So your kid wants to play baseball. Or your kid signed up because their friend signed up. Either way, you are now staring at a sporting-goods aisle that has six glove sizes, fourteen bat lengths, and helmets in every color but the one your kid wants.
Here is what you actually need, by age. We have bought the wrong thing in almost every category at least once. Learn from us.
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Ages 5–7 (Tee-ball)
This is the year of let’s see if they like it. Buy the basics. Don’t buy a top-shelf bat for a 5-year-old who may switch to soccer in three weeks.
A 9-inch glove
A 9-inch glove fits a 5-to-7-year-old hand. Anything bigger is for show. Look for one labeled “youth” or “tee-ball” with pre-broken-in webbing. A stiff glove that won’t close ends up sitting in the bag while the kid plays bare-handed.
How to choose: have your kid hold the glove out and squeeze it shut with one hand. If they can’t close it, it is too big. If it flops around their hand like a sock, it is too small.
Mizuno Prospect PowerClose Youth Glove
9-inch youth glove built for small hands. The PowerClose design and soft palm liner help kids actually close the glove on their first day.
Our take: Overall versatility, works with players who have small hands. Holds up season after season.
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A tee-ball bat (24–26 inch)
Tee-ball bats are aluminum, light, and short. Look for a 24-to-26 inch length and 13-to-15 ounce weight. Most leagues mark approved bats with a stamp.
How to choose: the one-arm test. Have your kid extend the bat horizontally from one arm at shoulder height. If they can hold it for 5 to 10 seconds without dropping, the weight is right. If their arm sags immediately, go lighter.
Rawlings Remix T-Ball Bat (-12)
Single-piece aluminum, USA Baseball approved, 2 1/4 inch barrel. Light enough for a five-year-old to actually swing.
Our take: Cool colors, USA Baseball approved, the right weight for a five-year-old who is still figuring out the swing.
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A helmet
Most leagues provide team helmets. If yours doesn’t, get a basic youth helmet sized to fit snugly without pinching. The helmet should not move when your kid shakes their head.
Rawlings COOLFLO Youth Batting Helmet
Standard youth helmet with the option to add a face mask if your league requires one or you want the extra coverage.
Our take: Has a face mask option if you want to add it. Tough, durable, high reviews.
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Cleats (optional at this age)
Tee-ball can be played in regular sneakers. Plastic cleats are nice if you have them, not necessary. If you buy cleats, buy a half-size up so they last through the season.
Youth plastic-stud baseball cleats
Plastic-stud cleats in youth sizes. Low-cut with enough ankle collar to hold the foot. Legal in every league at this age.
Our take: Optional at tee-ball age but useful once they start running the bases in earnest. Buy a half-size up — they'll fill them in by mid-season.
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Pants and a belt
Leagues usually require white or gray pants. The team provides the jersey. A simple elastic belt works. If you have a choice, pick gray or tan pants over white. White stains easily and stays stained. Way easier to keep clean if you avoid white.
Easton Youth Standard Baseball Pants
Easton youth-cut baseball pants. Standard build, multiple color options, sized down for tee-ball and coach-pitch bodies.
Our take:
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Champion Sports Elastic Uniform Belt
Elastic uniform belt sized for youth waists. Stretches with movement, clips closed, holds up without re-tying every inning.
Our take:
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A catcher’s mitt (optional)
Most kids won’t catch in tee-ball. If yours wants to try, or wants to play catcher in the backyard, a 32-inch youth catcher’s mitt fits the hand and the role. Most leagues provide team gear; this is the at-home option.
Rawlings Renegade RCM325B Catcher's Mitt
Rawlings Renegade Series catcher's mitt, 32.5 inches. Entry-level full-size mitt for kids ready to take catcher reps in coach-pitch.
