Track points, games, lets and strokes in real time. Squash keeps no clock, so the board runs on PAR-11 rally points.
No registration required
Free β’ No registration required
A squash scoreboard tracks one match: points in the current game, games won by each player, and the lets and strokes you call. JudgeMate keeps all of it on one screen and updates the score the moment you tap.
Squash uses PAR-11 scoring, so every rally ends in a point whoever served. A game goes to 11, win by two, and a match is best of 5 games. Three games take the match.
Open the board in a browser on a phone, tablet, laptop or TV. Share a public link or QR code and spectators follow the same score live. No account, no install, no cost.
Tap a let and the rally replays with no point. Tap a stroke and the point goes to the player who was blocked, with the score moved in one action.
Squash has no clock. JudgeMate closes each game at 11 points, enforces the two-point margin, and ends the match at three games won.
PAR scoring drops the old hand-in, hand-out rule. Whoever wins the rally takes the point, serve or no serve, and the board adds it straight away.
Send a live link or QR code for the public view, or open the board on a TV or kiosk. The score updates on every screen at once.
Every rally scores a point, whether you served or not. A game goes to 11 points, win by two, so 10-10 keeps playing until a player leads by two. A match is best of 5 games.
A let replays the rally with no point, usually after interference that stopped a fair shot. A stroke awards the point to the player who was blocked. The board logs both and moves the score.
Yes. Open the board or its public link in any browser on a TV, laptop or tablet. The layout scales to the screen, and the score updates live as you tap.
The board is free. Create one and start scoring without signing up. An account only matters if you want to save a match and come back to it later.
No. It scores one match at a time and builds no ladders or league tables. For the next match on court, open a new board.
Want the detail behind PAR-11, the two-point finish and the line between a let and a stroke? The guide walks through World Squash rules and how to run the score from first serve to match ball.
Read the squash scoring guide