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Tennis court guide

How big is a tennis court?

Tennis court dimensions diagram
A tennis court is 78 feet (23.77 m) long and 36 feet (10.97 m) wide. That full width is for doubles; for singles the court narrows to 27 feet (8.23 m), with the outer lane on each side ignored. The net stands 3 feet high at the center. Every regulation court uses these exact numbers, and they have barely moved since 1877.
Length
78 ft (23.77 m)
Width (doubles)
36 ft (10.97 m)
Width (singles)
27 ft (8.23 m)
Doubles alley
4.5 ft (1.37 m) each side
Net height (center)
3 ft (0.91 m)
Net height (posts)
3 ft 6 in (1.07 m)
Service box
21 ft × 13.5 ft
Playing area (doubles)
2,808 sq ft (260.9 m²)

How long is a tennis court?

A tennis court is 78 feet (23.77 m) long from baseline to baseline, and that length is the same for singles and doubles. It splits into 39 feet on each side of the net, the distance a groundstroke covers in a baseline rally. Only the width changes between the two games (27 feet for singles, 36 for doubles); the length never does.

Why this exact size?

The dimensions look arbitrary until you learn they are a compromise that got frozen in place. Tennis grew out of an 1870s lawn game, and the first standardized court was not even rectangular. Major Walter Wingfield's 1874 patent described an hourglass shape, pinched at the net and wider at the baselines, marketed in a box as "Sphairistikè."
That shape did not last. When the All England Croquet Club organized the first Wimbledon in 1877, a three-man subcommittee discarded the hourglass and drew a plain rectangle 78 feet long and 27 feet wide. They borrowed the 78-foot length and the net concept from real tennis, the older indoor game, and chose a width suited to the singles match they were standardizing. Those 1877 numbers, 78 by 27 with the net at the posts, are essentially the court played on today.
The length has a quiet logic to it: 78 feet is long enough that a hard serve can be returned but short enough to keep rallies alive, and 39 feet from net to baseline turned out to reward both power and patience. Nobody re-optimized it. It worked, the sport exploded, thousands of courts got built to match, and changing it later became unthinkable. The court is the size it is largely because that's the size it was.

Why some courts have lines on the sides and others don't

Look at a court and you will see two long lines running down each side, a few feet apart. That gap is the doubles alley, also called the tramline, and it is why a court can serve two different widths without repainting anything.
  • The inner sideline marks the 27-foot singles court. In a singles match, a ball landing in the alley is out.
  • The outer sideline marks the full 36-foot doubles court. In doubles, that same alley is in, the extra 4.5 feet on each side is live.
  • The alley only applies down the sides. The service boxes and baselines are identical for both games; doubles just widens the court after the serve.
A court with only one line down each side, common on older public courts, school courts, or backyard builds, was painted for singles only. A full doubles court adds the second outer line to open up the alleys. Same length, same net, same service boxes; the sidelines are the entire difference between the two games' footprints. For what each line governs once play starts, see tennis court lines explained.

What actually varies between courts

The painted playing area never changes. What differs from court to court is everything around and beneath it:
  • Run-off space, the ITF recommends 21 ft behind each baseline and 12 ft beside each sideline, so a proper court needs about 120 ft × 60 ft of ground. Cramped public courts skimp here; tournament courts don't.
  • Surface, hard, clay, or grass changes how the ball bounces and how long points last, but not the dimensions.
  • Net detail, 3 ft at the center, 3 ft 6 in at the posts. The sag is intentional and identical everywhere.
  • Ceiling height (indoor), the ITF wants ~30 ft of clearance over the net so lobs stay in play.
A tight neighborhood court and Centre Court at Wimbledon share the exact same lines. The difference you feel is the breathing room around them, plus the surface underfoot and the net height, which are worth knowing before you play.

Quick comparisons

  • A pickleball court (44 ft × 20 ft) fits inside one tennis court nearly four times over, which is why one tennis court can host up to four pickleball games.
  • A basketball court (94 ft × 50 ft) is both longer and wider than a tennis court's playing lines.
  • A doubles tennis court is roughly 1/15th the size of an American football field.
For the full pickleball-versus-tennis breakdown, see pickleball court vs tennis court. And now that you can read the lines, go use them: find a court near you and a partner to meet there.
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