Best Tennis Rackets for Beginners in India 2026 - Sports Galaxy

Best Tennis Rackets for Beginners in India 2026 — Top Picks for Adults & Juniors

Choosing the right tennis racket for beginners in India can decide whether you fall in love with the sport or quietly give up after a month. Walk into any sports store in Gurugram, Mumbai, Bengaluru or Pune and you'll see thirty-plus beginner tennis rackets ranging from ₹2,500 to ₹18,000. Most look similar. Most aren't. The wrong first racket — too heavy, too small a head, wrong grip — is the single fastest way to develop a sore wrist, lose interest, and quit before you've hit your tenth clean forehand.

This guide is a working playbook from the team at Sports Galaxy, the Gurugram-based store that has hand-strung and fitted thousands of beginner rackets across India. It covers the best tennis racket for beginners in India 2026 for adults, women, and juniors aged 4 to 12 — with verified specs, real Sports Galaxy prices, climate-aware advice, and a buying framework you can actually use. No filler. No hype.

One-line answer if you only have 30 seconds: For most adult Indian beginners, look for a graphite-composite frame with a 100–105 sq in head, 260–285g unstrung weight, 16x19 string pattern, and G2 or G3 grip, in the ₹4,500–₹8,000 band. The Babolat Boost Aero 2026 and the Head Geo Speed are the two safest first picks.

Quick-Pick: Tennis Racket for Beginners by Budget & Buyer Type

The right tennis racket for beginners depends on who's playing. A 9-year-old joining a summer camp, a 35-year-old picking up tennis for fitness, and a coached teen moving up from a 26-inch frame all need different rackets. Use the matrix below as your shortcut, then scroll down for the full reasoning.

Your situationPickWhy
"Just want to try tennis" — under ₹4,000Yonex Smash Team 290gReal graphite frame at the price of an aluminium starter
Adult beginner, ₹4,500–₹5,000 budgetHead Geo Speed 295g or HEAD MX Spark Elite 265gGraphite, balanced, easy power, stays under ₹5,000
Adult beginner, ₹7,000–₹8,000 budgetBabolat Boost Aero 2026Spin-friendly Pure Aero DNA at beginner weight
Want maximum forgivenessBabolat Boost Drive White 260g105 sq in head + Woofer grommets = huge sweet spot
Woman beginner / lighter swingHEAD MX Attitude Elite 265g or Babolat Boost Aero PinkLightweight builds, oversize heads, women-focused finishes
Late beginner / 6+ months inHead IG Challenge MP 295g or Babolat Boost Strike 285gStepping-stone to intermediate frames
Aspirational lightweightBabolat Pure Aero Super Lite 255gPro-family frame in a beginner weight
Junior, ages 4–621-inch junior racketsLightweight 180–200g frames built for the red-ball stage
Junior, ages 6–823-inch junior rackets200–220g frames suited to the orange-ball stage
Junior, ages 8–1025-inch junior rackets225–250g frames for green-ball play and academy juniors
Junior, ages 10–1226-inch junior rackets245–260g bridge frames before moving to a 27-inch adult racket

What Actually Matters in a Tennis Racket for Beginners

Marketing for a tennis racket for beginners often hides what's important behind tech names. Here are the five specifications that genuinely change how the racket feels in your hand — and what to choose for each.

Head size: 100–110 sq in

The head size of a tennis racket for beginners determines the size of your sweet spot. For a player whose contact point is still inconsistent, a larger head means more clean shots and less mishit jarring through the wrist. Oversize (105–110 sq in) is the safest bet for absolute beginners and recreational adults. Midplus (100–105 sq in) still forgives but sets you up better for the move toward intermediate. Anything under 100 sq in is a punishment for a developing swing — skip it.

Weight: 255–285g unstrung

Weight on a tennis racket for beginners is always quoted unstrung in the industry. Strings add 15–20g. Lighter rackets are easier to swing and kinder on the arm during a two-hour Indian summer session. Heavier rackets absorb shock better but tire you out fast. The sweet spot for an adult beginner is 270–285g unstrung; for women, juniors moving to 27-inch frames, and seniors, look at 255–270g. Anything above 295g is a late-beginner or intermediate frame — see our tennis racket weight guide for the full breakdown.

