Players
What is cardio tennis? An Australian player's guide
Published June 13, 2026
Players
Published June 13, 2026
In short
- Cardio tennis is a coach-led group fitness session played on a tennis court, set to music, designed to combine tennis movement with a workout.
- 60 minutes; A$15–25 per session in Australia; 8–16 players per court; no tennis experience needed.
- It's not lessons (no technique instruction) and not social tennis (no rotating doubles). It's structured group exercise that happens to use a racquet.
- Most Australian capital cities have multiple cardio tennis venues. Sessions are typically weekday evenings or Saturday mornings.
If you've seen "cardio tennis" advertised at your local club and weren't sure what it actually was, this guide explains the format, what to expect at your first session, what it costs, and who it's a good fit for.
Cardio tennis is a structured group fitness format on a tennis court, run by a certified coach, set to music, lasting 60 minutes. It's a Tennis Australia-licensed program (also run by USTA in the US and LTA in the UK), which means cardio tennis sessions at affiliated clubs follow a standard structure and pacing.
The format has three parts:
Throughout the session, the coach feeds balls, calls plays, switches drills every 3–5 minutes, and keeps energy high with music. You won't play points or matches. You won't be coached on technique. You'll move, hit, sweat, and burn 400–800 calories an hour.
The biggest confusion is between cardio tennis and a tennis lesson. They're not the same product.
| Cardio tennis | Tennis lesson | |
|---|---|---|
| Goal | Workout | Improve technique |
| Coach focus | Pace, energy, ball feed | Diagnose, correct, drill specific shots |
| Format | Continuous group activity | Stop-start instruction |
| Time spent rallying | Most of the session | A portion |
| Stroke correction | Minimal | Core |
| Cost | A$15–25/person/60 min | A$60–110/person/60 min private; A$25–55/person/90 min group |
If you turn up to cardio tennis expecting "the coach is going to fix my backhand," you'll be disappointed. If you turn up expecting "an hour of group exercise with a tennis racquet," you'll love it.
Social tennis is rotating doubles with score-keeping. Cardio tennis has no doubles, no rotation, no score. It's also coach-led, where social tennis is self-organised.
For a side-by-side, see what is social tennis.
The dominant cardio tennis demographic in Australia is 30–55 year-old adults who want fitness with a recreational sport vibe. It works particularly well for:
It's a worse fit for:
Arriving You sign in at the club or coach, pay your A$15–25, and grab a court. Most cardio tennis sessions are held at clubs or council courts with 2–4 courts available.
Warm-up You'll start with shadow movement — side-to-side shuffles, split-step practice, dynamic stretches. Then 5 minutes of mini-tennis from the service line with rotating partners.
The workout The coach announces a drill. You line up. They feed you 5–8 balls in a row at varying paces and placements. You hit, move, recover, then move to the back of the line. Most stations run 3–5 minutes. Common drills:
Throughout, music keeps the pace. Your heart rate stays elevated. You'll be tired by halfway.
Cool-down The intensity drops. A short rally with whoever's next to you, some stretching, and a chat about the next session.
The whole thing ends about an hour after start. Most sessions finish with players standing around chatting.
Same as any tennis session, plus a workout sensibility:
| Per session | Per term (8–10 sessions) | |
|---|---|---|
| Council courts / community programs | A$10–18 | A$80–150 |
| Suburban club | A$15–22 | A$130–200 |
| Inner-city / premium club | A$20–30 | A$170–270 |
Most sessions are pay-as-you-go; some clubs require a term enrolment (cheaper per session). First session is often free or half-price at most venues.
Compared to other fitness options, cardio tennis sits between F45 (A$50/class) and parkrun (free) — roughly the same as a gym group class or a yoga session, with the variety of a sport.
Cardio tennis is most established in Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane, Perth, and Adelaide, with regional pockets at Tennis Australia-affiliated clubs. Standard slots:
For a city-specific look at the tennis scene including cardio tennis:
Partially. The honest answer:
What it improves
What it doesn't improve
If your goal is to play better tennis, cardio tennis is a useful supplement to social tennis and the occasional private lesson — not a replacement.
Cardio tennis vs F45 / boot camp F45 and similar HIIT classes are pure strength + cardio. Cardio tennis adds racquet skill and ball tracking. Same calorie burn; different brain activation.
Cardio tennis vs spin / cycling class Both are coach-led group exercise. Spin is steady-state low-impact; cardio tennis is interval-style high-impact. Different muscles, different injuries possible.
Cardio tennis vs a regular tennis hitting session A normal hit involves 30–40% of the session actually rallying. Cardio tennis is closer to 70–80% — you're moving and hitting constantly. Different workout.
Cardio tennis vs Pickleball Club Pickleball is a sport you can play in casual social formats; cardio tennis is a fitness format that uses tennis. Pickleball gets you points; cardio tennis gets you a workout.
In order of how reliably they work:
1. Hitting Partner Filter Open Games by "Clinic" and "Cardio Tennis." Sessions in your suburb appear sorted by distance. Live across 10 Australian cities.
2. Tennis Australia's Find a Club tool Filter by suburb. Most affiliated clubs running cardio tennis are listed.
3. Your local council's leisure programs Many councils run subsidised cardio tennis at public courts. Cheaper than private clubs; often beginner-friendly.
4. Local Facebook groups "[Your suburb] tennis" groups usually have cardio tennis posts from coaches.
60 minutes is standard. Some clubs offer "Cardio Tennis Lite" at 45 minutes; very few run 90-minute sessions.
Not for your first session. The coach scales intensity to the group. You'll be tired the next day. Within 4–6 sessions your conditioning will catch up.
Yes — and it's actually one of the best entry points to adult tennis. No one watches your technique. You hit hundreds of balls per session. You get tennis movement embedded fast.
Most studies estimate 400–600 calories per hour for a typical 70 kg adult, up to 800 in high-intensity sessions. Comparable to running 6 km in an hour, but spread across more muscle groups.
Yes — assuming the rest of your nutrition is sorted. Two cardio tennis sessions per week + a normal recreational sport schedule is a reliable maintenance cardio dose.
Most cardio tennis programs lend racquets to first-timers. After 2–3 sessions, get your own. A$80–150 buys a decent adult racquet.
Yes. Many cardio tennis regulars don't play any other tennis. Some never play points. The format is self-contained.
Probably not, at least during a flare-up. The continuous rallying loads the forearm heavily. Wait until the elbow is settled, then ease back in. Talk to a physio first.
Twice a week is the sweet spot for fitness gains without overloading the elbow. Three times a week is fine if your body handles it. Once a week works for maintenance.
No. "Cardio tennis" is a specific Tennis Australia / USTA / LTA branded format. Other "cardio [sport]" classes are unrelated marketing.
Tennis Australia-accredited Cardio Tennis instructor (separate to general tennis coach accreditation). Coaches running official Cardio Tennis programs have completed the Tennis Australia Cardio Tennis course. Unaccredited "cardio fitness on a tennis court" sessions also exist; they're not Cardio Tennis (capitalised), just inspired by it.
Cardio tennis is a 60-minute coach-led group fitness session on a tennis court, set to music, designed as a workout rather than a tennis lesson. A$15–25 per session in Australia. Suitable for any level including absolute beginners. Most Australian capital cities have multiple weekly sessions.
To find cardio tennis near you across 10 Australian cities, Hitting Partner lists sessions by suburb and time.
Hitting Partner matches you with players at your level, near you, when you're free. Free to browse.