Players
Tennis coach vs group clinic: which is better for adult improvers?
Published June 13, 2026
Players
Published June 13, 2026
In short
- Private coach is better for fixing specific technical problems (broken serve, bad footwork, weak backhand).
- Group clinic is better for everything else — reps, point play, fitness, community, cost.
- For most adult improvers, the optimal mix is 2 group clinics + 1 private lesson per month.
- Group clinics are 3–5× cheaper per hour. Don't pay for private when you don't need to.
If you're an adult improving at tennis, you'll eventually face the same choice: private lessons, or group clinics? They're not the same product. They solve different problems. Used together, they compound. Used separately, you'll either improve too slowly (clinic only) or overpay (private only).
This guide explains when each is the right tool and how to combine them.
A private lesson is focused diagnosis and correction.
A good coach watches your stroke from three angles in the first 10 minutes, identifies the one or two changes that will produce the largest improvement, and spends the rest of the hour drilling those changes. They feed precisely. They explain technique in your language. They correct on the spot.
What you're paying for:
What you're not paying for:
A private lesson is high-cost, high-density learning. It's also boring for the coach to feed you the same drill forty times, so good coaches mix in variation. That mix is part of why they cost more.
A group clinic is reps, point play, varied partners, and community.
A typical 90-minute group session at A$35 per head with 6 students is doing four things at once:
What you're not getting:
Group clinics are lower-cost, lower-density per-stroke, but higher in total practice volume. The maths is favourable.
Private lessons are worth it when:
Group clinics are the right buy when:
For most amateur adults in the 2.5–4.0 NTRP range:
| Frequency | Activity | Cost per month |
|---|---|---|
| 2× per week | Group clinic (A$35–50) | A$280–400 |
| 1× per month | Private diagnostic lesson | A$60–110 |
| 1–2× per week | Hitting partner / social tennis | Free–A$200 |
| Total | A$340–710 |
The private lesson once a month is the director — it tells you what to focus on in your next 4 weeks of group + practice. Without it, you'll drift. Without the group + practice, the private lesson is a one-off insight with nowhere to embed.
Mistake 1: All private, no group. You're spending A$400/week on private lessons and improving roughly as fast as the person paying A$120/week on group + occasional private. The marginal value drops fast.
Mistake 2: All group, no private. You're putting in 6 hours of clinic time per week and still hitching the same forehand. A single 60-minute private lesson would fix in an hour what 30 group hours can't.
Mistake 3: Switching coaches every few sessions. A coach needs 2–3 sessions to understand your strokes. Switching too fast resets that clock.
Mistake 4: Buying a 10-pack of privates with a coach you've never met. Always do one session first, then commit. The most common predictor of value isn't certification — it's whether you click.
Mistake 5: Treating a group clinic as a lesson. A clinic isn't a lesson. The coach can't watch you closely. Don't expect a private experience for group prices.
Five questions to ask before booking:
Five questions:
For private lessons:
For group clinics:
For the first 4–6 sessions, yes — you avoid building bad habits. After that, group is more cost-effective for ongoing work.
A diagnostic private every 4–6 weeks is enough for most adult improvers, paired with regular group and hitting practice. Beyond that you're paying for repetition you can do cheaper.
Yes, especially if your technique is already sound. You'll improve more slowly than someone combining both, but you'll still improve.
Sometimes. They're roughly half the per-person cost of private but lose the customisation. Best for two friends at similar levels who want to share a session.
A$25–55 per person per 90-minute session in Australian capital cities. Cheaper in regional Australia and at council programs.
With 2 group clinics + 1 monthly private + 2 hitting partner sessions per week, expect noticeable improvement in 6–8 weeks. Plateau-busting improvement (NTRP step up) in 6–12 months.
Both. Indoor sessions are usually available in winter for slightly more cost. Don't pause completely — six weeks off resets your touch.
Yes, and many do. You'll likely get a familiar-coach discount. The downside is they see you mostly in group format and may have a less complete picture of your technique than a dedicated private coach.
Private lessons fix what's broken; group clinics build everything else. Most adult improvers do best with 2 group clinics per week + 1 private lesson per month. Don't buy private when you don't need it — group is 3–5× cheaper per hour and gives you reps, point play, and community.
If you want to compare both private coaches and group clinics in your suburb side by side, Hitting Partner lists local coaches with their rates and clinic schedules — no commission, so prices are lower.
Hitting Partner matches you with players at your level, near you, when you're free. Free to browse.