Choose the Right String Tension

String tension is just as important as what string you use in your tennis racquet. While it can seem even more complicated than choosing your string, there are three easy questions you can ask yourself when deciding at what tension to have your racquet strung.

What String Material?

Are you using nylon/gut string, polyester string, or a hybrid of half and half? In general, beginners should play with nylon strings (or natural gut if you don’t mind spending the money), intermediate players can start to blend with hybrids, and advanced players can take the court with a full bed of polyester. When it comes to tension, the general rule is to string elastic materials like nylon or natural gut around 50-60lbs, which we’ll use as our base recommended tension. If using a stiffer string material like polyester, we’d recommend stringing looser to avoid arm injuries. Here are the tension ranges we’d aim for the first time you get your racquet strung:

How Do You Want String To Affect Your Play?

Do you want your strings to provide more power or more control? Typically, beginner players with slower racquet-head speeds want their strings to add more power to their shots while advanced players with faster racquet-head speeds want their strings to provide more control over their shots. The higher your string tension, the more control you’ll have while the looser your string tension, the more power. Here are the above tension ranges again, but adjusted for power or control:

What is your skill level? Beginner, Intermediate, Advanced?

Your skill level on court is the final question that needs to be addressed in order to nail down your ideal string tensions. Here are those tension ranges again, narrowed down even further for each playing level.

Nylon/Gut: 50-60lbs

Hybrid: 46-56lbs *Because polyester is a stiffer material, string 2lbs (1kg) looser than nylon

Polyester: 44-54lbs