Grip size: G2 or G3 for most Indian players

To measure your grip, hold your hitting hand open with fingers extended. Measure from the middle horizontal crease of your palm to the tip of your ring finger. That number in inches matches your grip size. Most Indian women fit G1–G2 (4 1/8″–4 1/4″); most Indian men fit G2–G3 (4 1/4″–4 3/8″). When in doubt, go one size smaller and add an overgrip — you can always build up, but you can't shave a grip down.

String pattern: 16x19 (open)

An open 16x19 pattern lets the strings move more, which gives you more spin, more power, and more forgiveness on off-centre hits. A dense 18x20 pattern gives more control and lasts longer but punishes inconsistent contact. For any tennis racket for beginners, 16x19 every time.

Frame material: graphite composite (ideally)

Aluminium frames are durable and cheap — fine for "trying tennis", but they transfer more shock to the wrist. Graphite-composite frames (the Babolat Boost line, Head Geo Speed, Head MX Spark, Yonex Smash Team) are lighter, more responsive, and develop your feel for the ball. Titanium-graphite frames sit in between. If you're committed to staying with tennis beyond the first month, go graphite from the start — your wrists and your stroke development will thank you.

String tension for a first racket: 50–55 lbs. Lower tension (50 lbs) gives more power and a softer feel — better while you're still building swing speed. Higher tension (55 lbs) gives more control and is worth trying once your strokes are stable. Skip polyester strings as a beginner; ask for synthetic gut or a multifilament. Full breakdown in our string tension guide.

Top Tennis Rackets for Beginners in India 2026 — Our Picks

Each tennis racket for beginners below has been chosen for a specific buyer type, with verified 2026 specs and current Sports Galaxy prices. Every racket linked here is in stock at the time of writing.

Babolat Boost Aero 2026 tennis racket for beginners in India
Best Overall

1. Babolat Boost Aero 2026 — for the spin-curious adult beginner

102 sq in · 260g unstrung · 16x19 · Graphite

The Boost Aero is the entry into Babolat's Pure Aero family — the same lineage as Carlos Alcaraz's tournament racket, in a 260g build a beginner can actually swing. The aerodynamic frame slices through the air faster, helping you generate easy topspin even with a slow swing. The 102 sq in head is forgiving without being so big that it feels like a beach paddle. If you want one racket that will see you through your first year of tennis without complaint, this is it.

₹7,789₹11,999

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HEAD Geo Speed 295g graphite composite tennis racket
Best Under ₹5,000

2. HEAD Geo Speed 295g — graphite power on a budget

~100 sq in · 295g · 16x19 · Graphite composite with GPT Technology

The Geo Speed is the answer to "I want a real graphite racket but I'm not spending ₹8,000 on my first one". At 295g it's slightly heavier than the Boost Aero, which gives it more stability on contact — a small advantage for beginners who hit flat and a small drawback if you're still building swing speed. Excellent value, arm-friendly, and a frame coaches in Gurugram and Delhi commonly hand to adult academy starters.

₹4,599₹7,075

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HEAD MX Spark Elite 265g lightweight beginner tennis racket
Lightweight Sub-₹5,000

3. HEAD MX Spark Elite 265g — easiest swing in the budget tier

~100 sq in · 265g · 16x19 · Pre-strung graphite composite

If the Geo Speed at 295g feels heavy in your hand at the store counter, the MX Spark Elite at 265g is the easier alternative. Same general spec, 30g lighter swing weight, and pre-strung at the right tension out of the box. Especially good for adult beginners who haven't done racket sports before and are still building forearm strength.

₹4,699₹6,889

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Babolat Boost Drive White 260g lightweight beginner tennis racket
Most Forgiving

4. Babolat Boost Drive White 260g — biggest sweet spot in the Boost line

105 sq in · 260g unstrung · 16x19 · Woofer grommet system

The Boost Drive is the Boost Aero's more forgiving sibling. The 105 sq in head and Woofer grommets — small floating sleeves that let the strings move on impact — make it the most forgiving frame Babolat sells under ₹8,000. If you mainly want to keep the ball in the court while you learn, choose the Boost Drive. If you want to learn topspin from day one, choose the Boost Aero. Both are right; they're built for slightly different beginner instincts.

