Gym Marketing
Walk into ten schools with "jiu-jitsu" on the sign and you'll get ten different training experiences.
One runs full-resistance rolling from your first week. Another spends the hour on pre-arranged forms with a cooperative partner. A third mixes strikes, takedowns, and self-defense drills, and never touches a competition rule set.
All three are legitimate types of jiu-jitsu.
They all use the same word. They aren't teaching the same thing.
The types of jiu-jitsu practiced today run from ancient Japanese battlefield systems to modern sport grappling. Knowing the differences is how you find training that actually fits your goals.
This guide covers the major branches you'll meet at real gyms:
- Japanese jujutsu
- Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu
- Gracie Jiu-Jitsu
- Gi and no-gi variants
- Self-defense-oriented systems
It sticks to what people actually encounter at academies today, skipping every historical ryu and obscure offshoot.
Maybe you're a beginner picking your first martial art. Maybe you're a cross-trainer coming from judo, karate, or wrestling. Or maybe you're a parent weighing options for a kid.
Whichever one you are, this is written for you.
The questions driving most of these searches are simple:
- Which type is best for self-defense?
- Which one is built for competition?
- Which is safer for older practitioners or children?
The short version: the main types of jiu-jitsu are traditional Japanese jujutsu and its modern descendants. Above all Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu (BJJ), plus specialized offshoots built around self-defense, sport, or mixed martial arts.
By the end, you'll have:
- Clear definitions of the main types practiced today
- A side-by-side comparison of what each style emphasizes: striking, throws, ground fighting, weapons, competition
- Concrete examples of when each type earns its keep, from self-defense to MMA to fitness
- A framework for choosing the right style and school for your goals
Understanding Jiu-Jitsu as a Martial Arts Family
Jiu-jitsu (also spelled jujutsu or ju-jitsu) comes from the Japanese for "gentle art."
The name captures the whole idea: use leverage and body mechanics instead of brute strength to control or submit an opponent. The art was born in feudal Japan, then branched into dozens of styles now practiced worldwide.
Traditional Japanese jujutsu evolved over centuries and gave rise to Kodokan judo in the late 1800s.
Judo, in turn, produced Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu in the early 20th century. From there came the variants: no-gi grappling, self-defense systems, sport-specific training.
The terminology trips people up. "jujutsu," "ju-jitsu," "jiu-jitsu," "BJJ." One root, different stages and regional adaptations of the same lineage.
Core principles shared across all types of jiu-jitsu

For all their differences in method and rules, the major jiu-jitsu types rest on one foundation.
The core idea is simple: redirect an opponent's own energy and movement instead of meeting force with force. That "yield to win" principle is what lets a smaller practitioner control a stronger one through technique and timing rather than muscle.
Underneath nearly every technique sits off-balancing, or kuzushi. In a judo throw, a BJJ sweep, or a standing joint lock, the practitioner breaks the opponent's base first, then finishes.
Treat the body as a system of levers and fulcrums, and precise positioning beats raw strength.
From there, every type builds toward the same finishes: joint locks, chokes, and positional control.
Joint locks attack the elbow, shoulder, wrist, knee, or ankle past its safe range. Chokes and strangles cut blood to the brain or air to the lungs. Positional control is the platform that makes either one possible.
That shared core is why such different styles can all carry the name. Train at a classical Japanese dojo or a modern BJJ academy, and you're building the same understanding of leverage, timing, and control. Just in different contexts, under different rules.
From samurai battlefields to modern gyms
Japanese jujutsu grew up as close-combat for samurai grappling in armor.
Lose your weapon, or find it useless at grappling range, and you needed another answer: a way to control, throw, and neutralize an armored opponent.
Those classical systems bundled throws, joint locks, chokes, strikes to vulnerable points, and weapons disarms into one method built for life-or-death encounters.
In 1882, Jigoro Kano changed that. He pulled techniques from several jujutsu schools (Tenjin Shin'yō-ryū and Kitō-ryū among them) into Kodokan judo.
His breakthrough was safety.
Randori (free sparring) became central, and the most dangerous techniques were removed so students could actually practice live. Judo went on to become both a physical-education system and, eventually, an Olympic sport, carrying Japanese grappling around the world.