Our take:
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Ages 8–10 (Coach-pitch and machine-pitch)
Coach-pitch baseball typically starts at age 6 and overlaps with tee-ball. The transition happens naturally as kids improve. Age, talent, and experience are mixed together at the youth level. That is the point. The goal is for kids to have fun, learn how to be a teammate, and learn a little bit about the sport.
This is when kids start to actually look like baseball players. The gear gets a little more serious. Most kids stay with the same glove for two years and outgrow their bat halfway through year two.
A 10-to-11 inch glove
Move up from the 9-inch tee-ball glove to a 10-or-11-inch infield glove. The webbing and pocket are deeper, which helps with actual catches.
How to choose: your kid should be able to fully open and close the glove with one hand. If you have to help them break it in, plan to play catch with them for a week of evenings before opening day.
The more expensive gloves last longer and feel better.
Rawlings 10–11 inch youth infield glove
Step-up from the 9-inch tee-ball glove. Deeper pocket, full webbing. Sized for coach-pitch hands.
Our take: Any Rawlings or Wilson in this size range works. The more you spend, the longer it lasts. This is the glove most kids use for two seasons.
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A 27-to-28 inch bat
The one-arm test still works. At this age, bats run 27 to 29 inches and 17 to 22 ounces. Lighter is almost always better. A bat that’s too heavy turns into a slow, late swing and a frustrated kid.
28-inch coach-pitch bat (USA Baseball stamped)
A drop-10 28-inch bat sized for the coach-pitch / machine-pitch transition. USA Baseball stamp covers most rec leagues.
Our take: Light enough for an 8-year-old to swing through the zone, durable enough to last into 9 and 10.
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Batting gloves (optional)
Most coach-pitch kids don’t need them. By age 10, some kids want them because they see older kids wearing them. They do help with grip and they hide blisters.
Franklin Sports Shok-Sorb Youth Batting Gloves
Franklin Shok-Sorb youth batting gloves. Padded palm cushions the sting of mishit balls. Sized for ages 6 to 10.
Our take:
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Cleats (now actually needed)
Plastic-stud cleats are the standard. Metal cleats are not legal in most leagues until age 13. Look for cleats with a high enough collar to stop ankle rolls.
Youth plastic-stud baseball cleats
Plastic-stud cleats are the standard at this age. Metal is not legal until most leagues hit 13. Collar height matters more than brand.
Our take: Fit them with the socks they'll actually wear on game day. A loose cleat at full speed turns into a twisted ankle.
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Ages 11–12 (Player-pitch and middle-school feeder)
This is when most kids decide if they’re staying in the sport. The gear list gets longer. The real cost is travel ball if you go that route.
An 11-to-12 inch glove
Infielders use 11-inch gloves. Outfielders use 12-inch. If your kid plays multiple positions (most do), get a 11.5-inch as the all-purpose option.
How to choose: position-specific gloves matter starting at this age. If your kid is a pitcher, the glove should have a closed web (the opponent shouldn’t see your kid’s grip on the ball).
A 29-to-30 inch bat
Rawlings 11–12 inch youth fielding glove
Full-size webbing and pocket for player-pitch speeds. Closed web for pitchers; open web for outfield. Most kids use 11.5 inch as the all-position option.
Our take: This is the glove your kid will use for multiple seasons. Spend what you can — a quality leather glove breaks in better and lasts longer.
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Look for the USSSA stamp if your league requires it. For Little League, use a USABat-approved bat with drop weight of -10 or -11 per USA Baseball rules. Drop weight (the difference between length and weight) usually goes from -10 to -8 in this age band. The one-arm test still works. Don’t buy your kid a heavier bat to “make them stronger.”
A decent name-brand bat does the job. The top-shelf composite bats are not necessary.
Youth baseball bat 29–30 inch (USA/USSSA)
Drop-10 or drop-8 youth bat in the 29-to-30 inch range. USA Baseball or USSSA stamped depending on your league. Single-piece aluminum handles the reps.
