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Social tennis for beginners: a first-timer's guide (Australia)

Published June 13, 2026

In short

  • You don't need to be good. You need to be able to rally a few balls back over the net.
  • Look for sessions labelled "Beginner," "Introductory," "All Levels Welcome," or "Cardio Tennis."
  • First night: wear court shoes, bring a racquet, A$10–15 cash, and a water bottle.
  • The first 30 minutes will feel awkward. By round two it stops being awkward. By the end of the night you'll have played 5+ people and exchanged numbers with at least one.

If you're an adult who'd like to play tennis but doesn't currently have anyone to play with, the cheapest way in is social tennis. The most common reason people don't go is they think they're not good enough. This guide explains why that worry is almost always misplaced — and walks you through your first night so it's less of an unknown.

Are you actually a beginner — or do you just think you are?

The single biggest reason adults avoid social tennis is the belief that everyone else there will be much better. Here's the honest range you'll meet at a mainstream Australian social tennis night:

  • Total beginners — 1 in 10 players. Picked up a racquet for the first time recently.
  • Returning players — 4 in 10. Played as a teenager, dropped off, came back at 30+.
  • Intermediates — 4 in 10. Have played reasonably consistently for years.
  • Advanced — 1 in 10. Strong club players or ex-juniors.

The numbers shift session to session, but the dominant group is "returning players" — adults who played casually at school, stopped for a decade or two, and now want to play again. They're rusty, they double-fault, they shank forehands. They look exactly like a beginner.

If you've ever swung a racquet, you're closer to the average than you think.

What level do you actually need?

The genuine minimum to enjoy social tennis is:

  • You can serve underhand (over the net, into the box) most of the time
  • You can rally a forehand or backhand back over the net 2–3 times
  • You can stand in a doubles court and know not to stand at the net while your partner serves

That's it. Topspin, slice, second serves, strategy — all unnecessary. You will learn them by playing.

If you can't do those three things yet, you're better off with one or two beginner clinics or lessons first. After 3–4 hours of structured beginner instruction, almost any adult can manage social tennis.

Picking the right session for your first night

Not all social tennis sessions are good for beginners. Look for the labels:

Sessions that are beginner-friendly:

  • "Beginners' social tennis"
  • "Introductory social tennis"
  • "All levels welcome"
  • "Cardio tennis" (coach-led; even better for beginners)
  • "Social tennis for adult learners"

Sessions that are not beginner-friendly:

  • "Competitive social"
  • "Advanced social"
  • "UTR 6+ social"
  • "Social comp" or "Social ladder"
  • A club night that's been running for 20 years with the same 12 players

If a session is unlabelled, ring or message the organiser before you turn up. "Hi, I'm returning to tennis after years off — is the Tuesday session welcoming to rusty players?" gets you a straight answer. Most organisers genuinely want new players.

Where to find beginner-friendly social tennis

In rough order of how reliably they work in Australia:

1. Hitting Partner Filter Open Games by "Social Tennis" and "Beginner" or "All Levels." Players post sessions with explicit level tags so you know what you're walking into. Live in Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane, Perth, Adelaide, Gold Coast, Canberra, Newcastle, Wollongong, and Hobart.

2. Your local tennis club Many clubs run a dedicated beginners' social tennis night or a women's day that's beginner-friendly. Phone the club secretary; they'll tell you which night.

3. Council "Try Tennis" programs Most Australian councils run cheap (A$5–10) beginner social programs at public courts. Search "[your council] tennis."

4. Tennis Australia's "Cardio Tennis" sessions A coach-led, music-driven group session that's adult beginner gold. Check Tennis Australia's website for accredited cardio tennis venues near you.

5. Local Facebook groups Search "[your suburb] social tennis." You'll find both established sessions and casual one-off invites.

What to wear

Don't overthink it. The minimum:

  • A T-shirt or polo shirt — anything you'd run in
  • Tennis shorts, a skort, or athletic shorts — knee length or above
  • Court shoesnot running shoes. Running shoes have curved soles that roll your ankles on lateral movement. Court shoes have flat, non-marking soles. Most courts require them.
  • Socks (yes, this is worth mentioning) — court socks or low-cut athletic socks
  • A jumper or light jacket — Australian evenings cool fast

What you don't need: a tennis dress, brand-name kit, a wristband, sweatbands, a specific colour. Some old private clubs require predominantly white clothing — check the dress code on the venue's website, but most modern social sessions are come-as-you-are.

What to bring

The minimum kit:

  • A racquet — if you don't own one, ask the organiser. Most clubs and many coaches have spare racquets they'll lend a beginner for the first session. If you want to buy one, A$80–150 gets you a perfectly adequate adult racquet.
  • A water bottle — most clubhouses have taps, some don't
  • Cash for the entry fee — A$10–15 typically; some clubs take card
  • Sunscreen for daytime sessions
  • A hat for daytime sessions

What's optional but appreciated:

  • A 3-pack of tennis balls — usually the club provides, but bringing one shows you came to play
  • A wristband if you sweat into your eyes
  • Snacks for energy if it's a 2-hour session

What you don't need to bring:

  • A coach
  • A partner
  • Any prior experience
  • A higher level of fitness than you currently have

What to expect at your first session

This is the bit beginners want to know most.

