Measure Tennis String Tension From Your iPhone

Tap the stringbed, and acoustic analysis turns the vibration into a tension reading in about 30 seconds — no hardware, no guessing. Then track how that number drifts after every match, build a baseline for each racquet, and know when it's time to restring.

Free to measure · No account required · First reading in ~30s

Pro Staff 97 · Poly
● Indoor Verified
51.3lbs
▼ 1.7 lbs vs fresh-string baseline (53.0)
● Holding — match-ready
Confidence
94%
−1.7 lbs
vs Baseline
6.5
Hours Hit
Excellent
Quality

No accessory — just your iPhone · First reading in ~30 seconds · 100% on-device & private · Free to measure.

How do you measure tennis string tension?

There are three real ways to measure tennis string tension: on a stringing machine (the reference at the moment of stringing), with an electronic tension meter, or with an iPhone app that reads your stringbed's vibration through the microphone. For checks between restrings, the phone app is fastest and cheapest — tap the strings, get a reading in about 30 seconds, and watch how tension changes over time.

Tension Decay Estimator LIVE

See the tension your strings are likely holding after a stretch of play, by string type. For your real racquet, measure it in String Tension AI.

55lbs
8hrs
Status: Holding
Estimated tension
Tension lost
Loss percent

Educational model — not a measurement. Based on general tension-loss data (Sources: My Tennis HQ; Tennis Warehouse University). Your real results depend on string, racquet, gauge, swing speed, and conditions.

Can an iPhone measure tennis string tension?

Yes. When you tap a strung racquet, the stringbed vibrates at a frequency tied to its tension — higher tension rings at a higher pitch, the same principle a piano tuner relies on. String Tension AI captures that sound, cross-checks it, and converts it into a reading. The value isn't one perfect number; it's repeatable readings and the trend they reveal over time.

How to measure with String Tension AI

  1. Baseline at stringing. Measure right after a fresh string job to set the fresh-string baseline for that racquet.
  2. Calibrate to a reference. Calibrate to a known reference tension, or use one of the 200+ pre-loaded string profiles.
  3. Tap & analyze. Tap the strings 3–10 times; the Quality Coach rejects bad taps so only trustworthy readings count.
  4. Re-measure after play. Measure again after matches and practice to capture how tension is changing.
  5. Watch the trend. Follow the tension trend across readings instead of reacting to a single number.
  6. Decide from data. The Tension Advisor predicts the window so you restring on evidence, not guesswork.

Why a tension history beats a single reading

A single tension reading is useful. A history is powerful.

One-time reading compared with tracking tension over time
One-time reading Tension tracking over time
Shows an estimated current tensionShows how your racquet is changing
Helpful right after a fresh string jobHelpful after every practice and match
Easy to forgetSaved to racquet history
No trendTension loss, playing hours, setup lifespan
Good for curiosityGood for restring decisions

How to measure consistently

Consistent inputs give you a trend you can trust. A few habits make every reading comparable:

  • Start with a fresh-string baseline for each racquet.
  • Measure in a quiet environment so background noise doesn't muddy the signal.
  • Use the same tapping routine every time.
  • Watch the measurement-quality feedback and re-tap when it's low.
  • Track playing hours alongside tension, not just the number.
  • Compare against your own preferred range — not a universal rule.

The real story isn't tension — it's tension loss

From the moment your racquet leaves the stringing machine, the strings start shedding tension. How fast depends on material, gauge, strung tension, and hours of play — which is exactly why your own history beats any single rule of thumb.

First 24 hours (poly)
~10%
In ~20 hits (test)
~20 lbs
Power vs. control line
~52 lbs

Sources: polyester can shed ~10% of tension in the first 24 hours (My Tennis HQ); strings can lose ~20 lbs in ~20 hits in test conditions (Tennis Warehouse University); ~52 lbs is a commonly cited power-vs-control dividing line (ReString). Figures are directional, not guarantees.

