Equipment Guide

Strings and Tension: The Most Underrated Factor in Your Tennis Game

When players talk gear, the conversation almost always starts with the racquet. Brand, weight, head size, balance — these get obsessed over endlessly. Meanwhile, the strings inside that racquet? Often an afterthought. That's a mistake. The string bed is your only point of contact with the ball. Get it wrong and you're not just leaving performance on the table — you're potentially setting yourself up for a repetitive strain injury that sidelines you for months.

Why Strings Matter More Than Most Players Think

A racquet without strings is just a frame. What actually transfers energy from your swing to the ball is the string bed — its material, gauge, and tension all shape how the ball leaves your racquet.

Different string types behave in fundamentally different ways:

The Tension Equation

String type is half the story. Tension is the other half — and it's where even experienced players make costly errors.

The common assumption is that higher tension = more control. And while there's truth to that at the extremes, the relationship is more nuanced:

The sweet spot depends on your racquet, your string type, your swing speed, and your physical condition. A 56 lb poly setup that feels controlled to one player can be a recipe for tennis elbow in another.

Arm problems from string and tension choices are far more common than people realise — and they tend to creep up gradually. By the time you feel it, you've often been compounding the problem for weeks.

Practical Guidelines by Player Profile

Club player, 2–3 times per week

A multifilament or natural gut string at mid-to-low tension (around 50–54 lbs) will give you comfort and playability without punishing your arm.

Intermediate-advanced, heavy topspin game

A poly or hybrid setup makes sense, but don't go too tight. Many players assume they need 55+ lbs — dropping to 48–52 lbs often improves spin generation and feel while being kinder on your body.

Anyone with arm sensitivity or a history of elbow/wrist issues

Avoid full poly until the issue resolves. Natural gut or a quality multifilament, strung in the low-to-mid range, is the move. Pair it with a frame that isn't too stiff.

How Often Should You Restring?

Strings don't snap before they lose playability — especially poly. Within 10–20 hours of play, poly strings lose a significant portion of their tension. A "dead" poly string loses its elastic properties and becomes even stiffer and less forgiving than when fresh. The old rule of thumb: restring as many times per year as you play per week.

The Takeaway

If you're investing time and money into finding the right racquet, apply the same scrutiny to what goes inside it. The difference between the right string at the right tension and the wrong combination isn't just a matter of feel — it can determine whether you're playing pain-free or sitting out.

Use our String Advisor to find the right string for your game, or explore the String Comparison page to dig into the specs side by side.