🏓 Pickleball · Playing Smart

Should You Play Pickleball Doubles to Protect Your Elbow?

⚐ Dr. Stephen Chambers, MD📅 May 2026⏰ 6 min read
One of the smartest modifications a pickleball player with tennis elbow can make is switching from singles to doubles — or changing how they play doubles. Here's the biomechanical case for why doubles is significantly easier on elbow tendons.

Why Doubles Is Easier on the Elbow Than Singles

The physics of pickleball doubles vs. singles creates dramatically different ECRB tendon loading patterns:

  • Less court to cover: In doubles, you cover roughly half the court. Fewer emergency shots mean fewer high-force, off-balance drives that spike elbow stress.
  • More kitchen play: Doubles points are won and lost at the kitchen line in soft dinking exchanges — lower-force strokes that load the ECRB more gently than hard drives from the baseline.
  • Fewer overhead smashes: With a partner covering half the court, you receive fewer lobs directed at you and hit fewer smashes — the single highest-risk stroke for both lateral and medial elbow injuries.
  • Slower overall pace: At recreational and intermediate doubles levels, the average ball speed is lower than singles, reducing the peak impact force transmitted through the paddle on each contact.
~50%
Reduction in court area covered vs singles
Lower
Average ball speed in doubles vs singles
Fewer
Smashes required compared to singles
More
Dinking — lower-force, recoverable stroke
The Kitchen Game Is Your FriendWhen playing doubles with tennis elbow, adopt a kitchen-focused strategy. Get to the kitchen line quickly on every rally and play soft, controlled dinks. This keeps the game in the lowest-elbow-stress zone. Avoid going for hard putaway shots from the kitchen — a controlled tap winner is kinder to your elbow than a drive.

How to Play Doubles Smarter with Tennis Elbow

Choose Your Side Strategically

In doubles, the player on the left side (when facing the net) takes most of the middle balls on their forehand. The player on the right side takes more backhands. If you have lateral (outer) elbow pain — tennis elbow — the backhand is your most painful stroke. Consider playing the left side of the court so more balls come to your forehand, reducing backhand volume.

Let Your Partner Take Overhead Smashes

If your partner is capable, communicate that you'll take kitchen duty and they'll handle lobs. Overhead smashes create the highest valgus and extension stress at the elbow of any pickleball stroke. Having your partner handle the majority of smashes while you cover the kitchen line is a legitimate and effective strategy during recovery.

Use the Two-Handed Backhand Temporarily

Many recreational pickleball players naturally hit a two-handed backhand. If yours is predominantly one-handed, switching temporarily to two hands during your recovery period dramatically reduces the torque on the lateral epicondyle. The non-dominant hand does much of the work, taking stress off the ECRB.

Position Yourself at the Kitchen Earlier

The baseline-to-kitchen transition zone is where hard-driven balls create the most emergency, high-force swing responses. Get to the kitchen line faster and spend less time in the transition zone. Fewer emergency full-swing shots = less elbow stress per session.

When to Move Back to Singles

The progression from doubles to singles mirrors the general return-to-pickleball protocol:

  1. Doubles dinking only (Weeks 1–3 of return protocol)
  2. Doubles with groundstrokes at 50% (Weeks 4–5)
  3. Full doubles including smashes (Week 6)
  4. Singles at 50% intensity (Week 7)
  5. Full singles (Week 8+, if pain-free throughout)

Playing But Still Hurting?

If modifying to doubles play and using a counterforce brace isn't keeping your elbow pain manageable, it's time for a proper treatment plan. PRP injection can significantly accelerate recovery, allowing a faster return to full-intensity singles play. No referral needed.

📅 Book an Appointment →
Can I play pickleball singles with tennis elbow? +
Singles is harder on the elbow than doubles because of the larger court to cover, more emergency shots, and more overhead smash situations. During active treatment, switching to doubles is strongly recommended. Return to singles should follow the graduated protocol only after doubles play has been pain-free for 2+ weeks.
How long should I play doubles before returning to singles? +
Use pain as your guide: when you can play full doubles including smashes with pain below 2/10 during and after play for 2 consecutive weeks, you're ready to begin the transition back to singles at reduced intensity.

Elbow Pain Keeping You Off the Court?

Dr. Chambers treats tennis elbow and pickleball injuries at four Wake County locations. No referral needed — same-day appointments often available.

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