Understanding North Dakota Youth Hockey Levels: AAA, AA, A and B (2025-26)
In North Dakota, the Letter Is the Level
North Dakota is a strong, traditional hockey state organized around the USA-Hockey letter system (AAA, AA, A, B, House). Despite a small population it punches above its weight, with deep community travel programs across the Fargo, Grand Forks, and Bismarck areas. The level that matters is the letter, not the league.
The Competitive Ladder
We grade each level against an internal 1 to 8 scale used to compare programs across leagues and states.
| Label | Our tier | What it means |
|---|---|---|
| AAA | 6 | National-elite travel (where the state fields it). |
| AA | 5 | The top competitive travel level for most programs. |
| A | 4 | Strong competitive travel. |
| B | 2 | Town and entry-level travel. |
| House | 1 | Recreational and in-house. |
The league a team plays in is the schedule; the letter is the level. Families identify a team by its USA-Hockey letter, not the league name. The age groups are the standard 8U, 10U, 12U, 14U, 16U, 18U; rating services cover 10U and up. Junior hockey (NAHL, NA3HL, USPHL, for players roughly 16 to 20) and high-school leagues are a separate system, and girls hockey runs on its own rating scale, so we compare girls programs separately.
What This Costs
Levels and dollars track together: a house or B-level season runs a few hundred to a couple thousand dollars; AA travel climbs into the four figures once ice, league fees, and travel are counted; and AAA, where a program fields it, reaches well into five figures with the out-of-state circuit. We track real reported season costs at every level. Look up a club on its program page, compare two programs, or share your season cost.