₹7,800₹11,999

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HEAD MX Attitude Elite 265g pink tennis racket for women beginners
Best for Women Beginners

5. HEAD MX Attitude Elite 265g — designed for the women's beginner game

102 sq in oversize · 265g · 16x19 · Pre-strung

The MX Attitude Elite is the racket that most often leaves the Sports Galaxy showroom with women picking up tennis for the first time. The 102 sq in oversize head is forgiving, 265g swings easily through long rallies, and the pink colourway is a real preference — many of our women customers tell us they want a racket that looks like it belongs to them, not borrowed from the men's range. Pre-strung at recreational tension, ready to play out of the box.

₹4,899₹7,459

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Babolat Boost Aero Pink 2026 tennis racket for women beginners
Premium Women's Pick

6. Babolat Boost Aero Pink 2026 — same Pure Aero DNA, lighter swing feel

102 sq in · 260g · 16x19

Mechanically identical to the standard Boost Aero, this version is finished in pink. We're including it as a separate pick because if you've already played a season or two on a basic frame and you want to step up to a real Pure Aero family racket built around the women's game, this is where to go. The Boost Aero's spin-friendly aerodynamics make it the best frame in this segment for learning topspin under a coach.

₹7,789₹11,999

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Yonex Smash Team 290g graphite tennis racket for beginners
Best Try-Tennis Pick

7. Yonex Smash Team 290g — real graphite under ₹4,000

~100 sq in · 290g · 16x19 · Graphite frame · Pre-strung

This is the racket we hand to anyone walking in who says "I just want to try tennis for a few weeks before I commit". At ₹3,849 it's priced like an aluminium starter but built like a real graphite frame, with Yonex's isometric head shape adding a slightly bigger sweet spot than the spec sheet suggests. If after a month you decide tennis is for you, the Smash Team will keep up; if not, you haven't overspent.

₹3,849₹6,690

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HEAD IG Challenge MP 295g graphite tennis racket with Innegra technology
Best Stepping-Stone

8. HEAD IG Challenge MP 295g — for the late beginner

~100 sq in · 295g · 16x19 · Graphite with Innegra arm-friendly tech

Six to twelve months into your tennis journey, the ultra-light beginner frames start to feel underwhelming. The IG Challenge MP at 295g with Innegra fibre is the natural next step — more stability on contact, more depth on groundstrokes, still arm-friendly thanks to the dampening Innegra layer. Many of our customers who started on a Geo Speed or a Babolat Boost graduate to this exact frame.

₹9,069₹13,969

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Babolat Boost Strike 285g graphite tennis racket for late beginners
Late Beginner Bridge

9. Babolat Boost Strike 285g — when 260g feels too light

100 sq in · 285g · 16x19 · Graphite

If you've grown out of a 260g Boost and you're not quite ready for a 295g+ intermediate frame, the Boost Strike at 285g is the sensible bridge. More plough-through on contact, still forgiving enough that mishits don't sting. A natural successor frame for anyone moving up from the Boost Aero or Boost Drive after a year of regular play.

₹7,800₹11,999

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Babolat Pure Aero Super Lite 2026 255g lightweight tennis racket
Aspirational Lightweight

10. Babolat Pure Aero Super Lite 2026 (255g) — pro-family frame, beginner weight

100 sq in · 255g unstrung · 16x19 · Same Pure Aero family as Alcaraz, in a 255g build

This is the racket for the beginner who wants the real Pure Aero — same paint job, same family, same shop window — without the 300g playing weight a pro frame demands. At 255g it's one of the lightest legitimate performance frames you can buy. Includes free string worth ₹1,000.

₹18,199₹25,999

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Already a year in and outgrowing your beginner frame? The next sensible step is the Babolat Pure Aero Lite 2026 (270g) at ₹19,949 or the HEAD IG Challenge Team L (260g) at ₹8,949 — both bridge cleanly toward intermediate play.

Best Junior Tennis Racket for Beginners in India 2026 (Ages 4–12)

Junior tennis rackets for beginners are sized by length in inches, not by age. Age and height are guidelines; the deciding test is the racket itself. Have your child stand straight with the racket head resting on the floor next to them. Their palm should rest comfortably on the butt cap. If they have to reach down or stretch up, the size is wrong.

