Serve Speed Calculator
Free Serve speed Calculator for tennis. Enter your stats to get performance metrics and improvement targets. Enter your values for instant results.
Formula
Speed = Distance / Travel Time
Where Distance is the court length (typically 23.77m) and Travel Time is in seconds. Horizontal and vertical components use launch angle with cosine and sine.
Worked Examples
Example 1: Professional First Serve
Problem: A tennis ball travels 23.77 meters in 0.40 seconds with 6 degree launch angle and 1200 RPM spin.
Solution: Speed = 23.77 / 0.40 = 59.43 m/s\nkm/h: 59.43 x 3.6 = 213.9\nmph: 59.43 x 2.237 = 133.0\nHorizontal: 59.43 x cos(6) = 59.10 m/s\nVertical: 59.43 x sin(6) = 6.21 m/s
Result: 213.9 km/h (133.0 mph) - Professional level
Example 2: Club Player Kick Serve
Problem: Ball travels 23.77m in 0.60s with 14 degree angle and 2500 RPM.
Solution: Speed = 23.77 / 0.60 = 39.62 m/s\nkm/h: 142.6\nMagnus force: 0.00005 x 2500 x 39.62 = 4.95 N
Result: 142.6 km/h (88.6 mph) - Intermediate with heavy spin
Frequently Asked Questions
How is tennis serve speed measured?
Tennis serve speed is primarily measured using radar guns positioned behind the server or at the net. Professional tournaments use Doppler radar technology that captures the ball velocity at the instant it leaves the racquet strings. The radar gun emits a signal that bounces off the moving ball and returns at a shifted frequency, allowing precise speed calculation. Some venues also use high-speed cameras with frame-by-frame analysis and Hawk-Eye ball-tracking systems for secondary verification. Serve Speed Calculator uses the physics-based approach of distance divided by travel time to estimate serve speed from observable measurements.
What is considered a fast serve in professional tennis?
In professional mens tennis, first serves typically range from 185 to 230 km/h (115-143 mph), with elite servers like John Isner and Ivo Karlovic consistently exceeding 220 km/h. The fastest recorded serve in ATP history is 263.4 km/h (163.7 mph) by Sam Groth. For professional womens tennis, first serves usually range from 160 to 200 km/h (100-125 mph), with players like Sabine Lisicki reaching 210+ km/h. Second serves in professional play average about 30-50 km/h slower than first serves because players prioritize placement and spin over raw power to ensure reliability.
How does spin rate affect serve speed and trajectory?
Spin rate significantly impacts how the ball travels through the air and bounces off the court surface. A flat serve with minimal spin (under 1000 RPM) travels in a relatively straight line with maximum speed but reduced margin for error over the net. A topspin serve (1500-3000 RPM) creates the Magnus effect, pulling the ball downward and allowing it to clear the net higher while still dropping into the service box. Kick serves with heavy topspin can exceed 3000 RPM and bounce significantly higher, making them effective second serves despite lower speed readings on the radar gun.
What factors determine serve speed besides technique?
Multiple physical and environmental factors influence serve speed beyond just technique. Racquet head speed is the primary determinant, which depends on arm length, shoulder rotation speed, and kinetic chain efficiency from legs through core to arm. Racquet weight and string tension play important roles as heavier racquets generate more momentum while lower string tensions create a trampoline effect for added power. Environmental conditions like altitude, wind direction, temperature, and court surface affect measured serve speeds. Ball compression and age also significantly impact speed at the professional level of competition.
How does launch angle affect serve effectiveness?
Launch angle is critical for serve success because the ball must clear the net (0.914m high at center) while landing within the service box approximately 6.4 meters from the net. A flat serve hit at 200 km/h typically requires a launch angle between 4 and 8 degrees to achieve this trajectory. Higher launch angles sacrifice some horizontal speed but provide greater net clearance and allow topspin to pull the ball down into the box. Professional players adjust launch angle based on serve type with flat serves using 4-6 degrees, slice serves 5-10 degrees, and kick serves 10-18 degrees to maximize the vertical bounce component.
How much reaction time does a returner have on a fast serve?
Reaction time on a professional serve is remarkably short. For a 200 km/h serve traveling 23.77 meters from baseline to baseline, the ball arrives in approximately 0.43 seconds. However, human visual reaction time is about 0.2 to 0.25 seconds, and it takes another 0.15 to 0.2 seconds to execute a swing. This means the returner must begin predicting serve direction before the ball is struck, using cues from the server toss, body position, and racquet angle. At elite speeds of 230+ km/h, the ball arrives in under 0.37 seconds, giving returners virtually no time for conscious decision-making.