
Understanding tennis scoring rules can be confusing for new players — from terms like love and deuce, to tie-breaks and advantage sets. However, once you learn how points, games, sets, and matches work together, the scoring system becomes extremely intuitive and strategic.
This comprehensive guide covers every tennis scoring rule, including singles and doubles scoring, tie-break formats, match formats, and tournament variations, making it ideal for players, coaches, and sports fans.
Why Tennis Has a Unique Scoring System
Unlike most sports that use linear scoring (1, 2, 3…), tennis follows a progressive point system. It was originally designed to make performance and stamina equally important — winning just a few rallies isn’t enough, consistency matters.
1. Basic Tennis Scoring – The Foundation
A tennis match is structured into points → games → sets → match.
| Unit | Needed to Win | Key Condition |
|---|---|---|
| Point | 4 points (15, 30, 40, Game) | Must win by 2 |
| Game | 4 points | Must win by 2 points |
| Set | 6 games | Must win by 2 games (tie-break if 6–6) |
| Match | 2 or 3 sets | Depends on format |
2. Point Scoring Explained (Love, 15, 30, 40, Game)
Each rally won = 1 point, but the scoring terms are unique:
| Points Won | Score Term |
|---|---|
| 0 | Love |
| 1 | 15 |
| 2 | 30 |
| 3 | 40 |
| 4+ | Game |
However, to win the game, a player must be ahead by 2 points.
Deuce and Advantage
When the score reaches 40–40, it’s called Deuce.
From Deuce:
- If Player A wins a point → Advantage Player A
- If Player B wins next → back to Deuce
- If Player A wins two consecutive points → Game Player A
This rule ensures games can be short or long depending on competition.
3. Game Scoring: First to Six Games with a Two-Game Lead
A set is won when a player wins 6 games, with a 2-game margin:
- 6–3 → Set won
- 6–5 → Set continues
- 7–5 → Set won
If the score becomes 6–6, a tie-break usually decides the set.
4. Tie-Break Scoring Rules
Tie-breaks keep matches fair and time-efficient.
Standard (7-Point) Tie-Break
- Players play to 7 points
- Must win by 2 points
- Players switch ends after every 6 points
Examples:
- 7–5 → Tie-break won
- 8–6 → Tie-break won
- 6–6 → continues
The set ends 7–6 in the winner’s favour.
5. Match Scoring Formats
Different tournaments use different match formats.
Best of 3 Sets (most common)
- First player to win 2 sets wins the match
Best of 5 Sets
- Used in men’s Grand Slam matches
- First to 3 sets wins the match
Deciding Set Rules (Varies by Tournament)
| Tournament Type | Final Set Rule |
|---|---|
| ATP / WTA Standard | 7-point tie-break |
| US Open | 7-point tie-break |
| Australian Open | 10-point tie-break |
| Roland Garros | 10-point tie-break |
| Wimbledon | 10-point tie-break at 6–6 |
6. Scoring Rules for Doubles
Doubles follows the same scoring system, but there are format variations:
No-Ad Scoring Format (Common in Doubles)
- At deuce, next point wins the game
- Receiver chooses which side returns
Match Tie-Break Instead of Third Set
- Played to 10 points
- Must win by 2
Example score: 6–3, 4–6, [10–8]
7. Common Terms in Tennis Scoring
| Term | Meaning |
|---|---|
| Break | Winning a game on opponent’s serve |
| Hold | Winning a game on your serve |
| Bagel | Winning a set 6–0 |
| Golden Set | Winning a set without losing a point |
| Walkover | Opponent unable to start match |
| Retired | Opponent unable to continue match |
8. Special Scoring Situations
| Situation | Outcome |
|---|---|
| Ball touches line | IN |
| Player touches net | Point to opponent |
| Ball hits player | Point to opponent |
| Hindrance | Replay or loss of point based on situation |
9. Strategy Impact of the Scoring System

The scoring format influences gameplay strategy:
- Serving aggressively is rewarded because hold advantage matters
- Big points (30–30, deuce) are decisive
- Mental endurance becomes crucial due to long games/sets
- Tie-break mastery often separates pros from amateurs
Conclusion
Tennis scoring may seem complicated at first, but once players understand points → games → sets → match, the game becomes far more enjoyable. The scoring system is designed to reward consistency, mental strength, and strategic play, making tennis one of the most competitive and exciting sports in the world.
Whether you’re a player learning the rules, a coach educating students, or a fan wanting deeper insight, mastering tennis scoring helps you understand the sport at a whole new level.


