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⚾ 2026 Baseball Bat Sizing Guide

Find the Right
Bat Size
for Your Child

Use our interactive calculator to get a personalized bat size recommendation — then learn everything about drop weight, league certifications, and how to know if a bat truly fits.

⚾ Bat Size Calculator
Enter your child's details for an instant personalized recommendation
Recommended Bat Length
30"
Recommended for your player's height and weight
-10
Drop Weight
20 oz
Approx. Bat Weight
USA Baseball
Certification Needed
By Age & Size

Baseball Bat Size Chart
by Age, Height & Weight

Use this chart as a reference alongside the calculator above. When height and weight recommendations differ, always go with the longer bat if your child has good bat speed.

Age Height Weight Bat Length Drop Weight Certification
4–6Under 4'Under 40 lbs24–26"-13 to -11T-Ball Standard
6–73'8"–4'40–50 lbs26–27"-12 to -11USA Baseball
7–84'–4'4"50–60 lbs27–28"-12 to -10USA Baseball
8–94'4"–4'8"60–70 lbs28–29"-11 to -10USA Baseball
9–104'8"–5'70–80 lbs29–30"-11 to -10USA or USSSA
10–114'10"–5'2"80–90 lbs29–30"-10 to -8USA or USSSA
11–125'–5'4"90–100 lbs30–31"-10 to -8USA or USSSA
12–135'2"–5'6"100–115 lbs31–32"-10 to -5USSSA or BBCOR
13–145'4"–5'8"110–130 lbs31–32"*-8 to -5USSSA or BBCOR
14–155'6"–6'130–160 lbs32–33"-5 to -3BBCOR (-3)
15–165'8"–6'1"150–175 lbs32–33"-3BBCOR (-3)
16–185'10"–6'3"160+ lbs33–34"-3BBCOR (-3)

* At 13–14, check your specific league's bat rules — some travel organizations transition to BBCOR at this age.

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Drop Weight Explained

What is Drop Weight
and Why Does it Matter?

Drop weight is the number that defines how heavy a bat is relative to its length. It's calculated by subtracting the weight in ounces from the length in inches. A 30-inch bat that weighs 20 ounces has a drop of -10. The bigger the drop number, the lighter the bat.

-13
-13 Drop
Ultra Light
The lightest bats available. Designed for very young players who are still developing bat speed and need maximum swing ease. Common in T-ball and early coach pitch.
Best for: Ages 4–7 · T-Ball · Coach Pitch
-10
-10 Drop
Most Popular Youth Drop
The most common drop weight for youth baseball players. Balances swing speed with enough weight to generate power. Required for many USA Baseball certified youth leagues.
Best for: Ages 8–13 · Little League · Entry Travel
-8
-8 Drop
Transition Drop
A bridge between youth and high school bats. Heavier than -10, trains players to develop more power while building strength. Common in competitive travel ball for older youth players.
Best for: Ages 12–14 · Competitive Travel Baseball
-5
-5 Drop
Pre-BBCOR
A heavy youth bat used by advanced players preparing for the transition to BBCOR. Builds the strength needed for high school baseball while still allowed in some travel organizations.
Best for: Ages 13–15 · Advanced Travel · Pre-HS Transition
-3
-3 Drop (BBCOR)
High School & College Standard
Required for all high school and college baseball. Significantly heavier than youth bats — a 33-inch BBCOR bat weighs 30 ounces. Requires genuine strength and developed bat mechanics to use effectively.
Best for: Ages 14+ · High School · College · BBCOR Leagues
Wood
Wood Bats
Pro Style / Training
Wood bats develop proper mechanics because they have a smaller sweet spot and demand correct contact to perform. Many travel programs introduce wood bat training at 12U and above.
Best for: Training · Wood Bat Tournaments · Ages 12+
League Certifications

Which Bat Certification
Does Your Child's League Require?

Buying the wrong certified bat is one of the most expensive mistakes in youth baseball. Your child will be turned away at the plate if their bat doesn't match their league's certification. Always confirm with your coach before purchasing.

✓ USA Baseball
USA Baseball Certified
Recreational & Entry-Level Youth
Introduced in 2018, USA Baseball bats are designed to perform more like wood bats. They are marked with the USA Baseball logo. Required for Little League, Babe Ruth, Cal Ripken, Dixie Youth, and most recreational programs.
Little League Babe Ruth Cal Ripken Dixie Youth Pony League
✓ USSSA 1.15 BPF
USSSA Certified
Travel Baseball / Club Baseball
USSSA bats are marked with the USSSA 1.15 BPF thumbprint logo. They generally perform better (hit further) than USA bats, which is why they are only allowed in USSSA-sanctioned travel tournaments and not in recreational leagues.
USSSA Travel Ball Triple Crown Perfect Game GSL
✓ BBCOR .50
BBCOR Certified
High School & College Baseball
BBCOR (Batted Ball Coefficient of Restitution) bats are required for all NFHS (high school) and NCAA (college) baseball. They must be -3 drop weight with a maximum 2⅝" barrel. Marked with BBCOR .50 on the taper.
High School (NFHS) College (NCAA) 13U BBCOR Leagues
✓ T-Ball Standard
T-Ball Certified
T-Ball Programs (Ages 4–6)
T-Ball bats are specifically designed for young beginners. They are lighter (under 2 lbs), shorter (24–26 inches), and have softer barrels designed for use with the standard foam or rubber T-ball. Do not use regular baseball bats for T-ball.
T-Ball Programs Ages 4–6 All Recreational T-Ball
The Weight Test

How to Know if a Bat
is the Right Weight
for Your Child

The sizing chart gives you a starting point — but bat weight is ultimately about whether your child can generate good bat speed with proper mechanics. Here is the definitive test.

