Sport Court Line Marking on Synthetic Turf: What You Need to Know

20250710 001054000 ios

If you manage a school, sports club, or community facility in New Zealand, chances are the question of line marking has come up more than once. Do you paint them on? Have them inlaid during manufacturing? What colours work best for multiple codes? And what happens when the game codes change?

Line marking on synthetic turf is more nuanced than most people expect. Get it right and your facility looks sharp, plays well, and stays compliant for years. Get it wrong and you are looking at costly rework. Here is what every facility manager should know before committing to a solution.

Colour Selection: More Than Just Aesthetics

Choosing the right line colours for your synthetic sports surface is partly about brand identity and partly about player safety. On natural grass, white is the standard. On synthetic turf, you have a much wider palette to work with, which is both an opportunity and a responsibility.

The key principle is contrast. Lines need to be clearly visible against the turf pile colour in all lighting conditions, whether that is a sun-drenched Saturday afternoon or a floodlit Friday night. Here are the general colour guidelines used across NZ sport codes:

  •       White: The most universal choice, used for netball, rugby, and general multi-sport courts.
  •       Yellow: Popular for basketball and futsal, offering strong contrast on green turf.
  •       Red and blue: Commonly used for tennis court service boxes and doubles tramlines.
  •       Avoid similar tones to the turf base colour. Even slight colour blending can create dangerous confusion during competitive play.

If your facility hosts multiple sports, a multi-code colour strategy, where each sport gets a distinct line colour, is the cleanest approach. TigerTurf synthetic sports surfaces are engineered with consistent pile colour across each roll, which makes multi-colour line work visually clean and easier to read from all angles.

Permanent Painted Lines vs Inlaid Lines: Which Is Right for Your Facility?

Painted Lines

Painted lines are applied after installation using specialist turf-marking paint. They are a practical choice when:

  •       Budgets are tighter and flexibility is a priority
  •       Court uses are likely to change as the facility evolves
  •       A temporary or seasonal setup is needed

The trade-off is durability. UV exposure, heavy foot traffic, and regular cleaning will gradually fade painted lines. On a well-maintained synthetic turf surface, most painted lines need refreshing every two to four years depending on usage intensity. New Zealand’s high UV index, particularly in the North Island, accelerates this fading compared with more temperate climates.

Inlaid Lines

Inlaid lines are manufactured directly into the turf during production. Strips of contrasting colour pile are integrated into the backing at precise positions so the lines are essentially part of the surface itself from day one.

Inlaid lines are the premium option for permanent multi-sport facilities because:

  •       They do not fade, peel, or require repainting over the lifetime of the surface
  •       They maintain a clean, professional appearance regardless of how much UV or rainfall the surface receives
  •       They are indistinguishable from the surrounding playing surface underfoot
  •       They eliminate ongoing line maintenance costs entirely

The critical requirement for inlaid lines is that your line layout must be finalised before manufacturing begins. This makes pre-installation planning absolutely essential. The TigerTurf team works with facility managers through this process to ensure nothing is missed before production starts.

Sport-Code Compliance: Getting the Dimensions Right

This is where many facilities trip up. Each sport code has its own governing body requirements for court dimensions, line widths, and run-off zones. Installing lines without confirming exact specifications with the relevant national body can result in a court that cannot be used for sanctioned competition.

Key compliance dimensions for common NZ sport codes:

  •       Netball NZ: Court 30.5m x 15.25m, lines 50mm wide, goal circles clearly marked. Surface must meet appropriate slip-resistance standards.
  •       Basketball NZ: Court 28m x 15m (FIBA standard), with specific three-point arc radii and restricted area dimensions.
  •       Tennis NZ: Court 23.77m x 8.23m singles, 10.97m doubles width, with surface pace ratings applicable to synthetic turf.
  •       Football NZF: Varies by competition level, with minimum and maximum pitch sizes stipulated by NZF and FIFA quality programme requirements.

TigerTurf’s Tournament 1000 is designed specifically for high-performance sports applications where dimensional accuracy and surface consistency are non-negotiable. As New Zealand’s only local synthetic turf manufacturer, every surface can be specified to meet the exact requirements of your chosen sport code.

Explore the full range of compliant synthetic turf sports surfaces to find the right solution for your facility.

Maintenance of Line-Marked Synthetic Surfaces

Maintaining Painted Lines

  •       Avoid directing high-pressure water jets along painted line edges. This lifts and cracks the paint boundary over time.
  •       Use only turf-compatible cleaning products. Solvent-based cleaners degrade both line paint and turf fibres.
  •       Schedule an annual inspection before the start of the competitive season. Repainting before lines become worn gives you time to plan without urgency.

Maintaining Inlaid Lines

  •       Standard surface brushing and grooming applies equally across line zones and field zones. No special treatment is required.
  •       Infill redistribution should be done evenly across the full surface, including all line areas.
  •       Monitor for localised wear around high-traffic zones such as centre circles, goal areas, and service boxes where repeated foot strikes occur.

Planning Your Court: Questions to Resolve Before You Start

Before approaching any supplier or installer, work through these questions so you arrive with a clear brief rather than a vague request:

  •       Which sport codes will this surface need to accommodate, now and over the next ten years?
  •       Do you need sanctioned competition capability, or is recreational use sufficient?
  •       What is the expected peak weekly usage in hours?
  •       Is your budget structured for inlaid lines (higher upfront, zero ongoing line cost) or painted lines (lower upfront, maintenance budget required every few years)?
  •       Have you contacted the relevant national sporting body to obtain current specification documents?

Getting these answers sorted before installation saves considerable time, money, and frustration. The TigerTurf team can help you work through the options and connect you with the right installation expertise for your region.

If you are also considering your facility’s wider outdoor upgrade, our guide on how to plan a full backyard turf renovation covers base preparation, drainage, and costing in detail.

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