Little League Pitch Count Rules 2026 — By Age | Baseball Mode
Youth Pitching · Arm Health · Pitch Smart 2026

Little League Pitch Counts:
The Ultimate Guide

Official Pitch Smart limits by age group — 8U through 18U — plus rest requirements, overuse warning signs, and arm care tips every parent needs to know.
⚾ All Age Groups Covered 📅 Updated 2026 ⏱ 7 min read
Quick Reference — Daily Pitch Limits by Age
How many pitches can my player throw? It depends on their age.
Ages 7–8
50
pitches per day
Ages 9–10
75
pitches per day
Ages 11–12
85
pitches per day
Ages 13–14
95
pitches per day
Ages 15–16
95
pitches per day
Ages 17–18
105
pitches per day

If you have a young pitcher in training, you may be wondering how much they should be throwing and what the proper amount of rest is. Baseball parents, youth coaches, and league administrators should all be aware that certain activities are considered harmful to the long-term health of a player's throwing arm. Your first priority should be protecting your young pitcher's arm — and the Pitch Smart guidelines are the most credible tool available to do that.

Why pitch counts actually matter

Youth sports are completely different from when most of us were growing up. We had Little League in the spring and maybe summer ball if you made the all-star team. After that the season was over, and you would not throw again until a month before the next spring season. The arm got real rest.

In today's game, kids are playing year-round — town leagues, summer ball, showcases, and travel ball, often simultaneously. That makes it nearly impossible to give their arms the proper recovery time they need. The result is visible in the data.

45%
Of youth pitchers pitched in a league without pitch count rules (AJSM)
30%
Pitched on multiple teams with overlapping seasons simultaneously
43%
Pitched on consecutive days — one of the highest injury risk behaviors

The problem starts earlier than you think

A lot of the arm damage happens before these kids even enter high school. At the youth level, players are pitching in town leagues, summer ball, showcases, and travel ball — sometimes all at the same time with different coaches who have no visibility into each other's workloads. If coaches truly have their players' best interests at heart, they need to coordinate pitch counts across every team a player is on.


Full Pitch Smart chart — all age groups

This is the complete official Pitch Smart table from USA Baseball and MLB covering every age group from 7 through 18. Rest requirements are based on pitches thrown in a single day — not per game.

Age Daily Max 0 Days Rest 1 Day Rest 2 Days Rest 3 Days Rest 4 Days Rest
7–8 50 1–20 21–35 36–50 N/A N/A
9–10 75 1–20 21–35 36–50 51–65 66+
11–12 85 1–20 21–35 36–50 51–65 66+
13–14 95 1–20 21–35 36–50 51–65 66+
15–16 95 1–30 31–45 46–60 61–75 76+
17–18 105 1–30 31–45 46–60 61–75 76+

Source and important note

These limits are from the official Pitch Smart program developed by USA Baseball and MLB. Note that these are guidelines — individual leagues may have their own rules that differ slightly. Always check your specific league's rulebook, especially for travel ball organizations like USSSA and Perfect Game which set their own limits. The Pitch Smart guidelines represent the minimum standard of care, not the ceiling.


Age by age breakdown — what the guidelines mean in practice

7–8
Ages 7–8 — 50 pitches per day
T-ball through coach pitch · Foundation years

At this age the game should be about having fun, building knowledge, and improving skills. With the decline in the sport's popularity over the years, these years should focus on developing a love for the game before making it super-competitive. Learn the rules, focus on teamwork, build the fundamentals of hitting, fielding, base running, and pitching.

Pitchers at this age should not exceed 60 combined innings in a calendar year. After the season ends, players should take a minimum of four months off hard throwing, with at least two to three of those months being consecutive.

9–12
Ages 9–12 — 75 to 85 pitches per day
9–10: 75 max · 11–12: 85 max · Skill development years

The 9-12 focus should be on learning the game's rules, improving skills in all areas, and enjoying the experience. Your baseball career could be over by 18 — enjoy this time with your teammates. It goes by fast.

