Beginner Tips
What Is the Kitchen Zone? The Rule That Changes Everything
The most-misunderstood rule in pickleball — explained clearly.
The most-misunderstood rule in pickleball — explained clearly.
The kitchen zone costs more beginners more points than any other rule in pickleball. Understand it fully and your game changes immediately.
“I can’t go into the kitchen at all.”
You can enter anytime — you just can’t volley from inside it.
“Only stepping fully inside is a fault.”
Touching the line on a volley is a fault. The line is part of the kitchen.
“I have to leave before hitting again.”
Only true for volleys. You can hit a bounced ball from inside the kitchen freely.
| Action | Legal? |
|---|---|
| Walking into the kitchen | Yes |
| Hitting a bounced ball from inside the kitchen | Yes |
| Standing in the kitchen to wait | Yes |
| Volleying from inside the kitchen | Fault |
| Stepping on the kitchen line while volleying | Fault |
| Momentum carrying you in after a volley | Fault |
Yes. Standing in the kitchen, or entering it at any time, is completely legal — the only restriction is that you can’t volley the ball while any part of you is touching the kitchen or its line.
Only if you volley while touching it. The kitchen line is considered part of the kitchen, so a volley made while your foot is on the line is a fault, exactly the same as volleying from fully inside.
The kitchen, or non-volley zone, extends 7 feet from the net on both sides of the court.