Get certified to protect swimmers in one of America’s most historic and diverse aquatic regions.
From the Atlantic coastline to the Chesapeake Bay, from Appalachian mountain lakes to large community recreation centers and year-round indoor pools, Virginia offers one of the most varied aquatic landscapes on the East Coast. With millions of residents and tourists enjoying beaches, lakes, waterparks, and pools each year, certified lifeguards play a vital role in keeping the Commonwealth safe.
The American Lifeguard Association® (ALA) proudly provides nationally recognized lifeguard training in Virginia, preparing individuals to work in pools, beaches, waterparks, lakes, resorts, and community aquatic centers. Whether you’re guarding at Virginia Beach, a recreation center in Fairfax County, a waterpark in Williamsburg, or a lakefront campground in the Shenandoah Valley, ALA’s blended training gives you the skills, knowledge, and credentials you need.
Weather plays an important role in aquatic safety in Virginia, with seasonal storms, heat advisories, coastal winds, and rapidly shifting lake and river conditions.
Why Lifeguard Training Matters in Virginia
Virginia’s aquatic facilities from municipal pools to Atlantic beaches to sprawling lakefront parks rely on well-trained lifeguards to maintain safety. Many employers require nationally recognized certifications, making the American Lifeguard Association one of the most trusted training options in the state.
For more than 30 years, ALA has aligned with:
- CDC Healthy Swimming Program
- U.S. Department of Labor (DOL) national standards
- U.S. General Services Administration (GSA)
- Federal OSHA safety guidance
- CDC Model Aquatic Health Code (MAHC) evaluation requirements
These recognitions support both lifeguards and employers, ensuring compliance with federal and national safety expectations.
What Is a Lifeguard?
A lifeguard is a trained safety professional responsible for:
- Monitoring swimmers
- Preventing dangerous behavior
- Enforcing safety rules
- Responding to emergencies with CPR, first aid, and rescue skills
- Maintaining vigilance in all aquatic environments
Lifeguards in Virginia must be attentive to changing coastal conditions, freshwater visibility challenges, crowded community pool environments, and varying seasonal demands.
Lifeguarding as a Career Opportunity in Virginia
Virginia offers lifeguarding opportunities year-round. With indoor aquatic centers active throughout all seasons and summer tourism booming in coastal and resort areas, lifeguarding provides valuable work at any time of year.
Many Virginia lifeguards advance into careers in:
- Parks and recreation
- Emergency medical services (EMT/paramedic)
- Fire departments
- Coast Guard and Navy-related water safety roles
- Swim coaching and aquatic programming
- Resort and hospitality management
- Public safety and local government roles
Lifeguarding builds confidence, leadership, communication, and responsibility.
Virginia Offers Lifeguard Opportunities In:
Below are the major categories of lifeguard employment in Virginia, along with named real locations for SEO and local relevance.
Beaches — Atlantic Coast & Chesapeake Bay
Virginia’s oceanfront and bay beaches attract millions of visitors every summer. These areas require guards trained in surf conditions, rip currents, heat risks, and large crowds.
Atlantic Coast Beaches
- Virginia Beach Oceanfront (Resort Beach, Croatan Beach, Sandbridge Beach)
- First Landing State Park Beach
These areas face Atlantic swells, rip currents, and high tourism volume.
Chesapeake Bay Beaches
- Buckroe Beach (Hampton)
- Ocean View Beach (Norfolk)
- Grandview Beach (Hampton)
- Colonial Beach (Potomac River/Chesapeake Bay)
- Chic’s Beach / Chesapeake Beach (Virginia Beach)
Bay beaches typically offer calmer waters but large families and recreational boat traffic require high vigilance.
Indoor & Outdoor Swimming Pools
Virginia’s indoor pool network is strong, especially in Northern Virginia and major metro regions. Many facilities hire lifeguards year-round.
Major pool employers include:
Northern Virginia
- Fairfax County Park Authority Aquatic Centers (Cub Run Rec Center, South Run Rec Center, Oak Marr Rec Center, etc.)
- Arlington County Aquatic Centers
- Alexandria Recreation Pools
- Prince William County Aquatic Centers
- YMCA of Northern Virginia
Richmond & Central Virginia
- SwimRVA (Richmond)
- Chesterfield County Aquatic Centers
- Henrico County Rec Pools
- University of Richmond & VCU Pools
Hampton Roads / Tidewater Region
- Norfolk Recreation Pools
- Virginia Beach Recreation Centers
- Hampton & Newport News community pools
- Portsmouth city pools
Western & Southwest Virginia
- Roanoke Parks and Recreation pools
- Lynchburg area aquatic facilities
- Charlottesville YMCA & recreation pools
Indoor aquatic complexes ensure employment opportunities during fall, winter, and spring.
Waterparks — Seasonal & Year-Round Facilities
Virginia features several major waterparks that hire hundreds of lifeguards each year.
Hampton Roads Area
- Ocean Breeze Waterpark (Virginia Beach)
- Water Country USA (Williamsburg) — one of the largest waterparks on the East Coast
Northern Virginia
- Volcano Island Waterpark (Sterling)
- Atlantis Waterpark (Centerville)
- Pirate’s Cove Waterpark (Leesburg)
- Signal Bay Waterpark (Manassas Park)
Central & Western Virginia
- Massanutten Resort Indoor/Outdoor Waterpark (McGaheysville) — open year-round
- Great Wolf Lodge (Williamsburg) — full indoor waterpark operations
Waterparks require training in rapid-response rescue, slide dispatch skills, and coordinated teamwork.