Brazil entered the story through Mitsuyo Maeda, a Kodokan judoka who toured the globe giving demonstrations and taking challenge matches.
In the 1910s and '20s, he taught in Brazil. There, Carlos Gracie and his brothers, Helio in particular, expanded the ground-fighting side into what became Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu.
The Gracie family chased one goal: techniques that let a smaller, weaker person beat a bigger one. They refined the guard and ground control into a complete system around it.
Three developments, three "types" people still compare today:
- Japanese jujutsu, the ancestral art
- Judo, the first modernized form
- BJJ, the ground-focused evolution and the most widely practiced jiu-jitsu style in the western world
Major Types of Jiu-Jitsu Practiced Today
These are the branches you'll actually run into at academies.
Each one grew to emphasize a different side of the art: tradition and kata, sport competition, self-defense, or mixed martial arts. Knowing what separates them is how you find the type that fits what you want.
Traditional Japanese jujutsu

Every other style on this list descends from Japanese jujutsu, the original battlefield art (often written "jujutsu" or "ju-jutsu" in academic contexts).
Classical schools (koryu) founded between the 1500s and 1800s still operate in Japan and abroad. They preserve techniques built for real combat rather than sport.
A typical curriculum is broad: standing joint locks to the wrist, elbow, and shoulder; throws that predate but resemble judo throws; off-balancing; and atemi waza (strikes) used to set up grappling entries.
Ground fighting exists, but it gets less attention than in BJJ, since the original context assumed multiple attackers or weapons. Many schools also drill defenses against knives, swords, and sticks.
Training leans on kata: pre-arranged forms practiced with a partner, rather than the free sparring at the center of BJJ.
That preserves techniques too dangerous to run at full resistance.
It also limits the pressure-testing that sharpens timing against an opponent who won't cooperate. Practitioners drawn to martial-arts history and the philosophy of budo tend to gravitate here.
Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu (BJJ)

Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu is the style most people mean when they say "jiu-jitsu" today, with thousands of academies worldwide.
BJJ lives on the ground. The premise: most fights end up there, and better grappling technique can cancel out size and strength.
The art traces to Carlos Gracie, who learned from Maeda in Belem and spent years refining it in Rio through challenge matches and teaching. His brother Helio adapted it into a game for a smaller, weaker person.
Their signature contribution was fighting from the guard, with the bottom person using their legs to control and attack the top person. It became BJJ's calling card.
The core techniques stack in a clear order:
- Takedowns to get the fight down.
- Positional control through guard, mount, and back control.
- Submissions by joint lock and choke.
The art splits into two games: gi (a traditional uniform, the kimono) and no-gi (shorts and rashguard). Live sparring ("rolling") starts early and stays central, so you test technique against full resistance from the beginning.
Royce Gracie won three of the first four UFC tournaments in the early 1990s, submitting bigger opponents from every background. That was the moment BJJ went global, and the exposure made it a required part of any serious MMA base.
Gracie Jiu-Jitsu / self-defense-oriented BJJ

Gracie Jiu-Jitsu is the branch of BJJ that keeps its focus on street self-defense rather than sport.
Technically, it overlaps heavily with sport BJJ. The difference is the frame: the curriculum is built around defending common untrained attacks and surviving encounters with a bigger, aggressive opponent.
That changes what gets emphasized. Real time goes to the clinch, controlling an opponent up close to shut down strikes, and to takedowns that hold up when punches are flying.
Ground positions are taught with striking in mind.
Mount matters because the top person can strike while the bottom can't answer. Closed guard is framed as a survival position when strikes are on the table, not a place to camp by choice.
Most self-defense curricula cover the standard threats: escapes from headlocks, bear hugs, rear chokes, and grabs. Many Gracie-branded academies run structured, scenario-based programs before students ever spar for sport.
It's a fit for people who mostly want to walk away safe.
Modern eclectic / self-defense systems

Beyond the Gracie lineage, plenty of modern systems blend jiu-jitsu with judo, aikido, karate, and other arts into full self-defense programs.
You'll see them labeled "combat jiu-jitsu," "street jiu-jitsu," or just "self-defense jiu-jitsu." All of them put practical application ahead of sport rules.
The recipe is roughly the same:
- Fold standing grappling from Japanese jujutsu and judo together with ground control from BJJ.
