Parents’ Guide • Fuel

Tennis Nutrition for Kids: Fueling Performance

Last updated: November 2025

Tennis Nutrition for Kids is simpler than it sounds: steady carbs for energy, lean protein for growth, healthy fats for focus, and hydration that keeps up with practice and heat. This guide gives you match-day timing, snack ideas, hydration rules of thumb, and a 7-day sample plan — plus links to our Youth Tennis Progression Guide and Tennis Equipment for Kids so fuel, skill, and gear work together.

Tennis Nutrition for Kids
Balanced plates and smart timing make tennis days feel easier and more fun.

The building blocks (kid-friendly plate)

Think “half colorful produce, a quarter grains, a quarter protein,” in line with USDA MyPlate guidance for kids. For tennis days, bump up the whole-grain portion (oats, rice, pasta, tortillas) and include easy-to-digest fruit (berries, banana, orange). For general sports nutrition and portion sanity checks, see HealthyChildren.org (American Academy of Pediatrics).

Fueling windows: what to eat and when

TimingGoalExamples
2–3 hours before Top off glycogen; calm stomach Turkey & cheese sandwich + fruit; rice bowl + chicken + veggies; oatmeal with milk & berries
60–75 minutes before Light, low-fiber carbs Banana; applesauce pouch; small yogurt; graham crackers + peanut butter
During play (if >60 min) Steady energy, electrolytes Water; diluted 50/50 sports drink; orange slices; pretzels
0–60 minutes after Repair + rehydrate (carb + protein) Chocolate milk; Greek yogurt + granola; smoothie (milk/yogurt + fruit); rice + beans + salsa

Hydration made easy

Heat matters. For outdoor sessions, follow kid-friendly rules from the CDC on heat & hydration and junior-tennis best practices from the USTA.

  • Before: 1–2 cups of water in the hour pre-session.
  • During: ~½ cup every 15–20 minutes; add electrolytes in hot/humid conditions.
  • After: Kids should sip until urine is pale yellow; include a salt source with the recovery snack.

Smart snack list (court-bag winners)

  • Banana, clementines, apple sauce pouches
  • Granola bars (look for 15–25g carbs, 2–6g protein)
  • Pretzels or crackers; mini bagels; fig bars
  • Greek yogurt tubes; cheese sticks (if cooler bag)
  • Peanut/almond butter single-serves + whole-grain crackers

Tournament day: keep it steady

Multiple matches in one day? Think “little and often.” Between matches, take 5–10 minutes to drink, eat a small carb source (fruit, crackers, fig bar), and walk a few minutes to loosen up. Avoid large, high-fat meals that sit heavy and delay recovery.

Picky eater playbook

  • Pack two acceptable fruits and one “stretch” option.
  • Blend smoothies (milk or yogurt + banana + frozen berries + oats) for portable recovery fuel.
  • Use familiar grains (rice, pasta, tortillas) and add small amounts of lean protein.
  • Make “ownership plates”: let kids pick the carb + one fruit for practice days.

Supplements & sports drinks — do you need them?

For most kids, whole foods and water get the job done. Electrolyte drinks help on long, hot days. Caffeine and performance supplements are not recommended for children; see AAP guidance via HealthyChildren.org.

7-day sample plan (mix & match)

DayBreakfastPacked SnackPost-PlayDinner Idea
MonOatmeal + milk + berriesBanana + granola barChocolate milkChicken, rice, broccoli
TueEgg wrap + tortilla + salsaApplesauce + pretzelsYogurt + granolaTacos (beef/beans) + avocado
WedGreek yogurt + fruit + oatsFig bar + orangeSmoothiePasta + marinara + turkey meatballs
ThuWhole-grain toast + peanut butter + honeyMini bagel + cream cheeseMilk + cerealStir-fry rice + chicken + veggies
FriWaffles + berries + yogurtCheese stick + crackersYogurt tube + fruitSalmon, potatoes, green beans
SatBreakfast burrito (eggs/beans)Banana + pretzelsSmoothieHomemade pizza on whole-grain crust
SunPancakes + milk + fruitGranola bar + clementineChocolate milkRoast chicken, rice, salad

Tie fuel to skill & growth

Good fuel makes skill work stick. Pair this Tennis Nutrition for Kids plan with a clear training path in our Youth Tennis Progression Guide and age-appropriate gear from Tennis Equipment for Kids. If you’re still weighing the big picture benefits, here’s a parent favorite: Benefits of Tennis for Kids.

Want a coach to personalize fueling around practice slots and heat? Start here: Private Tennis Lessons for Kids Near You. We’ll build a simple, sustainable routine.

FAQ — Tennis Nutrition for Kids

How much protein do kids need?

It varies by age and activity. Most kids meet needs easily with dairy, eggs, beans, poultry, and fish. Focus on a palm-sized portion at meals; see MyPlate for kids for simple visuals.

Is milk a good recovery drink?

Yes — milk or chocolate milk offers carbs + protein + fluids in one. Useful after long hits or hot sessions.

When should we use sports drinks?

Mostly for long sessions or heat/humidity. Otherwise, water + a salty snack works. Review youth tips from the USTA and CDC.