A unique service

Going to
Buenos Aires?
do it right.

I have lived and danced in Buenos Aires for years. I know the milongas, the teachers, the unwritten rules — and exactly why so many visiting dancers struggle. I can help you not be one of them

The reality

Why talented
dancers fail.

"The difference between a dancer who thrives in Buenos Aires and one who leaves frustrated is almost never about dancing ability."

Every year, accomplished tango dancers travel to Buenos Aires with high expectations and leave confused, disappointed, or both. The invitations did not come. The milongueros did not dance with them. The teachers they found felt generic. They could not understand why.

The traditional Buenos Aires tango world runs on an invisible architecture — the códigos. These are the unwritten protocols that govern everything about how the milonga works: how you enter, where you sit, how you invite and accept dances through the cabeceo, how you behave on and off the floor, how you dress, what the music means, and how you earn the respect of a community that has been doing this for generations.

Without this knowledge, even a gifted dancer can walk into a milonga and be invisible. Or worse — be seen as disrespectful without ever knowing it.

The other factor is humility. Buenos Aires tango culture has zero tolerance for ego. Dancers who arrive convinced of their own excellence, who impose their style, who ignore the room — they are noticed, and not in a good way. Dancers who arrive curious, observant and respectful — even if technically less advanced — are welcomed.

I have watched both kinds of dancer navigate the city. I know precisely what makes the difference.

The consultation

What we
cover together.

A one-to-one session — in person or online — covering everything you need to arrive in Buenos Aires ready. Not a tango lesson. A practical briefing built from years of lived experience.

01

The códigos

What they are, why they exist, and how to navigate them with confidence and humility. The unwritten rules that govern every traditional milonga in Buenos Aires.

02

Which milongas to go to

Based on your level, your style and what you are looking for. And — just as importantly — which milongas to avoid until you are ready for them.

03

Finding the right teachers

How to identify teachers who will genuinely help you, and how to approach them in a way that opens doors rather than closing them.

04

The cabeceo

How to use it correctly — and why walking across the floor to ask someone to dance will quietly end your evening before it begins.

05

How to present yourself

Dress, behaviour, posture in the room. The signals you send before you even step onto the floor — and how to make sure they are the right ones.

06

Practical logistics

Neighbourhoods, timing, the rhythm of the Buenos Aires milonga calendar, what to bring, what to expect — and how to make the most of every night.

Who this is for

Is this
for you?

This consultation is for intermediate and advanced dancers who are planning a trip to Buenos Aires and want to make it count. It is also valuable for dancers who have already visited and came home unsure why the experience did not go as they had hoped.

Part of what I offer is an honest assessment of whether you are ready — and if not, what to work on before you go.

A note on level

This consultation is not for beginners. The traditional milongas of Buenos Aires are not the right environment for someone in their first one or two years of tango, and I will tell you that directly. Honesty is part of what I offer.

Common questions

Frequently
asked.

Do I need to speak Spanish?

It helps, but it is not essential. The milonga communicates through gesture, eye contact and movement more than words. That said, a few key phrases go a long way — and I can give you the ones that matter.

I have been dancing for several years. Am I ready?

Years of dancing alone do not determine readiness for Buenos Aires. Style, attitude and awareness of the tradition matter far more. We can assess this honestly together in the consultation.

I have already been and struggled. Can you help?

Yes — and this is one of the most valuable uses of the consultation. Understanding what happened, and what to do differently, can completely change a return visit.

Can we do this online?

Yes. The consultation works well online — most of what we cover is knowledge, context and mindset rather than physical practice. Video call works perfectly.

How long is the session?

Typically 90 minutes to two hours, depending on your questions and how much ground we need to cover. We go at the pace that is useful for you.

Can I combine this with private lessons?

Absolutely — and many students do. A Buenos Aires consultation combined with focused technique work in the weeks before your trip is the most effective preparation possible.

Buenos Aires on its own terms,
the only terms worth having.

Buenos Aires changed how I understand tango completely. Not because of the steps I learned there, but because of the culture I was allowed into — slowly, respectfully, and only because I approached it with the humility it requires. I want to help you have that experience.
Addicted to Tango
Copyright 2026 Marta Kubicz - Tango dancer & teacher