Tennis in NY

Tennis in New York

New York has the most tennis players of any US metro — and the most aggressive court-time competition to match, from Central Park bubble queues to prestige private clubs with multi-year waitlists.

The New York tennis scene

New York tennis splits hard across boroughs. Manhattan is dominated by indoor bubble courts in winter (November–March) and premium private clubs year-round — Sutton East Tennis Club on the East Side, Stadium Tennis Center in Washington Heights, and the legendary West Side Tennis Club in Forest Hills (Queens) anchor the prestige tier. Brooklyn's scene is centered on McCarren Park and Prospect Park courts — more casual, more competitive for public court time. Queens has the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center in Flushing, the largest public tennis facility in the world. The Bronx has Crotona Park courts as the main community hub. Riverside Park courts on the Upper West Side and Central Park's 26-court complex round out the Manhattan public offer. City View Racquet Club in Brooklyn serves the serious Brooklyn player base.

Social tennis in New York

USTA leagues are the backbone of organized adult tennis in New York — Eastern Section runs one of the country's largest adult league programs across all five boroughs. Drop-in social tennis exists but is less formalized than in many cities; most players connect through their club or a bubble-court membership. Typical indoor court hire runs $40–80/hr per court depending on location and time (peak evening slots at Manhattan bubbles hit $60–80/hr). Weekday evenings 6–9pm are the peak window in winter; public courts run summer mornings 7–10am. NYC Parks permit system for Central Park courts is first-come-first-served (free) on weekdays; weekend permit required ($15/hr).

New to social tennis? Read what social tennis is and the first-timer's guide.

Tennis coaches in New York

Manhattan private coaching rates run $100–200/hr — among the highest in the country. Sutton East, West Side Tennis Club, and Stadium Tennis Center coaches sit at the top of that range; coaches working out of public parks or outer-borough facilities are typically $80–120/hr. Brooklyn and Queens coaches average $75–110/hr. Group clinics in Manhattan run $50–90 per person per 90-minute session; outer boroughs $35–60. Many Manhattan coaches charge an additional court fee on top of their lesson rate — confirm before booking. USTA-certified and PTR-certified coaches are the standard credentials to look for.

For an Australia-wide breakdown of coaching costs, see how much does a tennis coach cost in Australia. Or read tennis coach vs group clinic to decide which suits you.

Finding a tennis hitting partner in New York

Finding a hitting partner in New York is a supply problem more than a demand problem — players are everywhere, but matching level, schedule, and location across five boroughs is genuinely hard. Most regular players find their partner through their indoor bubble membership, USTA league teammates, or club bulletin boards. Outer-borough public courts have regular pickup scenes (McCarren Park, Crotona Park, Astoria Park in Queens) on weekend mornings. Hitting Partner's level-based matching (NTRP 3.0–4.5) is particularly useful in NYC because the player pool is large enough that you rarely have to compromise on level.

For more on finding partners, see how to find a tennis hitting partner and how much to pay one.

Cardio tennis and clinics in New York

Cardio tennis in New York is concentrated at private clubs and indoor facilities — Stadium Tennis Center, Sutton East, and several Westchester-adjacent clubs run weekly programs. Typical price $30–55 per session. Year-round availability is good for club members; public-court cardio programs are limited. Adult tennis clinics focusing on doubles strategy and stroke mechanics run weekly at most private clubs at $45–75 per person. The USTA BJK National Tennis Center runs group programs and adult clinics at competitive public rates ($25–45 per session).

New to either format? See what cardio tennis is and what a tennis clinic is.

Popular courts and clubs in New York

  • Central Park Tennis Center (Manhattan)
  • Riverside Park Tennis Courts (Upper West Side)
  • McCarren Park Tennis Courts (Brooklyn)
  • USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center (Flushing, Queens)
  • West Side Tennis Club (Forest Hills, Queens)
  • Sutton East Tennis Club (Manhattan)
  • Stadium Tennis Center (Washington Heights)
  • City View Racquet Club (Brooklyn)
  • Astoria Park Tennis Courts (Queens)
  • Crotona Park Tennis Courts (Bronx)

Hitting Partner — live in New York

Find your hitting partner in New York.

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Common questions about tennis in New York

How much does a tennis coach cost in New York?+
$100–200/hr for private coaching in Manhattan; $75–120/hr in Brooklyn, Queens, and the Bronx. Group clinics $35–90 per person per session depending on borough and facility.
Where can I play social tennis in New York?+
USTA Eastern Section leagues are the main organized adult tennis vehicle. For drop-in, the USTA BJK National Tennis Center in Flushing runs public programs. McCarren Park, Central Park, and Riverside Park are the best-known public drop-in spots.
How do indoor bubble courts work in New York?+
Most Manhattan and outer-borough clubs inflate air-supported bubbles over outdoor courts from November through March. Court time runs $40–80/hr depending on facility and slot. Membership is usually required for guaranteed access; some facilities sell individual hour bookings when space allows.
Can I play at the USTA National Tennis Center year-round?+
Yes — the Billie Jean King National Tennis Center offers public court rentals and group programs outside of the US Open period (late August–early September). Indoor and outdoor courts available.