Understanding Wyoming Youth Hockey Levels: A, B and House (2025-26)

In Wyoming, the Letter Is the Level

Wyoming is a small, rural hockey market where most play is single-A, B, and community travel with long road trips. It is organized around the USA-Hockey letter system. 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.

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