What Is a Break of Serve in Tennis?

A break of serve happens when the player returning serve wins the game.

This is often a significant moment in a match, because serving is usually a big advantage in tennis.

Why is Serving Such an Advantage?

When a player is serving, they are able to choose how the point begins. The server is in control of where the first ball goes. With most rallies shorter than 4 shots, having full control of the opening shot is huge. The server can serve at the speed they want, place the ball in a difficult position for the receiver, and essentially set up each point.

Why it’s called a “break”

Because of the advantage a server has, each player is expected to “hold serve” (win their service games).
So, when the returner wins instead, they are said to have “broken” serve.

Example

  • Player A serves
  • Player B wins the game
    → Player B has broken serve

Why breaks matter so much:

Breaks often decide sets because:

  • players usually hold serve more often than not, meaning….
  • opportunities to break are limited, meaning….
  • one break can be enough to win a set

A typical set might look like:

  • 6–4 (one break difference)
  • 7–5 (one break difference)

In modern tennis:

Holding serve is expected. Breaking serve can be decisive.

Related: Tiebreaks Explained, What Does ‘Advantage’ Mean, Tennis Scoring Explained

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