For the complete junior buying guide with detailed sizing advice and academy recommendations, read our dedicated best junior tennis rackets in India 2026 guide.

Junior racket sizing chart

LengthChild heightTypical ageIdeal weightStage
21″100–115 cm4–6 yrs~180–200gRed ball
23″115–130 cm6–8 yrs~200–220gOrange ball
25″130–140 cm8–10 yrs~225–250gGreen ball, junior tournaments
26″140–155 cm10–12 yrs~245–260gBridge to adult / yellow ball
27″ (adult)150 cm+13+255–300gFull adult game

21-inch picks (ages 4–6)

HEAD Novak 21 junior tennis racket for kids ages 4-6

HEAD Novak 21 Junior

Ultra-light frame for first-time players, signature Novak Djokovic colourway. ₹2,549₹3,399 · View product

Yonex Junior 21 Ocean Blue 185g tennis racket for kids

Yonex Junior 21 Ocean Blue (185g)

Lightweight 185g pre-strung frame, Yonex isometric head for a bigger sweet spot at the smallest size. ₹2,549₹3,450 · View product

Wilson Federer 21 junior tennis racket 186g for kids

Wilson Federer 21 Junior (186g)

AirLite alloy frame, Federer-branded — popular gift pick for school camp starters. ₹2,300₹3,199 · View product

23-inch picks (ages 6–8)

HEAD Radical 23 Junior 215g tennis racket with Damp+ technology

HEAD Radical 23 Junior 2025 (215g)

Damp+ vibration dampening, balanced for orange-ball stage juniors. ₹3,109₹4,149 · View product

Yonex Junior 23 Ocean Blue 200g tennis racket with isometric technology

Yonex Junior 23 Ocean Blue (200g)

Isometric head shape for a bigger sweet spot — easier first contact for developing players. ₹2,699₹3,650 · View product

25-inch picks (ages 8–10)

Babolat Aero Junior 25 2026 tennis racket 225g for kids

Babolat Aero Junior 25 2026 (225g)

Entry into the Pure Aero family for juniors — spin-friendly, well-priced. ₹6,289₹8,999 · View product

Yonex Ezone 25 Junior 8th gen 225g graphite tennis racket

Yonex Ezone 25 Junior (225g)

All-graphite construction at junior level — a real upgrade over aluminium juniors. ₹6,499₹9,290 · View product

Yonex VCore 25 Junior 240g spin-friendly tennis racket

Yonex VCore 25 Junior (240g)

Spin-oriented frame for juniors developing topspin under coaching. ₹6,500₹9,290 · View product

HEAD IG Speed 25 Junior 2024 240g graphite tennis racket

HEAD IG Speed 25 Junior (240g)

Graphite composite Speed family junior — control-oriented for technique-focused juniors. ₹4,899₹6,979 · View product

HEAD Radical 25 Junior 240g aluminum tennis racket

HEAD Radical 25 Junior (240g)

Aluminium-frame value pick with Damp+ tech — great academy starter junior. ₹2,499₹3,599 · View product

26-inch picks (ages 10–12, the bridge to a 27-inch adult frame)

HEAD Extreme 26 Junior 245g aluminum tennis racket for kids 9-11

HEAD Extreme 26 Junior (245g)

Strong value at the 26-inch bridge stage — durable aluminium frame. ₹3,450₹4,599 · View product

HEAD IG Speed 26 Junior 250g graphite tennis racket for kids 9-11

HEAD IG Speed 26 Junior (250g)

Graphite Speed family for juniors who play multiple times a week. ₹5,099₹7,269 · View product

HEAD IG Gravity 26 Junior 250g graphite composite tennis racket

HEAD IG Gravity 26 Junior (250g)

Graphite composite, balanced for taller, technical juniors moving toward a 27-inch frame. ₹5,099₹7,269 · View product

HEAD Radical 26 Junior 245g tennis racket for developing players

HEAD Radical 26 Junior (245g)

Well-priced 26-inch option for developing players in the orange-to-green ball transition. ₹3,349₹4,719 · View product