Fresh strings compared with strings worth tracking closely
Fresh strings Strings worth tracking closely
Close to your fresh-string baselineNoticeably below your baseline
More predictable responseDepth/control feel less predictable
Good moment to calibrate & start trackingGood moment to compare tension, hours, feel
Useful reference pointUseful restring decision point
Easier to trust in matchesMay feel dull, boardy, loose, or inconsistent

When to measure for the cleanest history

When to measure and why it matters
Moment Why it matters
Right after restringingCreates your fresh-string baseline
~24 hours laterCaptures the early tension drop
After each match / practiceConnects tension loss to playing hours
Before important matchesConfirms the racquet still feels match-ready
When shots start flying longChecks whether feel matches the data
Before your next restringImproves the next setup decision

Tension Loss & Cost-Per-Hour Calculator

Enter your fresh-string baseline and current measurement to see how much tension your strings have lost — and your cost per playing hour.

lbs
lbs
hrs
$
Tension loss
Tension drop
Cost per hour

Estimates are based on your inputs. Actual playability depends on string type, racquet, gauge, swing speed, climate, and personal preference.

What to do with the number

When should you restring?

Restring when your racquet drifts outside your preferred range — not only when a string breaks. The clearest signals:

  • Shots start flying long.
  • Control feels unpredictable.
  • The stringbed feels dull, loose, or boardy.
  • You're altering your swing to compensate.
  • Tension has dropped below your target.
  • Playing hours are near this setup's normal lifespan.

Want the full breakdown? See how String Tension AI helps you decide when to restring.

Can a phone app replace a stringing machine?

No — it isn't a replacement for a professional stringing machine. It's a consistent tracking tool: measure the same racquet over time, build a baseline, monitor tension loss, compare setups, and decide from your own history. Used that way, a phone gives you something a machine never does — a running picture of what your strings are doing between restrings.

Who measures string tension — and why

League & club players

Want week-to-week predictability and a racquet that feels the same on match day.

Poly users

Poly changes fast — track hours and tension together to catch the drop-off.

Players with multiple racquets

Compare setups side by side and keep every frame in its range.

Home stringers & gear testers

Measure at stringing, at 24 hours, and after play to map real decay.

Junior parents & coaches

Manage racquets, costs, and consistency across a growing player.

4 ways to measure string tension

A machine tells you where you started; a phone app tells you where you are now.

Four ways to measure tennis string tension compared
Method What it tells you Typical cost Best for
Stringing machine Reference tension at the moment of stringing $200–$1,000+ Setting the baseline
Electronic tension meter A spot reading of stringbed stiffness ~$200–$300 (e.g. ERT 300) Bench checks
iPhone app (acoustic) Repeatable readings + the trend over time Free to measure Tracking change
Squeeze / feel test A rough sense of "tighter or looser" Free Quick guesses

The phone app is best used as a consistent tracker — calibrate against a known reference for your most reliable numbers.

Quick tension reference

Pick a starting tension, then measure what actually happens. Higher tension leans toward control; lower leans toward power and comfort.

Typical starting tension ranges by string type
String type Typical starting range (lbs)
Natural gut / nylon~50–60 lbs
Hybrid (gut / poly)~46–56 lbs
Polyester (co-poly)~44–54 lbs

Ranges based on Wilson starting-tension guidance. Pro tensions are reported / estimated / historic — never confirmed — and vary by racquet and source. Shopping for strings? Browse Courtside Tennis. Some links may be affiliate links.

6 common measuring mistakes

  • Measuring once with no baseline to compare against.
  • Comparing your number to someone else's racquet.
  • Waiting until the strings break to restring.
  • Ignoring playing hours when judging tension loss.
  • Chasing a pro's tension instead of your own range.
  • Expecting a machine-exact number and ignoring the Quality Coach.

Measuring tension: your questions

Stop guessing. Start measuring.

Measure in ~30 seconds, build a baseline, track tension loss, and know when to restring. Free to measure.

No accessories · Free core measurements · First reading in ~30s