Family Hotels in Belek with Tennis Courts
5 family-friendly hotels with tennis in Belek . Handpicked for families who want the best.
Belek is one of the few corners of Europe where tennis is built into the family resort, not added as an afterthought. Several of the big resorts run dedicated tennis academies with summer camps for kids, multiple courts under floodlights, and pros who actually teach. The five hotels below are all 5-star, all all-inclusive, all sit within a few kilometres of the coast, and all have tennis as a serious facility rather than a single sad clay court behind the pool. Prices in July run from around 1500 EUR to over 3500 EUR per night for family rooms, which is the trade-off you make for the level of facility.
Belek is not a town, it is a strip. There is no walkable centre, no old quarter, no meaningful main street. What you have instead is a 12km coastal strip of resorts, each with its own private beach, water park, kids club and tennis courts, separated by golf courses. You spend your week inside one resort with occasional excursions to the Land of Legends theme park or the Roman ruins at Aspendos.
πΎWhy Belek Is a Genuine Tennis Destination for Families
Tennis at Belek works at every level. Beginner kids from age four start with the mini-tennis programmes that use foam balls and shorter rackets. By age eight they graduate to proper courts, and from there the academies offer week-long camps that run from June through September. Coaches are typically Turkish nationals who have come up through the federation system; English is universal at all the major resorts.
For parents who play, the booking system is the differentiator. The big resorts let you reserve courts a week ahead, supply ball machines on request, and run morning and evening doubles round-robins for resident guests. Court fees are usually included in the all-inclusive package; rackets rent for about 5 EUR per session if you do not bring your own. Floodlights mean you can play after the kids are asleep, which in 35-degree July weather is when you actually want to be on a court.
For families with mixed interests, the resort layouts mean tennis sits a few minutes from the kids club, the water park and the beach. One parent can take a lesson while the other is at the pool with a six-year-old and not feel like they are abandoning the family for the morning. That is the real value proposition here, more than the courts themselves.
Parent's take
Honestly, the trick is to book a resort with both a kids club and a tennis academy, and to treat them as separate activities. Drop the kids at 9am, play singles for 90 minutes, swim with them at 11, and the day is half done before the heat hits. Skip mid-day tennis in July: the courts are red clay that absorbs heat and your shoes will melt by 1pm.
Our Top 5 Picks
Hotels in Belek with tennis, sorted by guest rating.

Maxx Royal Belek Golf Resort
Belek Tourism Centre
Wonderful
500 reviews
Maxx Royal Belek is the largest golf resort on the strip, sitting on its own beach with direct access to the Maxx Royal Golf Club designed by Brad Faxon. Eleven restaurants, ten pools, and a 23-room family suite wing make it the rare 5-star where children get equal billing with the back nine.
From
$300/night
Why families love Maxx Royal Belek Golf Resort
Parents of golfers rate this as the easiest place in Belek to balance a round with kids. The main pool complex has a separate toddler section with shaded loungers within sight of the swim-up bar. Kids club ages split 4-7 and 8-12 in different buildings, which matters once your eldest hits 9 and refuses to do the same craft as a four-year-old. The on-site golf shuttle is a 90-second ride, so you can do an early round and be back for a 10am family breakfast easily.

Rixos Premium Belek - The Land of Legends Access
Belek Tourism Centre
Wonderful
500 reviews
Rixos Premium Belek pairs a long private beach with free shuttle access to the Land of Legends theme park next door, which runs water rides until 7pm in summer. The Carya and Cornelia Faldo golf courses are 4 minutes by hotel car and stay-and-play rates are bundled into the room.
From
$300/night
Why families love Rixos Premium Belek - The Land of Legends Access
Families with mixed-age kids tend to rebook this one for the Land of Legends pass alone. The teenage end of the kids age range gets bored at most all-inclusives by day three. Here they walk to roller coasters. The resort's own kids club is solid for under-10s, and the family pool area has a small water park section with three short slides, enough to entertain a 5-year-old between golf rounds for the parent who plays.

Voyage Belek Golf & Spa Hotel
Belek Tourism Centre
Wonderful
500 reviews
Voyage Belek Golf & Spa is the most golf-forward of the five, with two 18-hole courses on the property and a full Voyage Belek Golf Club practice facility. Ten restaurants, a 1.2 km private beach, and a kids village set back from the adult zones round out a property genuinely engineered for golfing families.
From
$300/night
Why families love Voyage Belek Golf & Spa Hotel
The walking distance between rooms and the first tee is the smallest in Belek, around 200 metres. That sounds small until you have done a 7am tee time at a hotel where the course is a 15-minute shuttle ride. Kids village has a kids club, mini golf, ropes course, splash park, and a separate teen club with PlayStation 5. Family suites have a small kitchenette which is rare in Belek and useful when toddlers need an early breakfast before the buffet opens.

Kaya Palazzo Golf Resort
Belek Tourism Centre
Wonderful
500 reviews
Kaya Palazzo Golf Resort wraps an 18-hole course around its room buildings, so most rooms either look at fairway or pine forest. Eight pools, a long sandy beach with shade, and a kids club programme that includes evening mini-disco for the under-10s give it a calmer, less themed feel than the bigger Maxx Royal and Rixos properties nearby.
From
$300/night
Why families love Kaya Palazzo Golf Resort
Parents who find the mega-resorts overwhelming gravitate here. It is still 5-star and still all-inclusive but the volume is lower, paths are quieter, and the course threads between the buildings instead of being a separate facility. The kids club building has a small library and craft room used heavily on rainy days, which Belek does get a few of in late October. The beach has shaded sun beds standard, not paid extras, which matters when toddlers need naps mid-morning.

ROBINSON NOBILIS - All inclusive
Belek Tourism Centre
Wonderful
500 reviews
ROBINSON NOBILIS sits at the eastern end of the strip with an unusual layout: rooms cluster around three village squares rather than along a single corridor. The hotel runs its own sport academy in addition to direct access to the Antalya Golf Club, with tennis, beach volleyball and football camps for ages 6-15.
From
$300/night
Why families love ROBINSON NOBILIS - All inclusive
This is the best pick if you have older kids who actually want to do something rather than be entertained. The sport academy is included in the all-inclusive rate and runs proper coaching sessions, an hour a day in tennis or football. Younger siblings get a separate kids club. The result is parents can play golf, eldest does tennis camp, youngest does the splash zone, then everyone has dinner together. Three meal venues run a kids menu until 9pm which is later than most Belek hotels.
π‘Tips From Parents Who Have Played Belek With Kids
- 1Book a hotel with floodlit courts. Mid-day tennis in Belek summer is brutal; evening sessions from 7pm onwards are the only sensible option for adults. All five hotels below have lit courts. Kids lessons run mornings only at most academies for the same heat reasons.
- 2Ask about the racket-stringing service before you fly. Most of the big resorts have a stringer on-site for a fee of around 15 EUR per racket. If you bring two rackets and string both at home, you are paying for nothing once you arrive.
- 3Pack tennis whites or be prepared to buy them. Some of the resort academies still enforce dress codes during private lessons, which feels old-fashioned but is consistent. The pro shops at every resort sell brand kit at the prices you would expect, which is to say, not bargain prices.
- 4For under-eights, book group lessons rather than private. The mini-tennis groups are 4-6 kids with two coaches, last 90 minutes, and are about a quarter of the price of private. The kids also have more fun.
- 5Don't fly in racket bags as cabin baggage on Pegasus or AnadoluJet. Domestic Turkish low-cost carriers from Istanbul are strict about racket-bag dimensions and you will end up paying excess fees that exceed the cost of renting a kit at the resort.
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