Whether you’re a total beginner or a reformed athlete looking for your next obsession, racquet sports check a whole lot of boxes when it comes to your health and well-being. Ready to rally? Here are some of the ways tennis, pickleball, padel, and other court sports can enhance your life.
1. Heart Health
Picking up a racquet or paddle can be a game-changer for your ticker. A combination of aerobic (endurance) and anaerobic (fast, explosive movements) training, racquet sports are one of the most effective ways to strengthen the heart muscle, maintain a healthy weight, and ward off artery damage from high blood sugar, high blood pressure, and high cholesterol. In a large-scale cohort study published by the British Journal of Sports Medicine, researchers tracked more than 80,000 adults for nine years to examine the link between different types of exercise and the risk of early death. When it comes to heart health, racquet sports came out on top, lowering the odds of dying from cardiovascular disease by 56%—which was more than any other sport, including running and cycling.
2. Physical Fitness
Missed leg day at the gym? Not a fan of crunches and planks? No worries. Racquet sports offer a full-body workout in a single session. The repetitive motions involved in swinging and hitting contribute to muscle development and bone density, which can help stave off injuries as you age. All the short sprints, lunges, and quick pivots help to build explosive strength in your legs. The constant rotation and lateral movements engage the muscles of your core, while the serves and smashes add tone and definition to your upper body. Thanks to the dynamic nature of these sports, you’re also likely to see improvements in agility, speed, and stamina.
3. Brain Power
Court sports are as much a mental game as a physical one. The hand-eye coordination is activated by the cerebellum, which fine-tunes motor control and movement, and the parietal lobe, which processes spatial awareness. During a match, you have just milliseconds to anticipate your opponent’s moves, process sensory information, and respond strategically. Over time, this mental stimulation profoundly shapes the brain, enhancing cognitive function, improving problem-solving skills, and sharpening focus and memory.
4. Mood and Stress Relief
Call it therapy in motion. The rhythmic nature of racquet sports, punctuated by moments of high intensity, triggers the release of endorphins (the brain’s natural mood elevators) and lowers levels of cortisol (a stress hormone). Playing tennis, for example, has been linked to a number of mental health benefits, such as increased self-esteem and less stress. And it’s not something that must be done on a daily basis. In a 2016 study, just one 90-minute tennis session a week for 13 weeks was shown to decrease depression and anxiety symptoms and enhance well-being in healthy university students.
5. Connections With Others
There’s a reason so many racquet sports are played in doubles: Community is baked in. Whether you’re chatting between games, signing up for a local league, or bonding over a shared love of spin serves and smart watches, you’ll expand your social circle and get your human-interaction fix. Social connection, as you may know, is a top-tier predictor of long-term health, even more than exercise or diet alone. Joining a local club or league can be a great way to get to know like-minded players, or you can look to a platform like Meetup to find potential partners or communities near you.
6. Longevity
Apologies for burying the lede, but playing racquet sports just may extend your life. In the British Journal of Sports Medicine study mentioned earlier, racquet sports were associated with a 47% lower risk of death from all causes. And the Mayo Clinic’s Copenhagen Heart Study found that tennis players, on average, lived 9.7 years longer than non-exercisers and 10.1 years longer than those who regularly went to the gym. Prefer a birdie to a tennis ball? Badminton players in the study lived 6.2 years longer than the sedentary participants.
The bottom line: If you’re looking for a fun, community-powered way to get fit, racquet sports deliver. They boost heart health, mental clarity, muscle tone, social bonds, and longevity—all in an hour or two on the court. So book that tennis lesson, say yes to your co-worker’s pickleball invite, or dust off that badminton set. Your future, fitter, happier self is waiting at the baseline.
