Ratings

DUPR ratings: how the pickleball ladder works

Published May 29, 2026

Pickleball didn't have a serious rating system for most of its existence. Then it got popular, and the old US-style 2.0–5.5 "self-rated" scale started showing its cracks: two 4.0 players from different cities could be wildly different levels, and competitive players couldn't tell who they should be playing.

DUPR — Dynamic Universal Pickleball Rating — is the system that fixed it. This is the explainer most pickleball players actually need.

TL;DR

  • DUPR is a single number from 2.0 to 8.0 that tells you how well someone plays.
  • It's calculated from your recent competitive matches against rated players, like tennis's UTR.
  • Most adult social pickleball players sit between 3.0 and 4.5. Anything above 5.0 is regional-tournament strong. Above 6.5 is professional.
  • A "fair" doubles game is usually within 0.25 DUPR per partner; competitive singles is within 0.3.
  • You don't need a verified DUPR to play — most apps accept your self-rated DUPR or your old IPTPA / PPR level.

What is DUPR?

DUPR — Dynamic Universal Pickleball Rating — is the leading global rating system for pickleball. It's run by Dynamic Universal Pickleball Rating, Inc. and is now used by the Professional Pickleball Association, the Major League Pickleball circuit, and most serious recreational leagues worldwide.

The number runs from 2.0 to 8.0, with most adult amateurs falling between 3.0 and 4.5. It's calculated from match results — not from self-assessment, drills, or "what your coach thinks". The system is dynamic, meaning it updates after every match you log.

How DUPR is different from the old systems

Before DUPR, pickleball used a self-rated 2.0–5.5 scale (similar to USTA NTRP for tennis). It had two problems:

  1. It was self-assigned. Players rated themselves and were rarely challenged.
  2. It was sport-organisation-specific. A 4.0 from one league wasn't comparable to a 4.0 from another.

DUPR fixed both: ratings come from match results across all participating leagues, and there's a single global pool of opponents to compare against. A 4.0 DUPR in Sydney is genuinely close to a 4.0 DUPR in Houston.

How is DUPR calculated?

DUPR uses your recent competitive matches and weights three things:

  1. Your opponent's DUPR — beating a higher-rated opponent moves your number more.
  2. The match score — closer scores nudge ratings gently; blowouts shift them more.
  3. The recency — older results count less.

The system uses a 30-result rolling window. Once you've played at least 10 matches, you have a "Reliable" rating shown in regular type. Below 10, your rating is "Provisional" and shown in italics — still useful but less confident.

You can log results from any sanctioned event, league, or club that integrates with DUPR. Many casual clubs now have a DUPR rep who logs Saturday-morning round-robin results.

What's a "good" DUPR?

This depends on what "good" means. Some rough markers:

DUPRWho you typically are
2.0–2.5Brand new. Just learning the rules; figuring out where to stand.
2.5–3.0Improving recreational. Can keep a rally going but the kitchen is scary.
3.0–3.5Solid social. Plays Saturday round-robins. Knows when to drive and when to drop.
3.5–4.0Strong club player. Drilling regularly. Has a third-shot drop.
4.0–4.5Local tournament player. Wins your local 4.0 bracket consistently.
4.5–5.0Regional competitor. Travels to tournaments. Plays seniors-tour level.
5.0–6.0Top amateur / lower pro. Sponsored, plays MLP qualifiers, often a former tennis player.
6.0–7.0Touring pro. Top 500 in the world.
7.0+Top pro. Anna Leigh Waters, Ben Johns, Catherine Parenteau territory.

A useful frame: if you're a former tennis player with a UTR of 6, you'll usually start at around 3.5–4.0 DUPR and climb fast. Pickleball is much more skill-specific than people expect — racquet sports transfer maybe 70% of the way.

What makes a "fair" pickleball game?

Pickleball is mostly doubles, and partner pairings matter as much as individual ratings. Rough rules:

  • Doubles: add both partners' DUPRs. Pairs within 0.5 combined DUPR play competitive games. Within 1.0 combined is still fine. Beyond 1.5 combined is usually one-sided.
  • Singles: within 0.3 DUPR feels close. 0.5 is the limit before it gets boring for the higher player.

This is why partner-matching by DUPR matters. A 4.0 player has a great Saturday game with another 4.0 and 3.8. They'll be bored playing two 3.0s, and crushed playing two 4.5s.

What if you don't have a DUPR?

Most casual pickleball players don't — DUPR requires logged competitive results. Two paths:

Self-assess from the old scale. If you've been rated as a 3.0 IPTPA or PPR, your DUPR will be in roughly the same range. The scales are intentionally aligned.

Estimate from your tennis UTR. As a starting point, take your UTR and divide by 2, then add 0.5 to 1.0 depending on hand-eye and how long you've played pickleball. A UTR 6 tennis player who just picked up pickleball is usually a 3.0-3.5 DUPR. A UTR 6 who's been playing pickleball for a year is more likely a 3.8-4.2.

Or just use a self-rated level (Beginner / Intermediate / Advanced / Pro). Apps like Let's Rally let you enter DUPR if you have it, or fall back to a level for matching. Either works for finding hits.

How to get a verified DUPR

If you want an official number:

  1. Create a free DUPR profile at dupr.com.
  2. Find a participating club or league — most major pickleball clubs in Australia (Pickleball Australia affiliated venues) and the US now log results to DUPR.
  3. Play 10+ matches to get a Reliable rating.
  4. Keep playing — DUPRs decay slightly if you go inactive for many months.

How DUPR plays with Let's Rally

In the app, you can enter your DUPR on your profile. The smart-sort surfaces players within roughly 0.3 DUPR of you first, so the people at the top of your feed are the people you're going to have actual competitive games with. You can also enter your UTR for tennis, or skip both and use a self-assessed level. Whichever number you put in, we use to match.

The shortest possible version

DUPR is pickleball's global rating system — a number from 2.0 to 8.0, calculated from your recent competitive results. Most adult amateurs are 3.0–4.5. A fair doubles game adds to within 0.5 of your partner's combined DUPR. You don't need an official DUPR to find a partner — but knowing your rough number makes matching dramatically easier.

Let's Rally uses DUPR (or your level, if you'd rather) to put the right opponents at the top of your feed.

Stop searching. Start playing.

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