The honest comparison
Flex leagues vs.
a year-round ladder
Flex-league tennis proved Seattle players want organized singles. Here's what's structurally different about a continuous ladder — judge for yourself.
| Typical flex league | RallyClimb | |
|---|---|---|
| Structure | 5–7 week seasons, several per year; standings reset, you re-register and re-pay each time | One continuous ladder; join any day, rating and rank never reset |
| Cost | ~$30–45 per season (adds up across seasons) | $29/month, cancel anytime; annual discount |
| Scheduling | You receive opponents' contact info and email back and forth to find a time | Post availability windows; see compatible opponents; one-tap propose; reminders built in |
| Placement | Assigned to a level; the method isn't published, and appeals depend on the operator | Seeded from your UTR/NTRP, then a transparent rating moves with every match — the entire algorithm is public |
| If you can't get matches | Season fee is generally spent regardless of how many matches happen | 3 completed matches in your first 30 days or the month refunds itself — automatically |
| Off-season | Gaps between seasons; momentum resets | There is no off-season |
What flex leagues get right
Credit where due: flex-league formats got thousands of adults playing competitive singles on their own schedule, and many players have had great experiences with them for years. If a fixed season with playoffs is what you want, they deliver that. RallyClimb is for players who want the competition without the re-registration treadmill — and a scheduling product rather than a contact list.
Switching is easy by design
Your history isn't wasted: connect or screenshot your UTR and your RallyClimb rating starts calibrated — most switchers are correctly placed within their first few matches, and can watch the number prove it.
Try the ladder Seattle's flex leagues should have been
Casual play is free. The ladder's first month is guaranteed: 3 matches or it's free.