Our take: Check league rules before buying — USSSA and USA stamps are not interchangeable. A name-brand aluminum bat in this range does everything a composite does at a third of the price.
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A protective cup
This is a conversation no parent enjoys. Buy one before the season starts. Your kid will not like it. They will get over it.
Davion Youth Athletic Cup Underwear
Youth athletic underwear with a built-in protective cup. Multi-sport (baseball, football, lacrosse), removes the separate cup-and-supporter step.
Our take:
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Catcher’s gear (only if your kid is the catcher)
Most leagues provide team catcher’s gear. If you go travel ball, you may need your own. Helmet, chest protector, leg guards, and a catcher’s mitt come as a set.
Easton Black Magic Youth Catcher's Set
Easton Black Magic youth catcher's set. Helmet, chest protector, and leg guards in matching color. Sized for ages 9 to 12.
Our take:
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A catcher’s bag
A full catcher’s setup does not fit in a regular equipment bag. Wheeled or backpack-style catcher’s bags carry helmet, chest protector, leg guards, mitt, and bat in one piece. Worth the upgrade once your kid catches more than once a week.
Kioqiear Catcher's Equipment Bag
Catcher's equipment bag with multiple compartments. Carries helmet, chest protector, leg guards, mitt, and bat in one piece.
Our take:
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A sliding mitt
Sliding mitts protect the lead hand on head-first slides. Optional but cheap insurance against jammed fingers and bent thumbs. Most kids stop wearing them by 14.
EvoShield Baseball Sliding Mitt
Hard-shell sliding mitt worn on the lead hand for head-first slides. Protects fingers and the back of the hand from jammed digits and turf burns.
Our take:
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Ages 13–14 (Junior high / pony / travel)
The bat rules change here (BBCOR for high school, USSSA for travel). The glove gets full-size. Upgrades start to be worth making.
A 12-inch glove
Outfielders go to 12 to 12.75 inch. Infielders stay around 11.5 to 12 inch. Pitchers want a closed web. Buy quality leather; it lasts four years if you take care of it.
How to choose: your kid should help pick this one. They will be using it for at least three seasons.
12-inch adult fielding glove
Full-size adult glove in the 12-to-12.5 inch range. This is the glove your kid keeps through high school.
Our take: Buy the best leather you can afford here. A top-shelf glove at 13 outlasts a cheap one by four to five seasons and breaks in to fit the hand.
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A BBCOR or USSSA bat
Check league rules before buying. BBCOR (high school) bats run -3 drop weight (heavier). USSSA (travel) bats run -8 to -10. They are not interchangeable.
How to choose: the one-arm test still works, but at this age the swing speed matters more than the bat tech. Don’t get talked into a top-shelf composite bat unless your kid is a serious hitter.
BBCOR or USSSA baseball bat
BBCOR for high school (-3 drop). USSSA for travel (-8 to -10). Not interchangeable — verify league rules before purchase.
Our take: Don't get talked into a top-shelf composite at this age unless your kid is a serious hitter with a measurable swing speed. A solid single-piece alloy BBCOR does the job for most players.
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Batting gloves (adult sizes now)
Most kids cross into adult small around 13. The youth pairs stop fitting mid-season, usually the week of a tournament.
Franklin Shok-Sorb X batting gloves (adult)
The adult version of the same padded-palm Franklin pair we recommend at 8 to 10. Cushions mishits, runs true to the size chart, works for baseball and softball.
Our take: Measure the hand against Franklin's chart instead of guessing up from the youth size. A loose batting glove wears through in a month.
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Metal cleats (now legal in most leagues)
Metal cleats grip better but cost more. Plastic still works. If your kid plays travel ball on dirt infields, metal is worth the money.
Metal baseball cleats
Metal-spike cleats legal at 13 and up in most leagues. Grip significantly better than plastic on dirt infields.
Our take: Fit them with the socks they'll wear in games. Metal cleats run slightly tighter than plastic. If they play on turf or artificial surfaces, plastic is still the right call.
