Westhampton Beach Tennis and Sport unveils 2026 season pricing guide
Westhampton Beach Tennis and Sport’s 2026 sheet gives Hamptons players a clean buy-or-book window: April 1 to October 31, guest play allowed, nonmembers at $70 an hour.

A season window with hard edges
If you are deciding where to book court time from April through October, the most useful thing on Westhampton Beach Tennis and Sport’s 2026 sheet is how plainly it lays out the season. Outdoor tennis and pickleball run from April 1 through October 31, and the club spells out the cost of playing for members, guests and nonmembers instead of burying it in a glossy brochure.
That clarity matters on Long Island’s East End, where a court hour can turn into a planning problem fast. The pricing page lists new-member initiation fees, separates new-member pricing from consecutive-member pricing, and gives casual players a direct path onto the courts with a published nonmember rate of $70 per hour cash or $72.10 per hour by card.
What the membership actually covers
The membership structure is built for different kinds of use, not just one all-in Hamptons household. The page lists single, couple, family, twilight and junior options, which gives the club a rare amount of flexibility for people who do not all play on the same schedule or in the same way. Twilight membership, in particular, makes sense for after-work players who need later court time rather than peak weekend slots.
Guest access is also unusually practical. Members may bring a guest for a whole day, up to five visits, with a $30 guest fee per visit. That is the kind of rule that helps when friends are in town for a weekend or when a family wants to try the club before committing to a full membership, and it gives the pricing page real utility for players trying to decide whether the annual cost is worth it.
Why this is more than a tennis club
Westhampton Beach Tennis and Sport presents itself as a racquet-sports campus, and that changes the value of the pricing sheet. The club says it has 20 outdoor tennis courts and 4 indoor clay courts, plus 16 dedicated outdoor pickleball courts and a brand-new outdoor padel court. For players trying to stretch a membership past one season or one sport, that mix is the difference between a summer-only stop and a place you can use in more months of the year.
The pickleball pricing makes that point even more clearly. Pickleball members have no additional court cost for member play, and the club allows players to add pickleball membership for a fee. In a market where families often split their court time between tennis, pickleball and whatever the rest of the household wants to try next, that kind of cross-sport access gives the club an edge over a single-surface setup.
The calendar inside the calendar
The pricing guide is only part of the story, because the club’s programming fills the season around it. On the pickleball side, the intra-club league runs on a tight summer schedule, with a draft on June 9, first match on June 27 and finals on August 23. That turns the club into a place with a real competitive rhythm, not just a stack of reservable courts.
Junior tennis is just as structured. The 2026 camp runs from June 29 through August 21, with daily hours from 9:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m. For families balancing school breaks, summer residency and the usual East End traffic on time and attention, that kind of daytime programming is a major part of the value. Add in the club’s year-round adult and junior tennis programming, and the pricing sheet starts to read like an entry point into a full calendar, not just a summer rate card.
Why the address and access details matter
The club’s location at 86 Depot Rd, Westhampton Beach, NY 11978 reinforces its local-service pitch. Westhampton Beach Tennis and Sport describes itself as family owned and locally managed, which helps explain why the operation feels built for both year-round members and seasonal players who need something dependable in the middle of the Hamptons rush.
Accessibility also matters in a region where visitors often move by rail or shuttle rather than by car alone. Directory listings place the club near the Long Island Rail Road and Hampton Jitney, which helps explain how it can serve both East End regulars and players coming from farther west. For anyone trying to weigh a private-club commitment against a more flexible place to book, the real advantage here is how many choices the sheet puts on the table: a defined outdoor season, a nonmember rate, guest play, junior programming, pickleball, padel and indoor clay under one roofline.
That is what makes the 2026 pricing page feel less like an announcement and more like a planning tool. In a Hamptons tennis season where every court hour counts, Westhampton Beach Tennis and Sport is making the case that the smartest booking is the one with the clearest rules.
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