Yonex Ezone 26 Junior 235g graphite tennis racket with isometric head

Yonex Ezone 26 Junior (235g)

All-graphite construction with Yonex's isometric head shape — bigger effective sweet spot than the spec implies. ₹6,600₹9,490 · View product

Babolat Pure Aero Junior 26 2026 250g graphite spin tennis racket

Babolat Pure Aero Junior 26 2026 (250g)

Premium Pure Aero junior for competitive 11–12-year-olds in academy programs. ₹10,849₹15,499 · View product

When does a child move to a 27-inch adult frame? Roughly age 11–13 and 150 cm+ in height, with stable technique. Don't rush it — playing with a frame that's too heavy or too long encourages bad mechanics, and the wrong adult frame at age 11 can plant the seeds of future arm issues. When in doubt, stay one size shorter for one more season.

Comparison Table — Adult Tennis Racket for Beginners at a Glance

RacketHeadWeightMaterialPriceBest for
Babolat Boost Aero 2026102 sq in260gGraphite₹7,789Spin-curious adult beginner
HEAD Geo Speed 295g~100 sq in295gGraphite + GPT₹4,599Sub-₹5,000 graphite
HEAD MX Spark Elite~100 sq in265gGraphite composite₹4,699Lightweight sub-₹5,000
Babolat Boost Drive White105 sq in260gGraphite + Woofer₹7,800Maximum forgiveness
HEAD MX Attitude Elite102 sq in265gGraphite composite₹4,899Women beginners
Babolat Boost Aero Pink102 sq in260gGraphite₹7,789Premium women's pick
Yonex Smash Team 290g~100 sq in290gGraphite₹3,849Try-tennis budget pick
HEAD IG Challenge MP~100 sq in295gGraphite + Innegra₹9,069Late beginner stepping-stone
Babolat Boost Strike 285g100 sq in285gGraphite₹7,800Late beginner bridge
Babolat Pure Aero Super Lite 2026100 sq in255gGraphite₹18,199Aspirational lightweight

Buying in India: Authenticity, Care & the Climate

How to spot a fake Babolat, HEAD or Yonex racket

Counterfeit international rackets are a real problem on Indian marketplaces — and a fake tennis racket for beginners often looks identical to the real one in product photos. Quick checks before you pay:

  • Babolat: a genuine frame has a laser-etched serial number near the throat, an embossed Cortex pad inside the handle, and an original holographic Babolat sticker on the dampener slot.
  • HEAD: the model name and serial should be cleanly printed on the throat (not stickered) and the handle should have crisp injection-moulded text, not a label.
  • Yonex: look for the Yonex hologram on the throat, the model and serial on the inner shaft, and country-of-origin stamp on the butt cap.
  • General: any Babolat or HEAD frame selling for less than ₹3,000 on a marketplace is almost certainly fake. Buy from authorised dealers — Sports Galaxy is one — and your warranty stays valid.

Strung or unstrung?

For a first tennis racket for beginners, buy strung. You don't yet know what tension you prefer, and most beginner rackets ship with an appropriate factory string at 50–55 lbs. Plan a first restring at the 40–50 hour mark — even if your strings haven't broken, they've lost tension and feel.

Looking after your racket in Indian conditions

  • Heat: never leave a racket in a parked car. Above 50°C, the frame can warp and the grip can melt.
  • Humidity: the factory grip will be soaked through within 2–3 sessions in Mumbai or Chennai. Wrap an overgrip — Yonex Super Grap, Tourna Grip or Babolat VS Original — from day one.
  • Monsoon: a padded thermo cover is worth carrying. Damp strings lose tension fast.
  • Restringing: recreational players should restring every 40–50 playing hours, or every 4–6 months even if you don't reach that. Sports Galaxy offers racket stringing in Gurugram.

What Indian Coaches Actually Recommend

Across academies in Delhi, Gurugram, Mumbai, Bengaluru, Pune and Hyderabad, the pattern is consistent: coaches put adult academy starters into lightweight (260–285g) oversize (100–105 sq in) graphite frames at 50–55 lbs of synthetic gut or multifilament string. The Babolat Boost family, HEAD MX Spark and HEAD Geo Speed come up most often in adult academy kit lists. For coached juniors, the Babolat Aero Junior 25/26 and HEAD IG Speed 25/26 lines dominate. The reason isn't fashion — it's that these specs let a beginner build clean strokes without overworking the wrist or shoulder. The official ITF rules and regulations set the maximum racket length at 29 inches, which is why all standard adult frames are 27 inches.

