AI Ballet Technique Analysis — Posture, Lines, and Feedback Online
Ballet technique is built on precision. A slightly dropped shoulder, a collapsed arch, a moment of overcrossing in the footwork — details that feel invisible from the inside are immediately visible to anyone watching from the outside. For dancers training without regular access to a teacher, those uncorrected details compound over time.
DanceBetter's AI ballet technique analysis gives you the external feedback your training needs, available any time you have a phone and a clear space to move.
What the AI Analyses in Your Ballet Videos
Upload a short clip of your barre work, centre practice, or a specific combination, and the AI evaluates:
- Posture and spinal alignment — whether your back is genuinely neutral or compensating with a tuck or an arch
- Arm lines and port de bras — the quality and consistency of your arm positions through transitions
- Turnout management — whether your rotation is coming from the hip or being forced through the knee and ankle
- Timing and musicality — how cleanly your movement phrases align with the music
- Head and épaulement — often the last thing self-taught dancers work on and the first thing an audience notices
Who It's For
DanceBetter's ballet feedback is useful at every stage — beginner adults learning ballet for the first time, intermediate students supplementing their studio training, and advanced dancers who want an objective read on a specific technical problem they cannot see in their own mirror.
It is particularly valuable for dancers who practise between lessons and want to avoid reinforcing incorrect habits during unsupervised sessions.
How It Works
Film your practice from the front and from the side — both angles give the AI the most complete picture of your alignment and lines. Upload the clip. Receive a detailed technique breakdown within seconds, with specific corrections and a structured practice schedule.
Wondering whether a studio is worth it for your ballet training? Read our honest comparison of studio vs. at-home learning →