Arriving (15 mins before start) You'll arrive at the courts. Find the clubhouse or the organiser. Pay your A$10–15 cash. Get a name tag if there is one. Most organisers will introduce you to the regulars as you arrive — say hi, repeat their names back, you won't remember any of them, that's fine.

Warm-up (10 minutes) The organiser tells you which court to go to. You'll hit briefly with whoever's been assigned to your court — mini-tennis from the service line first, then long rallies from the baseline. No score is kept. Your only job here is to get your eye in. Hit slowly. Aim for the middle. Don't try to look impressive.

Round 1 (15–20 minutes) The organiser calls the first round. You're paired with a partner against an opposing pair. You play doubles. Score is kept for the round but doesn't accumulate across the night.

What feels weird the first round:

  • You don't know your partner
  • You'll feel watched
  • You'll hit at least one ball straight into the net
  • You'll probably double-fault

What's actually happening:

  • Your partner is also slightly anxious
  • Nobody is watching as closely as you think
  • Everyone else also hits balls into the net
  • Double-faulting is endemic in social tennis — including among 4.0 NTRP players

After the round, the awkwardness drops dramatically.

Rotation At the end of the round, the organiser tells you which court and which partner you're on next. You'll typically play 4–6 different partners over the night. Each one is a new social interaction — but a shorter, simpler one than the first.

The bar / coffee afterwards Many groups hang around 30 minutes after play. This is where the actual community part happens. Stay if you can; this is how you turn first-timer into regular.

What to do if you have a bad first night

Some first nights are wonderful. Some are mediocre. Some are just bad — the level was wrong, the rotation was confusing, no one talked to you. Don't generalise.

If your first night was bad, try a different group before you give up. Most Australian cities have 5–15 social tennis sessions within a 20-minute drive. The first one you try is rarely the right fit.

Things that often help on attempt two:

  • Pick a session explicitly labelled for beginners or returners
  • Go with a friend who's also rusty — significantly reduces first-time stress
  • Try a cardio tennis session instead of pure social — the coach-led structure removes social pressure
  • Use Hitting Partner to find a recurring weekly hit at your level first; build confidence; then return to social

How to improve quickly between sessions

Three things that compound over a month or two:

1. One 45-minute lesson per fortnight Pick one stroke, fix one specific habit, hit a wall or use a ball machine to embed it. Don't try to fix everything — work on serve for two weeks, then forehand for two weeks.

2. One hitting partner session per week Same partner, same time, same court. Predictability is what builds confidence. Find one through Hitting Partner or the social tennis night you've started attending.

3. One social tennis night per week For variety, rotation, and the social side. This is also where you'll start meeting players to play with outside social tennis.

Add up: one lesson every two weeks + one hit a week + one social a week = roughly 4 hours of tennis a week. That's the budget for steady improvement as an adult.

FAQ

Can absolute beginners play social tennis?

Yes — at sessions explicitly labelled beginner-friendly. Pure mainstream social tennis assumes basic competence (rally a few balls back). If you can't yet, take 2–3 lessons first or join a beginners-only social.

What if I don't have a racquet?

Most clubs and coaches running social tennis have a spare or loaner racquet for first-timers. Just ask the organiser when you contact them. If you want to buy your own, A$80–150 gets you a good adult racquet.

Will I be the worst player there?

Probably not. Most social tennis sessions have a wider range than newcomers expect. You're likely to be at or above the lower third — alongside other returners and beginners.

What if I haven't played in 15 years?

You're the dominant demographic of Australian social tennis. Show up.

How do I find someone my level?

Use Hitting Partner to filter players by level. Or attend social tennis a few times, identify players who feel like a good match, ask them for a separate hit outside the social night.

Do I need to be fit?

Not really. Social tennis doubles is forgiving on fitness — you're rarely running flat-out for sustained periods. If you can walk briskly for 90 minutes, you can play 90 minutes of doubles.

What if I'm slow on court?

So is most of social tennis. The rotation system means slow players are matched with sympathetic partners. Doubles is far more forgiving on movement than singles.

Will people be friendly?

Almost always yes. Australian social tennis is built around the idea that strangers turn up and play together. The implicit rule is "be welcoming to anyone who arrives." Antisocial groups don't last.

How long should I stay?

The whole night, if you can. The first half is the awkward half; the second half is when you start enjoying it. Many groups also have a post-tennis drink, which is where you actually become a regular.

What if I cry from frustration mid-session?

It happens occasionally. Sit out a round, drink water, breathe. It passes. Tennis is a frustrating sport — it does this to professionals too. Coming back the next week is the answer.

The shortest possible version

You don't need to be good at tennis to play social tennis as a beginner. Look for sessions labelled "beginners," "introductory," or "all levels." Wear court shoes, bring a racquet (or borrow one), turn up 15 minutes early, expect the first 20 minutes to feel awkward, and stay for the post-tennis chat. You'll meet 5+ people in 2 hours.

To find beginner-friendly social tennis in your suburb, Hitting Partner lets you filter by level and tags. Live in 10 Australian cities.

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