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An arm sleeve
Pitchers and outfielders wear them for warmth and light compression on the throwing arm. Common in cold-weather games and early-spring practices. Not necessary for tee-ball or rec league.
Newcotte Compression Baseball Arm Sleeve
Compression baseball arm sleeve. Light support and warmth for pitchers, throwers, and cold-weather games.
Our take:
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Ages 15+ (High school and club)
The economics change here. Most high-school programs supply jerseys, helmets, and field gear. You buy the personal gear: glove, bat, cleats, gloves, undershirts, and any specialty equipment for their position.
Buy the best glove you can afford. A top-shelf glove will outlast a cheap one by three to five seasons. The bat economics are different. Composites die after a year or two of heavy use.
Travel and showcase ball gets expensive fast. Fees, travel, and equipment all stack every season. We are not telling you that’s worth it. We are telling you to go in with eyes open.
Practice and at-home training
The gear that gets used between practices matters more than the gear that sits in a bag on game day. A bucket of balls, a tee, a few wiffle balls, and a kid who wants to swing. Cheap, durable, lasts for years.
Soft tee-ball baseballs
Real baseballs are too hard for kids learning to track and swing. Soft-core balls weigh and look the same but won’t bruise a kid or break a window.
Poosue Youth T-Ball Safety Baseballs
Soft-core youth t-ball baseballs. Same size and look as a regulation ball, soft enough that taking one off the shin or the bat handle does not end practice.
Our take:
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Throw-down bases
Rubber bases that lay flat on any surface. Useful for backyard games, driveway practice, and league-day setup when the field crew did not show.
GoSports Rubber Throw-Down Bases
Rubber throw-down bases. Lay flat on grass, dirt, or concrete, and roll up small enough to throw in a bag.
Our take:
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Wiffle balls
The original backyard pitching tool. Plastic, perforated, breaks hard. The kid throwing learns spin; the kid hitting learns to track movement.
Champion Sports Plastic Wiffle Baseballs
Plastic perforated baseballs in the classic wiffle pattern. Curve hard for the kid throwing, break harmlessly off a bat.
Our take:
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Blitzball set (ages 10+)
A step up from wiffle. Plastic balls built to break harder than any wiffle ever did. Comes with a plastic bat and three balls. Best for ages 10 and up; younger kids can’t track the movement and stop having fun.
Blitzball Bat & 3-Ball Starter Pack
Plastic bat plus three Blitzballs built to move more aggressively than wiffle balls. Backyard upgrade for kids old enough to track real movement on the ball.
Our take:
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Glove break-in kit
Speeds up the process of softening a new glove. Useful for stiff leather gloves that won’t close in the first week of practice. Skip it if your glove came pre-broken-in.
Rawlings BRKIT Glove Break-In Kit
Rawlings BRKIT glove break-in kit. Speeds up the process of softening a new glove so it actually closes.
Our take:
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Replacement glove laces
A glove with broken webbing isn’t done; it just needs new laces. Leather lacing strips and a lacing needle are cheaper than a new glove and let you keep one that’s already broken in.
Baseball Glove Lacing Repair Kit
Replacement leather laces with a lacing needle. Fixes the failure mode that ends most gloves before the leather body wears out.
Our take:
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Backyard practice gear
The reason most kids stagnate between seasons is they get zero reps at home. A few low-cost tools change that.
Soft-toss baseball trainer
Lets one parent feed reps without throwing. Five minutes a day in the backyard adds up to thousands of swings across a season.
Our take: The single best gear-to-reps multiplier I've found.
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Throwback rebound net
Stand-alone rebound net for solo throwing reps. Useful for between-practice arm work without needing a partner.
Our take: Holds up to thrown grounders and short-toss. Good for the kid who wants to keep working when no one else is around.
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A few honest notes
Don’t buy a top-shelf bat for