If you're walking into a first lesson uncertain about which tennis racket for beginners suits you, take the matrix at the top of this page with you. Any coach worth their court time will be happy to confirm the right pick. For brand-level deep dives, expert reviews on Tennis Warehouse are a useful second opinion.


Sports Galaxy Beginner-Friendly Services

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Used Tennis Rackets

Inspected and graded second-hand frames from top brands. Browse used rackets.

Authenticity guarantee

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Browse the full beginner tennis racket range

Filter by weight, head size and brand on the Sports Galaxy tennis racket category.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Q1. Which is the best tennis racket for beginners in India in 2026?

For most adult beginners, the Babolat Boost Aero 2026 is the safest pick — 102 sq in head, 260g unstrung, spin-friendly graphite, in stock at Sports Galaxy at ₹7,789. If your budget is closer to ₹4,500, the HEAD Geo Speed 295g is the comparable graphite alternative.

Q2. What is the right weight for a tennis racket for beginners in India?

For an adult tennis racket for beginners, 260–285g unstrung is the sweet spot. Below 260g suits women and players with a lighter swing; above 290g is for late beginners moving toward intermediate frames. Always check the weight unstrung — that's the industry standard, and strings add 15–20g.

Q3. Adult or junior racket — what should my 10-year-old use?

Most 10-year-olds fit a 25-inch frame; some taller 10-year-olds are ready for a 26-inch. Use the height test: have the child stand with the racket head on the floor, palm should rest on the butt cap. Babolat Aero Junior 25 is a good 25-inch starting point. For the full junior guide, see our best junior tennis rackets in India.

Q4. Should I buy a strung or unstrung tennis racket for beginners?

Buy strung. The factory string at 50–55 lbs is appropriate for any first tennis racket for beginners. Plan to restring at 40–50 playing hours, even if the strings haven't broken — they'll have lost tension and feel.

Q5. What grip size do most Indian players use on a tennis racket for beginners?

Most Indian women fit G1 to G2 (4 1/8″–4 1/4″). Most Indian men fit G2 to G3 (4 1/4″–4 3/8″). When in doubt, choose one size smaller and add an overgrip — easier than reducing a grip.

Q6. How much should I spend on my first tennis racket for beginners?

₹4,500–₹8,000 is the realistic sweet spot for an adult beginner committed to the sport. Below ₹4,000 is fine for "trying tennis" with the Yonex Smash Team. Above ₹10,000 is generally wasted on a beginner unless you're already coached and committed to a specific brand family.

Q7. Is graphite better than aluminium for a first tennis racket for beginners?

Yes, if you plan to keep playing. Graphite is lighter, more responsive, and develops your feel for the ball. Aluminium frames are heavier and less precise but cost less and are more durable. If you're certain about staying with tennis, start with graphite — your wrists and your stroke development will thank you.

Q8. How do I check if my Babolat, HEAD or Yonex racket is authentic?

Check for laser-etched serial numbers near the throat, embossed (not printed) brand logos, holographic stickers on the dampener slot, and a matching warranty card SKU. Buy from authorised dealers — any premium racket selling for under ₹3,000 on a marketplace is almost certainly fake.

Q9. When should I restring my new racket?

Around the 40–50 playing hour mark, or every 4–6 months — whichever comes first. Strings lose tension and feel even when they don't visibly break. Sports Galaxy offers racket stringing in Gurugram.

Q10. When should I upgrade from my tennis racket for beginners?

Typically after 12–18 months of consistent play, once you're making clean contact in the sweet spot most of the time and your strokes are stable. The natural step up is to a 285–295g frame like the HEAD IG Challenge MP or Babolat Boost Strike. Trade your old racket toward the new one through the Sports Galaxy Racket Exchange Program.


Want a deeper read on the spec side? Pair this guide with our complete tennis racket buying guide for Indian players, our weight guide, and our brand-by-brand comparison: Wilson vs HEAD vs Babolat.

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