For 9-10 year olds the daily max is 75 pitches. For 11-12 year olds it steps up to 85. For both groups, try not to exceed 80 combined innings over 12 months. Like the 7-8 group, take at least four months off from throwing every year with at least two to three consecutive months of rest.

Breaking balls at this age — do not do it

Make sure your pitcher is not throwing breaking balls or sliders before age 12. The growth plates and UCL are still developing. The torque of a curveball on tissue that is not ready for it is one of the most documented causes of early arm damage. Fastballs and change-ups only until 12. → See our full pitching injuries guide

13–14
Ages 13–14 — 95 pitches per day
Competitive travel ball · New pitches · Increased velocity

This is usually when pitchers go through puberty, get bigger and stronger, and their velocity increases. This is also the age when they begin throwing breaking balls. With the increase in strength the workload naturally grows — but so does the potential for strain.

The mound distance changes at this level, new pitch types are added, and the competition becomes more meaningful. All of those factors combined with developing bodies means rest and recovery is more important here than at any previous age group. The daily max steps up to 95 pitches — but the rest requirements stay strict.

15–18
Ages 15–18 — 95 to 105 pitches per day
15–16: 95 max · 17–18: 105 max · High school level

The same recommendations mentioned for younger age groups apply here. The only difference is the total pitch count increases. At 15-16 the daily max is still 95. At 17-18 it increases to 105. Rest requirements extend to 30-pitch minimums before any rest day is required — reflecting the more developed arm — but four days of rest for high pitch counts remains in place.

Showcase events and back-to-back outings

Showcase events are extremely popular at this age when trying to get noticed by recruiters. They create a specific pitch count management challenge — a pitcher who throws 80 pitches in a showcase on Saturday needs four days of rest before their next outing. Coaches and parents need to track showcase pitch counts the same way they track regular season counts. Scouts notice everything — including a pitcher who falls apart in the second outing of a weekend because they threw too much the day before.


Universal guidelines for every age group

These apply regardless of age. Every pitcher, every coach, every parent should have these as non-negotiables.

Warm up properly before every outing. This does not mean playing catch for 10 minutes. Get the blood moving — a few laps, dynamic stretching, progressive throwing. A cold arm under sudden load tears.
Never pitch twice on the same day. This should be self-evident. It is not always followed at showcase events and tournaments. Enforce it.
Do not pitch and catch on the same day. Both positions involve high-repetition throwing. Catching on your non-pitching days adds cumulative arm stress that pitch count rules do not account for.
Try to limit your player to one league at a time. Managing pitch counts across multiple teams with different coaches is nearly impossible. One team at a time makes workload tracking manageable.
No batting practice pitching between games. Pitching BP between tournament games adds real pitch count volume that almost never gets tracked. If your pitcher threw 60 pitches in game one and then throws 30 pitches of BP, they have thrown 90 pitches before the second game even starts.
Implement stretching before and after every outing. Pre-pitch stretching reduces cold muscle injury risk. Post-pitch stretching maintains range of motion that can be lost over a heavy throwing workload.
Have kids play other sports. Single-sport athletes who only play baseball year-round have a significantly higher injury risk than multi-sport athletes. Other sports develop complementary muscle groups and allow the arm to rest.
Always look for signs of fatigue or injury. If you ask a kid how their arm feels, they will say fine. Ask more specific questions. Watch for mechanical changes that signal fatigue — dropped elbow, shorter stride, labored follow-through. These appear before the pain does.

The conversation parents avoid

Too many parents whose children had shoulder surgery in high school say they wish they had paid more attention to pitch counts at younger ages. The conversation feels uncomfortable in the moment — pulling your pitcher when they want to stay in, limiting their reps when they want more. That conversation is significantly less uncomfortable than watching them get wheeled in for Tommy John surgery at 16. → See our full guide to youth pitching injuries and prevention


Running after pitching — what the research actually says

Running after pitching used to be the standard recovery recommendation — and the reasoning behind it is more nuanced than most coaches explain. Running enhances nutrient flow to the shoulder and elbow, promoting the healing process by increasing blood circulation to stressed tissue. That is different from icing, which constricts blood flow.

