Best Gyms for Dunk Sessions in Minnesota
The best gyms for dunk sessions in Minnesota, ranked. I film every session to track my progress and make clips, so I rate each gym on what actually matters for getting up, getting reps, and getting good footage.
Read this firstThis isn’t a review of these gyms overall. It’s rated entirely around my specific situation as someone focused only on improving my dunks and vertical. Most things I flag as a negative here would be totally fine for regular basketball or other common gym uses. A stiff rim or a dusty floor barely matters for a pickup run, but it changes everything for a dunk session.
What I look for in the perfect dunk gym
Every gym below is rated against the same checklist. None of these are dealbreakers out of spite. I always respect a gym’s rules. It’s just that some things have to line up for a real dunk session to work.
Dunking allowed
Non-negotiable. If a gym doesn’t allow dunking I won’t go, and it’ll rank low here. Nothing personal, it just doesn’t work for what I do.
Filming allowed
I film every session to document progress and create clips. Some gyms aren’t cool with that, which is totally fair, but it means I can’t really use them.
Rims at 9’11” or higher
Once you drop below 9’11” you start to feel that the rim is low. Perfectly 10′ rims aren’t realistic since they shift over time and aren’t always installed dead-on, so 9’11” and up is the sweet spot.
Snappy rims with the right give
A good breakaway rim moves when you go hard, then snaps back up quickly. Dead-stiff rims hurt and make dunks like Honey Dips and Elbow dunks harder. Too loose and your hand basically phases through, so you miss dunks you should make and make ones you shouldn’t. Snappy is the word.
Clean wood floor
I prefer wood, kept clean, with solid traction so there’s no slipping. Clean floor, good grip, no surprises.
Not too busy
Taking up a whole hoop to jump at the rim for an hour or two is awkward in a packed gym. The quieter it is when I go, the better.
Climate control matters too, but most gyms handle it fine for dunking specifically, so I only call it out when it’s actually a problem.
The rankings
Starting with the best and adding more as I session them.
H4 · 1
H4 · 2
H4 · 3
Exactly the snappy give I look for. Moves when you go hard, snaps right back up.
Wood, with great traction.
Kept really clean.
Always quiet when I host. Never a problem getting reps and filming.
H4 is the best gym I’ve dunked at in Minnesota. It’s the best combination of everything on my list: a clean wood court, adjustable 9’11″+ rims with that perfect snappy feel, and it’s never too busy when I’m there. I’ve been able to do exactly what I wanted every time, get my dunks in, film, and create a ton of great content.
Westonka · 1
Westonka · 2
Westonka · 3
Varies by hoop. Some are stiffer, but several are very good with that snappy feel, just a touch on the stiffer side of ideal.
Wood, with amazing traction.
Kept very clean.
Varies, but a lot of the time it’s really not busy. Every time I’ve gone I’ve gotten a hoop to myself.
Westonka is an amazing gym that’s kept super clean. The only two downsides for me are distance, it’s a bit further than some of these other spots, and the rims could be just the tiniest bit looser. Other than that, it’s an amazing gym.
Shoot 360 · 1
Shoot 360 · 2
Shoot 360 · 3
The hoop moved a little, so the rim came down a bit when you dunked, but the rim itself barely flexed. Not totally dead, but very stiff.
One of the best floors I’ve dunked on, with amazing traction.
Kept insanely clean.
I’ve only dunked here once, through a collaboration on a video. It’s a high-end training gym, not a dunk or day-pass spot, and getting in usually means renting the court (around $50–60 an hour) unless you can partner with them. But if you can get in, it’s amazing. One of the best, cleanest floors I’ve ever dunked on. The only real knocks are the stiff rim feel and how tough and pricey it is to get into.
Hope Fieldhouse · 1
Hope Fieldhouse · 2
Hope Fieldhouse · 3
Some can be kind of stiff, but overall they have a good feel. I haven’t dunked every rim in the gym, so there are probably a couple that are great for the way I like them.
Really good, really clean, and just really well kept.
Very clean.
It’s a big facility, so you should usually be able to get a hoop, though it can get busy. When I went it wasn’t at all.
Hope Fieldhouse is a big, clean, well-run facility with great staff. They’ve been really kind to me as a dunker and have supported the Minnesota Dunk Squad with contests and opportunities. Eight hoops across four courts, a spotless floor, and legit 9’11.5″+ rims make it an easy gym to get a good session in.
Underground · 1
Underground · 2
Underground · 3
Varies by hoop. The snappiness is pretty solid on most of them, but some are starting to rust, which isn’t great on the skin when you’re dunking a lot in a session.
A rubber surface. Totally fine when conditions are good, but there are occasional bumps and slightly uneven spots. When it gets humid out (as it does in Minnesota) the court can get a little wet — better than it used to be, but still noticeable here and there.
Fine, but not perfect.
Totally fine at the times I go (early Saturdays), though it can get busy during certain parts of the year.
I’m biased toward this one. I’ve been coming here since I was 13, it’s where I got my first dunk ever, so it’ll always have a legendary feel for me. A lot of people still know it as The Lab Athletic. It has real downsides — a rubber floor with some uneven spots, a pricier day pass, and rim heights all over the place — but it fully welcomes dunking and filming, and that history makes it special.
Mounds View · 1
Mounds View · 2
Mounds View · 3
Mixed. Two rims are really stiff and just not fun. Of the good two, one is snappier but still a little stiff, the other is pretty loose, not too loose but definitely loose.
Wood.
Not always clean, gets dusty pretty often.
Can get very busy, and the schedule varies a lot.
Mounds View works, but it has its flaws. It’s a public gym you can get into cheap with a day pass, and two of the four rims are decent, one snappier and one looser. The other two are too stiff to bother with. The wood floor gets dusty, the schedule isn’t posted anywhere easy so you have to call ahead, and it can get busy. A solid option if you catch it at the right time.