If you're exploring coaching qualifications, you're most likely wondering which route is best for you.
You’ll quickly find yourself staring at two big options: ILM Level 5 and ILM Level 7.
And if you’re like most people we speak to, you’re wondering:
“Do I need a Level 7… or will Level 5 be right for me?”
“Will I end up underqualified… or overqualified?”
This guide cuts through the noise and helps you choose the qualification that will genuinely move your coaching career forward.
The coaching industry is booming — and competitive.
Credentials matter more than ever: organisations want certainty, standards, and evidence of training. ILM is the gold standard for corporate and public sector buyers.
An ILM coaching qualification signals:
Credibility
Professionalism
Quality
Ethical practice
Relevance to organisational needs
At The BCF Group we are the coaching experts who have designed practical impactful training programmes and through our partnership with ILM (the awarding organisation) we are held to a global set of standards.
The go to qualification for internal coaching and those looking to create a coaching culture.
Level 5 is where most successful coaching careers start. It’s ideal if you want to:
Coach people across an organisation (managers, team leaders, specialists)
Build or join an internal coaching pool
Strengthen your management style with a coaching approach
Start offering coaching professionally
Learn the core frameworks (GROW, STAR, feedback models, boundaries)
It gives you a strong, credible foundation without overwhelming academic depth.
Think: real world coaching skills you can use immediately.
Many HR and L&D teams require Level 5 for anyone delivering internal coaching. It carries weight, opens doors, and shows you take coaching seriously.
If you want to coach senior leaders, directors or C-suite executives, Level 7 is your route.
It's ideal if you want to:
Build an external coaching or consultancy business targeting senior leaders
Coach at board level or work with high stakes clients
Lead or shape coaching strategy inside an organisation
Dive deeper into psychology, organisational dynamics, and reflective practice
Work at a postgraduate academic level
Coaching at executive level is different. The conversations are more strategic. The stakes are higher. Level 7 equips you for all of that.
If you’re already operating at a senior level or transitioning from a corporate career into coaching, Level 7 offers the credibility your future clients will expect.
This is the most important question.
If your coachees are managers or individual contributors → Level 5
If your coachees are senior leaders or executives → Level 7
It’s not about ambition — it’s about alignment. Coaching directors requires different tools, perspectives, and confidence.
Short answer: No.
Longer answer: Only if you don’t yet have coaching experience or access to senior coachees.
Level 7 requires you to coach at executive level.
If you can’t, Level 5 is the smarter first step.
Both levels require real coaching, not just theory.
This hands-on practice is where most of the learning happens — it’s why the ILM qualifications hold so much weight.
Choose Level 5 if you:
Choose Level 7 if you:
Both qualifications are exceptional. The question isn’t “Which one is better?”
It’s which one fits where you are today, and where you want your coaching to go?
Whichever you choose, you’ll be developing the skills that make the biggest difference in organisations today: coaching, reflective practice, emotional intelligence, and the ability to unlock performance.
If you are still undecided, have a chat with one of our account managers who will talk you through it in more detail and help make the best decision for you and your coaching career.
The BCF Group has been helping coaches and trainers develop their skills for over 25 years.
Our in-house tailored and ILM coaching qualifications programmes are designed for people who are serious about building real capability.
Get in touch to find out which programme is right for you.