- Add strikes and defenses against strikes.
- Sometimes include law-enforcement-style restraint methods.
Training may layer in scenario work, awareness, and de-escalation alongside the physical side.
Competition isn't the point here.
The focus is controlled responses that fit real situations. Some systems are built specifically for security, military, or police work, where you have to control a subject without doing unnecessary harm.
For someone who wants practical skills without committing to a competitive sport, a hybrid system is a reasonable middle ground.
No-gi grappling and submission wrestling

No-gi BJJ and submission grappling strip the uniform entirely. You train in shorts, spats, and rashguards.
Lose the BJJ gi and gripping changes at the root. No collars, no sleeves. Control shifts to wrists, ankles, the neck, and body clinches.
This is the style that dominates modern MMA gyms and pro grappling events like ADCC (Abu Dhabi Combat Club), Polaris, and Who's Number One.
Without gi grips, scrambles get faster, wrestling-style takedowns matter more, and leg locks open up as a primary attack. Many practitioners treat no-gi as a distinct type, since the strategic and technical game differs that much from the gi.
No-gi competition has exploded, and plenty of pros now specialize in it outright.
It also translates directly to MMA, where fighters wear only shorts. Catch wrestling and Luta Livre Esportiva (a Brazilian no-gi art that grew up parallel to BJJ) both fed the leg-lock-heavy, wrestling-forward game that defines no-gi today.
So the real question is one of feel. Do you prefer the grip-fighting chess of the gi, or the faster, more wrestling-driven game of no-gi?
How the Types of Jiu-Jitsu Differ in Practice
Beyond lineage and names, the styles diverge in what you actually experience in class.
The techniques you learn, how you drill them, the competition rules, the culture of the room: all of it shifts from one style to the next.
Technical emphasis: Standing, ground, striking, weapons
Japanese jujutsu keeps a balanced curriculum: standing joint locks, shoulder locks, throws, strikes to set up entries, sometimes weapons defense.
Ground fighting exists, but it gets less time, since the art assumes scenarios with multiple or armed opponents, where staying on the ground is a bad idea.
Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu flips that emphasis.
The bulk of training goes to the ground, and to getting there. Takedowns get taught, but they often sit behind guard work, sweeps, passes, and submissions.
Striking is nearly absent from regular class, though some academies add supplemental MMA or self-defense sessions for context. On the ground, BJJ's depth runs far past what any other type covers.
Self-defense systems try to cover every range:
- Intercept or parry a strike to close distance.
- Clinch to shut down more strikes.
- Take it to the ground if that helps, then control or finish.
Breadth is the point, so each range gets less depth than a specialist would give it.
Training methods: Kata vs live sparring
Traditional Japanese jujutsu leans on kata: set sequences with a cooperative partner. Kata preserves techniques too dangerous to spar, like neck cranks, eye attacks, and strikes to vulnerable points.
Partner drills build timing and precision. But without a resisting opponent, live application is harder to develop.
BJJ and no-gi grappling center on live sparring instead.
After drilling, students roll: free grappling where each person hunts submissions and dominant positions. That pressure-testing is what many call BJJ's greatest strength.
‍A technique that works in rolling has already been tried against someone genuinely trying to stop it.
Hybrid and self-defense systems usually blend the two: cooperative drilling to learn technique, scenario work for context, and limited sparring at controlled intensity. Some fold striking into sparring; others keep the two separate. It varies by school and instructor.
Rule sets and competition focus
Competition formats quietly shape how each type develops.
BJJ under organizations like the IBJJF runs on points: takedowns (2), sweeps (2), guard passes (3), mount or back control (4), knee-on-belly (2). Submissions end the match outright.
Bouts are time-limited, and competitors split by belt, weight, and age. Some techniques are restricted at lower belts.
Heel hooks and knee reaping, for instance, are off-limits in most gi and many no-gi divisions below advanced levels.
No-gi under ADCC rules rewards something different: wrestling and submission hunting. The opening period scores nothing, which pushes action over conservative position-holding; takedowns and control score later.
Leg locks, heel hooks included, are fully legal. That alone makes the no-gi game play out completely differently than the gi.
