medford Mt Holly Rd 
Medford, New Jersey 08055

Email: [email protected]
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