Country Club Tennis Attire: The Essential Dress Code Guide (2026)

Classic all-white country club tennis attire

Short answer: Most country club tennis dress codes require dedicated tennis attire — collared or structured tops, tennis skirts, dresses or tailored shorts, and court shoes — and prohibit gym wear: t-shirts, running shorts, leggings worn alone, and anything with large graphics. Traditional clubs may additionally enforce predominantly-white or all-white rules. When in doubt, white and structured is never wrong.

This guide is about the rules themselves — what dress codes typically say, why they exist, and how to stay inside them without dressing like it’s 1975. (For outfit styling ideas, see our country club outfits guide; for how to evaluate quality before buying, see the attire buying checklist.)

What Dress Codes Usually Require

Wording varies club to club, but the common rules cluster into five groups:

  1. Dedicated tennis clothing. Garments designed for tennis — not general gym or running wear. The visible cues clubs look for: collars or structured necklines, pleated or A-line skirts, tailored short lengths.
  2. Color rules. Three tiers exist:
  1. Coverage and fit. Midriff-baring tops, visible undergarments and overly loose “streetwear” fits are commonly restricted. Built-in liners under skirts are expected.
  2. Footwear. Non-marking court shoes, usually white or predominantly white. Running shoes with dark soles are the most common violation.
  3. Logos and graphics. Small brand logos are accepted; oversized graphics, slogans and neon colorways are not.

Why Clubs Still Enforce This

Three practical reasons, beyond tradition: white reflects heat on open courts; uniform standards keep member photos and club events visually consistent; and dedicated tennis construction (liners, stretch, non-marking soles) protects both players and court surfaces. Knowing the why makes the rules easier to navigate — they target garment categories, not personal style.

The Most Common Violations (and Easy Fixes)

Violation Why it’s flagged The within-code fix
Leggings worn alone Read as gym wear Wear them under a tennis skirt in solid colors
Crew-neck cotton t-shirt No structure, absorbs sweat Performance polo or structured tank
Running shorts No liner, casual cut Tailored tennis shorts with liner
Dark-soled trainers Court marking risk Non-marking court shoes, white base
Neon or big-graphic tops Logo/graphic rules Solids with small trim accents

Fabric Standards That Keep You Within Code

Dress codes describe how garments look; fabric decides whether they keep looking that way through a match:

A Note for Brands Selling Into the Club Market

If you are building a tennis line for club players, design to the strictest tier: an all-white colorway with optional trim accents will sell into every club; a neon-first line will not. The construction requirements above — lined whites, heat-set pleats, structured collars, non-translucent knits — are factory specifications, not marketing copy, so confirm your manufacturer can hold them at production scale.

YOUMEGA is a private-label activewear manufacturer in Xiamen, China, and these specs are standard in our activewear production — lined fabrics for white opacity, heat-set pleating, structured collars and matte technical knits — all under AQL 2.5 inspection with OEKO-TEX Standard 100, BSCI, REACH and CPSIA compliance. The same line can build club-ready skorts, polos and dresses to a strict all-white tier. Stock styles with your logo start from 100 sets (mixed colors and sizes allowed); full custom development runs 300–500 pcs per style per color.

Preguntas frecuentes

Do all country clubs require white tennis attire?

No. Many allow tasteful colors; traditional clubs may require predominantly white or all white. Check your club’s published code — color rules are the part that varies most.

Are leggings allowed under country club dress codes?

Usually only under a tennis skirt and in solid colors. Leggings worn alone are the single most commonly flagged item.

What counts as “predominantly white”?

In practice, white as the clearly dominant color — commonly interpreted around 80–90% — with accents allowed in trim, logos or accessories. Interpretations vary by club.

Can men wear t-shirts for club tennis?

Most codes expect collared polos or structured performance tops. A plain cotton crew-neck t-shirt is typically outside code.

What shoes are required at club courts?

Non-marking court shoes, usually white or predominantly white. Dark-soled running shoes are widely prohibited because they mark the surface.

Amber, YOUMEGA Garment
YOUMEGA Editorial Team
Autor · YOUMEGA Conocimientos
El equipo editorial de YOUMEGA comparte conocimientos de fabricación de activewear desde el lado de fábrica.

Have a fabric question?
We reply in 24 hours.

Envíanos una muestra, una imagen de referencia o simplemente describe lo que necesitas. Consulta de tela gratis, sin compromiso.