🏓 Pickleball · Tennis Elbow Comparison

Pickleball Elbow vs. Tennis Elbow — Is There Actually a Difference?

⚐ Dr. Stephen Chambers, MD📅 May 2026⏰ 6 min read
Patients often ask: "Is pickleball elbow the same thing as tennis elbow?" The short answer: yes, they are the same condition caused by the same mechanism — but with some important differences in which strokes cause it and how it behaves in pickleball players.

The Short Answer

Pickleball elbow and tennis elbow are both lateral epicondylitis — degeneration of the ECRB (extensor carpi radialis brevis) tendon at its attachment on the outer elbow. The diagnosis is identical, the ICD-10 code is identical (M77.1), and the treatment is identical. The only difference is how pickleball creates that tendon stress compared to tennis.

Same
ICD-10 code (M77.1) — same condition
Same
Treatment: eccentric PT + PRP + bracing
Different
Stroke mechanics that cause it
Different
Volume & frequency of exposure

How Pickleball Creates Tennis Elbow

In traditional tennis, the primary culprit is the one-handed backhand — the wrist extension and forearm deceleration at ball contact loads the ECRB heavily. Serve mechanics also contribute.

In pickleball, the loading pattern is somewhat different but the end result is the same:

  • The dink stroke: The controlled wrist-extension-dominant dinking motion loads the ECRB in its most vulnerable position on every single contact. Players dink hundreds of times per session — far more repetitions than a tennis backhand in a typical match.
  • The backhand drive: Essentially identical to a tennis backhand — same biomechanics, same ECRB loading, same risk. The hard flat pickleball backhand drive is the single highest-risk stroke for lateral epicondylitis.
  • The "kitchen game": Extended kitchen play involves sustained elbow flexion and repeated small wrist extension movements — cumulative ECRB loading over long sessions.
Why Pickleball Players Often Get It Faster Than Tennis PlayersThe average recreational tennis player hits perhaps 200–400 backhands in a 1.5-hour match. The average recreational pickleball player performs 400–800 dinking wrist extension movements in the same time period. Higher repetition + similar mechanism = faster tendon degeneration in susceptible players. This is why Dr. Chambers now sees more new lateral epicondylitis cases from pickleball than from tennis in his Wake County practice.

Key Differences That Matter for Treatment

Activity Modification

In tennis, avoiding the backhand is the primary modification. In pickleball, dinking is unavoidable — so the modification strategy is different: lighter paddle, counterforce brace, reduced drive intensity, and grip technique changes matter more than avoiding specific strokes entirely.

Equipment Impact

Tennis racket selection (string tension, frame stiffness, grip size) has well-established effects on lateral epicondylitis risk. Pickleball paddle selection has the same biomechanical logic but less research behind it. The principles are the same: lighter weight, more dampening core, correct grip size. See our: Paddle Guide.

Bilateral Risk

In pickleball, players are more likely to develop both lateral epicondylitis (from dinking/backhand) AND medial epicondylitis — golfer's elbow — (from forehand topspin and smashes) simultaneously. Tennis players more commonly develop lateral epicondylitis on its own. When a pickleball player comes in with "elbow pain," Dr. Chambers evaluates both sides of the elbow at every appointment.

The Treatment Is the Same

Regardless of whether your lateral epicondylitis was caused by pickleball, tennis, golf, or computer work, the treatment approach is the same:

  1. Counterforce brace during activity — 2–3 cm below the outer elbow bump
  2. Eccentric wrist extension exercises — the gold standard for tendon remodeling
  3. Activity modification — technique and equipment changes to reduce ECRB load
  4. PRP injection if not responding to 6–8 weeks of PT — superior to cortisone at 12 months
  5. Surgery for the 10–15% who fail conservative care after 6+ months

Elbow Pain from Pickleball or Tennis?

Whether your lateral epicondylitis came from the court or the kitchen, Dr. Chambers provides the same evidence-based treatment at four Wake County locations. No referral needed.

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Does pickleball elbow heal faster than tennis elbow? +
Not necessarily — the natural history (12–18 months to full resolution) and treatment response are similar. However, pickleball players often have more opportunity to modify their activity than competitive tennis players, which can make early conservative management more effective. Playing with a lighter paddle and a counterforce brace while avoiding hard drives allows many pickleball players to continue playing while healing.
Can I have both pickleball elbow AND tennis elbow at the same time? +
Technically they are the same condition (both are lateral epicondylitis / M77.1). You can, however, have lateral epicondylitis (outer elbow) AND medial epicondylitis / golfer's elbow (inner elbow) simultaneously — which is relatively common in pickleball players who dink heavily (outer elbow stress) and also smash overhead frequently (inner elbow stress). Dr. Chambers evaluates both sides at every appointment.

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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