Lakes, Rivers & State Parks
Virginia’s freshwater environments are popular for recreation, especially in the summer. Many parks supervise designated swimming areas and hire trained lifeguards.
Major Lakes
- Smith Mountain Lake
- Lake Anna
- Claytor Lake
- Lake Fairfax (Reston)
- Burke Lake (Fairfax Station)
- John H. Kerr Reservoir (Buggs Island Lake)
- Lake Arrowhead (Luray)
State Parks with Swim Beaches
- Lake Anna State Park
- Douthat State Park
- Hungry Mother State Park
- Fairy Stone State Park
- Westmoreland State Park
- Twin Lakes State Park
Rivers
- James River recreation zones
- Potomac River waterfronts
- Rappahannock River swimming sites
- Shenandoah River recreation areas
These areas require freshwater rescue awareness and strong surveillance.
Prerequisites for Lifeguard Training in Virginia
While anyone may enroll in ALA’s blended program, Virginia employers generally require:
- Minimum age 15 for pool lifeguards
- Minimum age 16 for ocean or bay waterfront lifeguards
- Strong swimming ability and endurance
To successfully complete the ALA certification, candidates must perform:
300-Yard Continuous Swim
- 100 yards front crawl
- 100 yards breaststroke
- 100 yards freestyle or breaststroke
Timed Object Retrieval
- Swim 20 yards
- Surface dive 7–10 feet
- Retrieve a 10-lb object
- Swim 20 yards back carrying the object
- Exit without ladder
- Must be completed within 1 minute 40 seconds
Upon certification, participants receive:
- Lifeguarding Certificate
- CPR/AED for the Professional Rescuer Certificate
- First Aid Certificate
All certifications are valid for two years.
What You Will Learn Lifeguarding Skills
ALA’s comprehensive course prepares candidates for real-world emergencies in both indoor and outdoor aquatic environments.
Water Rescue Skills
- Slide-in entry
- Stride jump
- Compact jump
- Swimming approach (front crawl/breaststroke)
- Simple assist
- Extension assist
- Throwing rescue
- Active drowning victim rescue
- Passive drowning victim rescue
- Multiple-victim rescue
- Submerged victim recovery
- Deep-water rescue
- Rear and front head-hold escapes
Spinal Injury Management
- Manual inline stabilization (water & land)
- Head splint technique
- Head/chin support
- Backboarding in shallow & deep water
- Submerged spinal recovery
CPR/AED for the Professional Rescuer
- Initial patient assessment
- Adult, child & infant CPR
- 2-rescuer CPR
- Bag-valve-mask ventilations
- Conscious & unconscious choking care
- AED usage and shock protocols
First Aid Training
- Secondary assessments
- External bleeding control
- Splinting (rigid, soft, anatomical)
- Sling and binder application
Final Scenario Evaluations
- Active drowning scenario
- Submerged passive drowning scenario
- Spinal injury rescue scenario
Virginia Counties Covered
ALA provides lifeguard training across all Virginia counties, including:
Accomack, Albemarle, Alleghany, Amelia, Amherst, Appomattox, Arlington, Augusta, Bath, Bedford, Bland, Botetourt, Brunswick, Buchanan, Buckingham, Campbell, Caroline, Carroll, Charles City, Charlotte, Chesterfield, Clarke, Craig, Culpeper, Cumberland, Dickenson, Dinwiddie, Essex, Fairfax, Fauquier, Floyd, Fluvanna, Franklin, Frederick, Giles, Gloucester, Goochland, Grayson, Greene, Greensville, Halifax, Hanover, Henrico, Henry, Highland, Isle of Wight, James City, King and Queen, King George, King William, Lancaster, Lee, Loudoun, Louisa, Lunenburg, Madison, Mathews, Mecklenburg, Middlesex, Montgomery, Nelson, New Kent, Northampton, Northumberland, Nottoway, Orange, Page, Patrick, Pittsylvania, Powhatan, Prince Edward, Prince George, Prince William, Pulaski, Rappahannock, Richmond, Roanoke, Rockbridge, Rockingham, Russell, Scott, Shenandoah, Smyth, Southampton, Spotsylvania, Stafford, Surry, Sussex, Tazewell, Warren, Washington, Westmoreland, Wise, Wythe, York.
Independent cities covered include:
Alexandria, Bristol, Buena Vista, Charlottesville, Chesapeake, Colonial Heights, Covington, Danville, Emporia, Fairfax, Falls Church, Franklin, Fredericksburg, Galax, Hampton, Harrisonburg, Hopewell, Lexington, Lynchburg, Manassas, Manassas Park, Martinsville, Newport News, Norfolk, Norton, Petersburg, Poquoson, Portsmouth, Radford, Richmond, Roanoke, Salem, Staunton, Suffolk, Virginia Beach, Waynesboro, Williamsburg, Winchester.
Safety You Can Trust
Virginia offers a rich and diverse aquatic environment from oceanfront beaches to freshwater lakes, state parks, community pools, and major indoor waterparks. Lifeguarding in the Commonwealth provides a meaningful opportunity to serve the community, prevent emergencies, and build lifelong skills in leadership and safety.
The American Lifeguard Association delivers a nationally recognized, federally aligned certification that aquatic employers across Virginia trust.