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The Capoeira Cord System Explained: Graduations, Cords, and What They Mean

Ginga Nation · 28 de mayo de 2026

Capoeira doesn’t use belts. It uses cords — cordas — and the system is more nuanced, more cultural, and more group-specific than most martial arts’ belt hierarchies. If you’re new to capoeira or running a group and want to understand graduations, this is your guide.

Why there’s no universal cord system

Unlike jiu-jitsu or judo, capoeira has no international governing body that mandates a single graduation system. Each grupo (group) defines its own cord colors, levels, and requirements. This isn’t a flaw — it reflects capoeira’s history as a decentralized, community-rooted practice.

That said, the major groups share common structural logic:

  • There are beginner levels (typically with lighter colors or single-color cords)
  • Intermediate levels (blended or multi-color cords)
  • Advanced levels (darker colors, often with group-specific symbolism)
  • Instructor designations (monitor, instrutor, professor, contra-mestre)
  • The apex: mestre, earned over many years and recognized by the community

The significance of the batizado

The batizado (“baptism”) is the ceremony where students receive their first cord. It’s usually the student’s first formal game (jogo) with a mestre or senior capoeirista. The name you receive at your batizado — your apelido — often stays with you for life in the capoeira world.

Subsequent ceremonies are called troca de cordas (“cord exchange”), where students advance to higher levels.

Common cord sequences across major grupos

While systems vary, here are representative examples:

Sistema ABCAP / Grupos independentes:

  • White → Yellow → Orange → Blue → Green → Purple → Brown → Red → Burgundy → Black

Grupo Capoeira Brasil (and affiliated): The GCB system uses a distinct color progression with more intermediate levels, including split cords that blend the previous and next color — signaling that a student is transitioning between levels but hasn’t fully crossed the threshold.

Abadá-Capoeira: Uses a narrower palette with cords that evolve from light (crua, amarela) to dark (verde, azul, violeta) with clear instructor designations built into the cord itself.

What requirements actually look like

Requirements for advancement vary by grupo but typically include:

CategoryExamples
Time at current cordMinimum months or years
Technical skillsSpecific movements, sequences
Musical knowledgeSongs, toques, instrument basics
PresenceAttendance at treinos and events
Mestre evaluationThe mestre’s personal judgment

The last point is critical and underrated. In capoeira, advancement is never purely mechanical. A student can check every box and still not be ready in the mestre’s eyes — because graduation is also about character, maturity, and how you carry the tradition.

Tracking graduation in a digital group registry

For group leaders, tracking all of this manually becomes challenging at scale. A group with 80 students across 3 cities needs a clear record of:

  • Each capoeirista’s current cord level
  • When they received it
  • Who gave it to them (which mestre or instructor)
  • Instructor recommendation for next graduation
  • Time at current level

This is the kind of data that lives in GN Hub’s graduation tracking — a visual cord history per student with the ability to generate a graduation report ahead of each batizado.

Should I care which grupo I join?

New students sometimes ask: does the cord system matter when choosing a group? The honest answer is: the cord system is the least important factor. What matters more:

  • The quality and character of your local instructor
  • The style of capoeira (Angola, Regional, Contemporânea)
  • The community you’ll train with every week
  • Whether the culture of the group aligns with your values

The cord will follow from your training. Choose your group for the people and the art, not the color of the rope.


Have questions about running your capoeira group more efficiently? Explore GN Roda for public group profiles and events, or contact us to learn about GN Hub for group organizers.