Traditional Japanese jujutsu has limited competition. Where events exist, they often split categories (throwing, groundwork, kata demonstration) rather than combining everything into one free-form match. Some modern rule sets exist for traditional styles, but for most practitioners, competition isn't the point.
The knock-on effects show up in how people train:
- BJJ practitioners often build sophisticated guard games, because pulling guard is a viable competitive strategy
- No-gi grapplers lean into leg-lock attack and defense, since those submissions sit at the center of the modern meta
- Traditional jujutsu practitioners may have polished kata but less experience against a fully resisting opponent
Choosing the Right Type of Jiu-Jitsu for Your Goals
Picking a style starts with an honest read on what you want from training.
So which one fits you? Someone after practical self-defense has different priorities than a competitor, and both differ from someone training for fitness and community. The framework and comparison table below match styles to goals.
Step by step: Matching jiu-jitsu types to your goals
- Name your primary goal. Self-defense, sport competition, traditional practice, MMA prep, a kid's development, or general fitness and community. Your answer decides which styles to shortlist.
- Pick your training intensity. Do you want hard live sparring early (BJJ) or structured, kata-based practice with controlled resistance (traditional jujutsu)? Both have value, and they feel completely different.
- Weigh the physical factors. Throwing-heavy arts like judo carry a different injury profile than ground-based BJJ. Your age, past injuries, and current condition shape what's sustainable for the long haul.
- Check what's actually near you. The best style for your goals is useless if no qualified school teaches it in your city. Survey real local availability before committing to an ideal.
- Try before you commit. Take trial classes at two or three schools and compare more than the style name: culture, safety, coaching quality, and how you feel in the room. A good school teaching a slightly different style beats a poor school teaching exactly what you thought you wanted.
Comparison table: Main types of jiu-jitsu at a glance
Chasing competition? Gi or no-gi BJJ gives you the clearest pathway, with tournaments running worldwide.
After self-defense with minimal sport artificiality? Gracie Jiu-Jitsu or a hybrid system addresses real scenarios head-on.
Drawn to the history and philosophy of the art? Traditional Japanese jujutsu delivers that, limited competition and all.
Common Challenges When Comparing Types of Jiu-Jitsu
A beginner searching "which jiu-jitsu is best" gets ten confident, contradictory answers and walks away more confused. Schools use overlapping terms, marketing pushes style names over substance, and first impressions mislead. These are the problems people actually hit, and how to get past them.
Problem 1: Confusing names and spellings
"jujutsu," "ju-jitsu," "jiu-jitsu," "Gracie Jiu-Jitsu": the terms get used interchangeably, and different schools spell near-identical arts differently.
A place calling itself "Japanese Jiu-Jitsu" might teach classical koryu, or a modern hybrid heavy with BJJ influence.
Solution: Look at what's trained, not the sign on the door. Ask directly:
- How much class time is ground versus standing?
- Gi, no-gi, or both?
- How much live sparring, and at what intensity?
- What competition opportunities exist, if any?
The answers tell you far more than the style name.
Problem 2: Overweighting "which type is best?"
Plenty of people hunt for the single "best" type for self-defense or MMA.
They miss the variables that actually decide it: your goals, the school's quality, the instructor. A mediocre BJJ school can deliver worse training than an excellent traditional dojo, reputation notwithstanding.
Solution: Ask "best for what?"
BJJ and no-gi give the clearest edge in pure grappling, and form the base for nearly all MMA. Self-defense programs address street scenarios more directly. Traditional arts offer historical and philosophical depth that sport training often skips.
And if you're weighing jiu-jitsu against another art entirely, karate vs. jiu-jitsu is a comparison worth making on its own terms. Match the style to your context instead of chasing universal superiority.
Problem 3: Judging a school on one class
Comparing types only gets you so far. At some point you stop weighing styles and start judging a specific room.
First impressions mislead.
Catch only a fundamentals class, and the school looks soft. Catch only a competition class, and it looks brutal. Neither is the full picture.
Solution: Watch more than one class type before you judge. Do a full trial week rather than judging on a single session.
Come with questions ready:
- What are the safety protocols?
- How is sparring intensity managed for new students?
- What are the instructor's credentials and competition experience?
- What does the path to black belt look like here?
Understanding the types is step one. Finding a quality room that matches your goals and values is the part that actually decides whether you stick with it.
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