🏏 The 30-Second Extension Test

This is the most reliable way to determine if a bat weight is appropriate for your child — used by coaches and bat fitters across the country.

1
Have your child hold the bat handle with their dominant hand only — arm fully extended out to the side at shoulder height.
2
Set a timer for 30 seconds and have them hold the bat perfectly still — arm extended, bat horizontal.
3
If they can hold it for 30 seconds comfortably: The bat weight is appropriate or you may be able to go heavier.
4
If the bat starts to drop before 30 seconds: The bat is too heavy. Choose a lighter drop weight or shorter length.
⚠️ The most common mistake parents make
Buying a bat that is too heavy because it "looks powerful" or "gives room to grow." A bat your child cannot control produces pop-ups and weak grounders. A lighter bat with better bat speed will always outperform a heavier bat with a slow, compromised swing. When in doubt, go lighter.
Expert Tips

7 Things Parents
Should Know Before Buying
a Baseball Bat

Always check your league's certification first
A bat that performs great at a USSSA travel tournament is illegal at a Little League game. Confirm the exact certification requirement with your coach before purchasing anything. This is the most expensive mistake parents make.
📏
Length matters more than weight at younger ages
For players under 10, getting the right length is more important than fine-tuning the drop weight. A bat that is too long will drag through the zone — a bat that is too short limits the plate coverage.
Bat speed beats bat weight every time
Physics favors bat speed. A player who swings a 28-inch -10 bat at full speed will hit the ball further than the same player swinging a 30-inch -8 bat with a compromised, slower swing. Never sacrifice bat speed for length or weight.
🌡️
Don't use composite bats in cold weather
Composite bats can crack or break in temperatures below 60°F. If your child plays in cold weather, stick with aluminum or hybrid bats.
💰
Don't overspend on bats for young players
Youth players grow quickly and bats become illegal as leagues change rules. For players under 10, a solid mid-range bat ($80–$150) is plenty. Save the $350+ investment for players 12 and older who have consistent mechanics and stable league requirements.
🤝
Ask your coach before the all-star game
Many tournament organizations — including Little League All-Stars — have stricter bat requirements than regular season play. A bat legal for regular season may not be allowed in All-Star or tournament play. Always verify before tournament day.
🔄
The "breaking in" period for composite bats
Composite bats need 150–200 hits to reach peak performance. Rotate the bat a quarter turn between swings during break-in to ensure even compression around the barrel. Using a composite bat in cold weather during break-in can damage it permanently.
📋
Travel ball uses different bats than Little League
If your child plays both Little League and travel ball, they may need two bats — a USA Baseball certified bat for Little League and a USSSA certified bat for travel tournaments. Check with both programs before assuming one bat works for everything.
Common Questions

Baseball Bat Sizing FAQ

What size baseball bat does my child need?
+
Use our interactive calculator at the top of this page to get a personalized recommendation based on your child's height, weight, and league type. As a general reference: players under 60 lbs typically use 26–28 inch bats, players 61–80 lbs use 28–30 inch bats, players 81–100 lbs use 29–31 inch bats, and players over 100 lbs typically use 30–32 inch bats. The 30-second extension test is the most reliable way to confirm the weight is right.
What is drop weight in baseball bats?
+
Drop weight is the number you get when you subtract the bat's weight in ounces from its length in inches. A 30-inch bat that weighs 20 ounces is a -10 drop. The higher the drop number, the lighter the bat relative to its length. Youth bats typically range from -13 (lightest) to -8. BBCOR bats for high school are standardized at -3 (heaviest).
What bat does my child need for Little League vs travel baseball?
+
For Little League, you need a USA Baseball certified bat (marked with the USA Baseball logo). For USSSA travel baseball, you need a USSSA certified bat (marked with the USSSA 1.15 BPF thumbprint). These are different certifications — a USSSA bat is not legal in Little League and vice versa. If your child plays both, they may need two separate bats. Always confirm with your specific league before purchasing.
How do I know if a bat is too heavy for my child?
+
Use the 30-second extension test: have your child hold the bat extended with one arm at shoulder height. If they cannot hold it for 30 seconds without dropping, the bat is too heavy. Other signs a bat is too heavy: your child swings around the ball rather than through it, they have slow bat speed compared to their peers, or they consistently hit the top half of the ball producing weak grounders and pop-ups.
Should I buy aluminum, composite, or hybrid?
+
Aluminum (alloy) bats are ready to use immediately, more durable, perform consistently in all temperatures, and are less expensive. Composite bats require a break-in period (150–200 hits), perform better once broken in, and have larger sweet spots — but can crack in cold weather and cost significantly more. Hybrid bats (alloy barrel, composite handle) offer a middle ground. For players under 12, aluminum is usually the best value. For competitive players 12 and older, composite or hybrid bats are worth the investment.
When should my child switch to BBCOR?
+
BBCOR bats are required when your child enters high school baseball (typically age 14–15). Some travel organizations transition to BBCOR at 13U or 14U — check your specific league. The transition from a -10 youth bat to a -3 BBCOR bat is significant — the bat becomes much heavier relative to its length. Many coaches recommend introducing a -5 or -8 drop bat at age 12–13 to gradually prepare for the BBCOR transition.

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