Ten markets ranked
Most market rankings tell you what you already know, supported by numbers that do not hold up to scrutiny. We built this one differently. Thirteen candidate markets. Five criteria, applied in priority order, with sources named throughout. The ranking that came out of it will surprise some people — and for each market where it might, we have explained the logic directly.
Where Tennis Homes Are Most Established
People choose a location for reasons that go well beyond a tennis court — lifestyle, family, climate, community, existing ties to a place. The court is part of what you want from that location. This guide covers the markets where a serious tennis home is a genuine option: where the supply exists, the infrastructure supports the lifestyle, and buyers in our network are actively looking.
We evaluated 13 candidate markets across the US, Europe, and the Caribbean and ranked the top 10 against five criteria, applied in the order that matters most to a buyer specifically in the market for a tennis home. The ranking and the methodology are both visible below. A number without an explanation is not useful to anyone — and where the data runs out, we have said so.
How the Ranking Works
Five criteria, applied in priority order. The sequence reflects what buyers in our network tell us matters most when evaluating a market specifically for a tennis home — not a luxury property in general. Tennis infrastructure appears as context, not as a primary driver: if you are buying a private court, proximity to a professional academy is a nice addition, not a reason to buy.
| # | Criterion | Why it drives the ranking |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Market depth | How established and accessible the tennis home supply is in a given market. Expressed qualitatively — Established / Active / Emerging — rather than as a listing count, because publicly visible listings are an unreliable proxy for actual supply in most of these markets. |
| 2 | Climate | Comfortable outdoor play months per year, based on temperature and rainfall data from WMO, NOAA, and IPMA. Our derived calculation — labelled as such throughout. (avg high 15–33°C, rainfall <80mm/month). |
| 3 | Permitting ease | For buyers adding or upgrading a court. A 30-day process and a 14-month process are fundamentally different purchase decisions. Verified from municipal and planning authority sources. |
| 4 | Foreign buyer access | Ownership rights, transfer costs, and residency pathways. Relevant primarily for international buyers — domestic buyers in each market are unaffected. Sources: Global Property Guide, Portugalist, Mintz, lacity.gov. |
| 5 | Rental ceiling | Published high-season weekly rates from named agencies for court properties. The lowest priority criterion — relevant for buyers with a rental strategy, not determinative of market rank. |
One important note on data: every figure in this ranking comes from a named, independent, datable source. Where verified data was not available after a thorough search, we have said so. The Hamptons is the clearest example of why this matters — and we have addressed it directly in the ranking below.
*Climate figures: WMO (World Meteorological Organization), NOAA (National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration), IPMA (Instituto Português do Mar e da Atmosfera), and AEMET (Agencia Estatal de Meteorología) — derived using the same methodology throughout (avg high 15–33°C, rainfall <80mm/month).
The Top 10 Tennis Homes Markets in 2026
E = Excellent S = Strong M = Moderate L = Limited — = Data not verified
Market depth: Est. = Established Act. = Active Em. = Emerging
| # | Market | Strongest for | Depth | Climate (mo.) | Permit | Access | Rental | Infra. (context) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Côte d’Azur | Highest rental ceiling + market depth | Est. | 8 | M | L | E | S |
| 2 | The Hamptons | Rental ceiling + broker-network depth | Est. | 4 | M | S | E | S |
| 3 | Mallorca | Climate + permitting clarity + active supply | Act. | 9 | S | M | S | E |
| 4 | Miami / South Florida | Year-round climate + visible international supply | Act. | 11 | S | M | S | M |
| 5 | Marbella | 10-month season + established rental market | Est. | 10 | S | M | E | E |
| 6 | Tuscany | Clay court heritage + rental season + ownership clarity | Est. | 7 | M | S | S | M |
| 7 | Los Angeles / BH | Deep domestic supply + year-round play | Est. | 10+ | S | M | M | S |
| 8 | The Algarve | Climate + ownership clarity | Act. | 9 | L | S | S | S |
| 9 | Turks & Caicos | Tax structure + year-round climate | Em. | 10* | M | E | S | L |
| 10 | Lisbon / Cascais | Appreciation momentum + growing supply | Em. | 8 | M | S | M | M |
* Turks & Caicos: 10 comfortable months but hurricane season (August–October) creates a planning caveat.
Climate figures: WMO, NOAA, IPMA, AEMET — derived using the same methodology throughout (avg high 15–33°C, rainfall <80mm/month).
A Note on the Ranking Logic
Two positions in this ranking are worth addressing directly. The Hamptons sits at #2 despite a four-month outdoor season — because the rental ceiling, broker-network depth, and cultural embeddedness of tennis in the summer calendar are stronger here than in almost any other market. The Côte d’Azur leads because no other European market combines established supply depth, a verifiable rental ceiling, and a long history of private court ownership at the top of the market in the same way. Its weakness — French acquisition friction for non-EU buyers — is real, and reflected in the access score.
The remaining positions reflect the criteria applied honestly. Marbella is a strong market — it ranks fifth because on the criteria that matter most here, Miami and Mallorca each make a stronger case. The supply is thinner than its reputation suggests, and climate alone is not enough to lead this ranking. Tuscany is included as an established but deliberately niche market: the right answer for a specific buyer, not a general recommendation. Turks and Caicos and Lisbon are forward-looking inclusions — markets where the conditions are forming, not yet formed.
Find Your Market. Find Your Court.
The ten markets here are where the evidence is strongest in 2026 — where supply, climate, permitting, and ownership clarity align well enough to rank with confidence. They are not the whole picture. The world is large, and tennis homes exists in places this ranking does not yet cover.
We already have a clear sense of where we are looking next. Ibiza for its rental ceiling and growing estate market. Montecito for its concentration of serious buyers. Marrakesh for the emergence of a distinct North African luxury tier. Cape Town for a market that is underrepresented in every global luxury ranking despite the quality of its properties. Ko Samui as Southeast Asia’s most credible entry point for private estate ownership. And Melbourne, where a handful of inner and outer suburb estates have courts that belong in this conversation. These markets will feature as the network expands.
For now, the ten above remain the strongest starting points.
Until the next match,
Tennis Homes