Research has shifted the thinking on post-pitching icing. The evidence increasingly suggests that icing is better suited for acute injuries with visible swelling — not routine post-outing soreness. Routine soreness might indicate the need for improved strength or mechanics, not cold compression.

Pitching expert Tom House suggests combining active recovery with ice in a 2:1 exercise-to-icing ratio when ice is used at all. For most youth pitchers after a normal outing, light running, band work, and mobility exercises the following day are more beneficial than sitting with an ice bag.

Post-outing arm care routine

Day of outing: light running after the game, arm stretches, J-Band work if available. Day after: light band work, mobility exercises, minimal throwing if any. Do not just go home and watch TV with no arm care. The recovery window immediately after pitching is when the arm needs attention most. → See our pitching psychology guide for the mental side of recovery


Frequently asked questions

How many pitches can a 10-year-old throw per game?
According to Pitch Smart guidelines, a 9 or 10-year-old pitcher can throw a maximum of 75 pitches per day. If they throw 51–65 pitches they need 3 days rest. If they throw 66 or more they need 4 days rest before pitching again.
How many pitches can a 12-year-old throw?
An 11 or 12-year-old pitcher can throw a maximum of 85 pitches per day under Pitch Smart guidelines. Throwing 66 or more pitches requires 4 days of rest. Throwing 51–65 requires 3 days rest. 36–50 requires 2 days. 21–35 requires 1 day. 20 or fewer pitches requires no mandatory rest day.
How many pitches can a 13-year-old throw?
A 13 or 14-year-old pitcher can throw a maximum of 95 pitches per day. Rest requirements are the same structure as younger ages — 66 or more pitches requires 4 days rest. Most Little League and travel ball organizations follow these Pitch Smart guidelines at this age group.
Can a pitcher pitch on consecutive days?
Yes, if they threw 20 or fewer pitches the previous day — no mandatory rest day is required at that low a pitch count. However, consecutive-day pitching with higher pitch counts is one of the most documented risk factors for arm injury in youth baseball. If a pitcher threw 21 or more pitches, at least one rest day is required before their next outing.
Do pitch count rules apply to travel ball?
Travel ball organizations like USSSA and Perfect Game have their own pitch count rules which may differ from Pitch Smart. Little League follows Pitch Smart directly. Always check your specific organization's rulebook. The Pitch Smart guidelines are the recommended minimum — many travel ball parents track pitch counts even when their league's enforcement is inconsistent.
Should a pitcher also catch?
Not on the same day they pitch, and ideally not on consecutive days either. Pitching and catching on the same day is explicitly addressed in Pitch Smart guidelines — do not do it. Catching involves high-repetition throwing that accumulates arm stress even though it is not counted in pitch count totals.
What are the signs a pitcher needs to stop?
Stop immediately if a pitcher reports sharp or sudden elbow pain, persistent soreness that does not clear with rest, tingling or numbness in the hand or fingers, or decreased velocity without explanation. Mechanical changes that signal fatigue — dropped elbow, shorter stride, labored follow-through — should also trigger a pull. Do not wait for a pitcher to tell you they are hurting. Most will not.

Protect the arm — the pitch count is the minimum

The Pitch Smart guidelines are the floor, not the ceiling. A pitcher who hits their daily maximum on back-to-back weekends for three straight months is technically compliant and practically at significant risk. Pitch counts are one tool in a larger arm care approach that includes rest, strength training, warm-up routines, and honest communication between players, parents, and coaches.

The damage that leads to Tommy John surgery at 16 almost always started years earlier — in the cumulative pitch counts of a 10-year-old pitching for two teams simultaneously. Track the numbers. Enforce the rest. Take the off-season seriously.