Tennis is experiencing a legitimate boom in the United States, with participation hitting an all-time record of 27.3 million players in 2025. The U.S. Tennis Association announced Wednesday that the sport has now grown for six consecutive years, representing a stunning reversal from the pre-pandemic era. Since 2019, participation has jumped 54% basically the sport has more than half again as many players as it did before COVID fundamentally changed how Americans think about recreation. This isn’t a niche sport recovering. This is a mainstream sport experiencing explosive growth driven by accessibility, cultural momentum, and genuine interest across demographics.
What’s particularly striking is that this growth is sustainable, not just a pandemic anomaly
Recreational tennis soared during the coronavirus lockdowns in 2020 when courts were among the safest outdoor activities available. That initial surge could have easily evaporated once pandemic restrictions lifted. Instead, it sustained and continued growing. More than half the current players 14.5 million people played 10 or more times in 2025. That’s not casual dabbling. That’s committed participation. These aren’t people trying tennis once at a birthday party. These are regular players who’ve integrated the sport into their lives.
The demographic expansion is equally important as the raw growth numbers
Women gained 1.1 million new players (up 10%), demonstrating that tennis is successfully recruiting beyond the traditionally male-dominated sports landscape. Black participation increased by 450,000 (up 14%), Hispanic participation grew by 550,000 (up 12%), and Asian/Pacific Islander participation jumped 260,000 (up 10%). The USTA is essentially building a genuinely diverse sport rather than simply growing existing demographics. That diversity is creating a different culture around tennis less country-club elitism, more community accessibility.
The first-time player metric reveals how accessible the sport has become
Nearly 4.9 million people tried tennis for the first time in 2025, representing a 9% increase from previous years. That’s meaningful because it suggests barriers to entry have dropped significantly. Whether that’s better court access, lower membership costs, or simply cultural acceptance of the sport as something normal people do, the result is clear: tennis is no longer intimidating for newcomers.
The USTA’s ambition reveals how seriously the sport is taking this momentum
They’ve set a goal of 35 million players by 2035 basically wanting to grow participation by another 30% over the next decade. That’s aggressive but achievable given the current trajectory. If tennis continues its annual growth rate and demographic expansion, reaching 35 million players is realistic. The infrastructure and cultural foundation are already in place.
What’s genuinely fascinating is how tennis transformed during COVID and never quite reverted. It became a democratized sport instead of an exclusive one. Public courts filled with casual players instead of dedicated club members. The sport’s elite profile the US Open, Wimbledon, Roland Garros became inspiring rather than intimidating for recreational players. That psychological shift created a feedback loop: more people playing recreational tennis created demand for more courts, coaching, and programs, which made the sport even more accessible.
The numbers also reveal something important about American sports participation patterns
We’re not just consuming sports. We’re playing them. Nearly 27 million people participating directly in tennis demonstrates that Americans want active recreation, not just passive entertainment. That’s a meaningful cultural shift toward health and community.
For tennis, these numbers represent vindication of accessibility-focused strategies. The sport finally cracked the code of making itself available beyond country clubs and exclusive clubs. The pandemic accelerated that process, but six consecutive years of growth suggest it’s structural, not temporary.
Tennis isn’t just recovering. It’s genuinely thriving.

