Rule of the Week
The Double Bounce Rule — Explained Simply
Also called the Two-Bounce Rule. One of the most misunderstood rules in pickleball.
Also called the Two-Bounce Rule. One of the most misunderstood rules in pickleball.
Players either forget this rule exists, apply it incorrectly, or confuse it with another rule entirely. Here’s a clear, definitive explanation.
| Shot | Must it bounce? |
|---|---|
| Serve (received by receiving team) | Yes — Bounce 1 |
| Return of serve (received by serving team) | Yes — Bounce 2 |
| Third shot and beyond | No — volley allowed |
| Any shot in the kitchen zone | Volley = fault regardless of bounce rule |
USA Pickleball’s official rulebook now uses “two-bounce rule” to reduce confusion — some players interpreted “double bounce” as the ball bouncing twice, which isn’t what the rule means. Both names are used across the region and mean exactly the same thing.
No. The serve must bounce once before the receiving team returns it — that’s Bounce 1. Volleying the serve on the fly is an immediate fault.
Once the serve and the return of serve have each bounced, both teams can volley freely for the rest of the rally — subject to the kitchen (non-volley zone) rule.
Both names describe the same rule. USA Pickleball’s official rulebook now uses “two-bounce rule” to avoid confusion, but you’ll hear both terms used across the region.