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How to Play Pickleball: A Beginner's Complete Guide

The short version: Pickleball is a paddle sport played on a small court with a plastic ball. It combines elements of tennis, badminton, and ping-pong. Games go to 11 points (win by 2), and only the serving side can score. The one rule that confuses everyone: you can't volley while standing in the "kitchen" (the 7-foot zone at the net).

What You Need to Play

One of the reasons pickleball has exploded in popularity is how low the barrier to entry is. You don't need much to get started:

💡 Tip: Find free courts first Most YMCA locations, community recreation centers, and public parks have free pickleball courts. Search "pickleball courts near me" on Google Maps or use the USA Pickleball court finder before investing in equipment.

Understanding the Court

The pickleball court is 20 feet wide and 44 feet long — the same size for both singles and doubles. That's about a third of a tennis court, which is why pickleball plays fast.

📐 Court at a Glance

  • Total court size20 ft × 44 ft
  • Net height (center)34 inches
  • Net height (posts)36 inches
  • Kitchen (NVZ) depth7 ft from net
  • Service area depth15 ft (beyond kitchen)

The key zone to understand is the Non-Volley Zone (NVZ) — commonly called the "kitchen." It's the 7-foot rectangle on each side of the net. You cannot volley (hit the ball out of the air) while standing in or touching the kitchen line. You can step in after the ball bounces there. See the full court dimensions guide for diagrams.

How to Serve

The serve starts every rally. Here's what the rules require:

  1. You must serve underhand — paddle contact must be below the waist
  2. The serve goes diagonally cross-court into the opponent's service box
  3. The ball must clear the kitchen (non-volley zone) and land in the service area beyond it
  4. Both feet must be behind the baseline when you serve
  5. You get one serve attempt (no second serve like tennis, unless it's a let)
📌 The Drop Serve Since 2021, USA Pickleball also allows a "drop serve": you drop the ball and let it bounce, then hit it. This is popular with beginners because it's easier to execute legally. You can use it at any level.

See our complete serve rules guide for details on foot faults, lets, and common serving mistakes.

The Two-Bounce Rule

This is one of the first rules that surprises new players, and it's fundamental to how pickleball feels different from tennis.

The rule: After the serve, each team must let the ball bounce once before they can start volleying. Specifically:

Think of it this way: the first two shots of every rally must bounce. After that, anything goes (as long as you're not in the kitchen).

The two-bounce rule exists to prevent the serving team from rushing the net and winning easily with a put-away volley. It creates a more balanced game.

The Kitchen (Non-Volley Zone) Rule

The kitchen rule is the defining feature of pickleball. It's what makes the sport different from every other paddle game.

The rule, plain and simple: You cannot hit the ball out of the air (volley) while any part of your body is touching the kitchen or its boundary lines. This includes your paddle, your hat, your momentum — all of it.

⚠️ Common misconceptions You can stand in the kitchen — just not while volleying. If the ball bounces in the kitchen, you can step in, hit it, and then step back out. You just can't be in the kitchen when you make contact with a ball that hasn't bounced.

Why the kitchen rule matters strategically

Because you can't smash volleys from the net, players have to develop touch and placement instead of pure power. This is why "dinking" — soft, low shots played just over the net — is such a central part of pickleball strategy at higher levels.

How Scoring Works

Pickleball scoring takes some getting used to, but it follows a logical pattern once you understand it.

In doubles, the score is called as three numbers: serving team's score – receiving team's score – server number (1 or 2).

Example: "4-3-2" means the serving team has 4 points, the receiving team has 3, and it's the second server's turn.

For the full breakdown with examples, see our pickleball scoring guide.

Faults and Out-of-Bounds

A fault ends the rally. The most common faults are:

If the serving team faults, they lose their serve (or the point goes to the other team in singles). If the receiving team faults, the serving team scores a point.

Playing Doubles (The Most Common Format)

Most recreational pickleball is played as doubles — two players per side. A few key doubles-specific rules and tips:

💡 The #1 beginner tip for doubles Get to the kitchen line as quickly as possible after you've hit your first shots. Most points in recreational pickleball are won at the net, not from the baseline. As soon as the two-bounce rule has been satisfied, move up.
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Quick Summary: The 9 Rules Every Beginner Needs

#RuleWhat it means
1Underhand servePaddle contact must be below the waist
2Diagonal serveServe crosses the court diagonally into the far service box
3Clear the kitchenServes must land beyond the NVZ line
4Two-bounce ruleFirst two shots of every rally must bounce
5No kitchen volleysCan't volley while in or touching the NVZ
6Only server scoresYou can only win points on your own serve
7Game to 11, win by 2Must win by two points
8Both feet behind baselineRequired during the serve
9One serve attemptNo second serve (except lets)

Frequently Asked Questions

Is pickleball hard to learn?
Pickleball is considered one of the easiest racket sports to pick up. Most beginners can play a real rally within 30 minutes of learning the basic rules. The court is small, the ball is slow (compared to tennis), and the paddle is easy to control.
How long does a pickleball game last?
A standard recreational game to 11 points usually takes 15–25 minutes. Tournament games sometimes play to 15 or 21 points and can go longer.
Can you play pickleball alone?
Not in a formal sense, but you can practice solo by hitting against a wall or a rebounder. These are great for improving your dink and drive consistency.
What's the difference between indoor and outdoor pickleball?
The main difference is the ball. Outdoor balls have smaller, harder holes and are made for wind resistance. Indoor balls have larger holes and are softer. Courts can also differ — outdoor courts are typically asphalt or concrete; indoor courts are often wood or sport tile.
Do you need special shoes for pickleball?
You don't strictly need special shoes, but court-specific shoes help significantly. They provide better lateral support and non-marking soles. Running shoes are designed for forward motion, not the side-to-side movement pickleball demands. See our pickleball shoes guide for recommendations.

Ready for the next step?

Now that you know how to play, dive deeper into the details:

Full pickleball rules guide
How scoring works (with examples)
Best paddles for beginners
Drills to improve fast