University of California, Los Angeles

Tennis courts in University of California, Los Angeles
At the Los Angeles area, University of California, Los Angeles gives the Los Angeles area a tennis stop that can work for practice, casual match play, or a low-key hit. The listing shows 9 listed courts, which helps players decide whether to plan singles, doubles, a lesson block, or a small group session. Because the listed surface is unclear, it is smart to scout bounce, traction, nets, and wind before starting a serious match. Hours are listed as Restricted Access, so it is worth planning around the posted window instead of assuming the court is always open. No lights are marked in the listing, so daytime play is the safer assumption. Campus access can shift by semester, team schedules, and events, so check visitor rules before arranging tennis lessons or competitive play. Because the listing is marked free, it is especially appealing for recreational tennis, beginner practice, and no-pressure rallies. Where permitted, it is a useful setting for tennis lessons for adults, casual singles, doubles, serve practice, and meeting tennis partners without making the session feel overplanned. Plan as if amenities are limited: bring water, balls, grips, and enough time to check the court before play.
University of California, Los Angeles Tennis Community
Player Community
Skill Level Breakdown
Court Schedule
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5.0 · 1 review
High quality courts if you can reserve them. Helps to play with a UCLA student
Coaches at this Court
Professional instruction available on-site
Did you know?
Set near Los Angeles, University of California, Los Angeles can turn a tennis hit into the start of a larger CA 90095 outing. Los Angeles tennis often folds into a bigger park day, with canyon trails, studio-era neighborhoods, taco stands, coffee shops, and beach-bound traffic all shaping the rhythm of a match. A simple after-play routine works well here: cool down, grab water or coffee, and talk through the next match while the details are still fresh. If courts are busy, a short warm-up and clear rotation plan can keep the mood friendly and the tennis moving.


