Skip to content
Printable Template

Free Printable Volleyball Stat Sheet

Track every stat that matters in volleyball. This printable template covers kills, hitting percentage, assists, aces, digs, blocks, and reception errors for your entire roster. Print it, hand it to your stat keeper, and get the data you need to coach better.

A volleyball stat sheet tells you what the score sheet can't: who's killing it on offense, who's digging everything on defense, and where your team needs to improve. While the score sheet tracks the score and official match record, the stat sheet tracks individual player performance across every measurable category.

This free printable template covers all the standard volleyball stats: kills, attack errors, hitting percentage, assists, service aces, service errors, digs, solo blocks, block assists, and reception errors. It includes per-set tracking and match totals for up to 15 players. Print it out and hand it to a parent volunteer, team manager, or assistant coach.

Pair this with your lineup sheet for rotation management and use the data to inform your position assignments and match preparation. When it's time to get your team looking sharp, check out our volleyball uniforms and jerseys.

What This Template Includes

Every stat you need to measure individual and team performance.

Attacking

  • Kills (K)
  • Attack Errors (E)
  • Total Attacks (TA)
  • Hitting Percentage (calculated)

Serving

  • Service Aces (SA)
  • Service Errors (SE)
  • Total Serves (TS)

Defense & Passing

  • Digs (D)
  • Reception Errors (RE)
  • Assists (A)

Blocking & Totals

  • Solo Blocks (BS)
  • Block Assists (BA)
  • Per-set and match totals
  • Team totals row

Stat Sheet Preview

Here's what the printable template looks like. Print this page or use it as a reference.

VOLLEYBALL STAT SHEET

Team: ________________________ Opponent: ________________________
Date: ______________ Result: ____ sets to ____
# Player K E TA Hit% A SA SE D BS BA RE
TEAM TOTALS

Set-by-Set Summary

Set Score Team Kills Team Errors Team Hit% Aces Digs
Set 1
Set 2
Set 3
Set 4
Set 5

Key

K = Kills E = Attack Errors TA = Total Attacks Hit% = (K-E)/TA A = Assists SA = Service Aces SE = Service Errors D = Digs BS = Solo Blocks BA = Block Assists RE = Reception Errors

Free printable volleyball stat sheet from Secondslide · go.secondslide.io/volleyball-stat-sheet

How to Use This Stat Sheet

Step-by-step guide for tracking volleyball stats during a match.

1

Print and prep before the match

Print one copy per match. Fill in team names, opponent, date, and your roster (jersey numbers and names) before play starts. Use the lineup sheet to know who's starting and in which rotation.

2

Use tally marks during play

Volleyball is fast. Use tally marks in each cell during live play. When a player gets a kill, tally the K column. When they error on an attack, tally the E column. Mark aces and service errors during serve rotations. Convert tallies to numbers between sets.

3

Fill in set summaries between sets

Between each set, total up the team's kills, errors, and other key stats for that set in the set-by-set summary table. Record the set score. This gives you a quick snapshot of how each set went and helps you identify trends across the match.

4

Calculate hitting percentage after the match

After the final set, total each column for individual and team numbers. Calculate hitting percentage: (Kills minus Errors) divided by Total Attacks. This is the single most important stat in volleyball. A team hitting .250 or better is usually winning. Below .150 usually means trouble.

When to Use a Printed Stat Sheet

Paper stats are fast, reliable, and easy to hand off to a volunteer.

Volleyball apps are great for stat tracking, but they require someone who's trained on the software and a tablet that's charged and connected. A printed stat sheet works every time, can be picked up by any parent volunteer with 5 minutes of instruction, and doesn't need wifi.

Printed stat sheets work best for:

  • Youth and high school teams where your stat keeper is often a parent rotating the duty
  • Tournament play where you're playing 3-5 matches in a day and need quick physical records
  • Backup to digital stats so you always have a paper record
  • Training new stat keepers since paper makes it easier to learn each stat category
  • Post-match coaching reviews where you can mark up the sheet and share it with players

Use this alongside the score sheet (official match record) and lineup sheet (rotation management) for complete match documentation.

Tips for Coaches

Get more out of your volleyball stats with these coaching strategies.

Start simple, add complexity

If your stat keeper is new to volleyball stats, start with just kills, errors, and aces for the first few matches. Once they're comfortable, add digs and blocks. Then assists and reception errors. Trying to track everything on day one leads to messy, unreliable data.

Hitting percentage tells the story

If you only look at one stat, make it team hitting percentage. It's the best single indicator of offensive performance in volleyball. If your team is hitting above .250, you're usually winning. If you're below .100, you're in trouble. Track it set by set to see where your offense breaks down.

Share stats with your players

Post the stats after each match (on a team board, in a group chat, or at the next practice). Players respond to data. When a middle blocker sees they had 0 block assists, it motivates them to work on their reads. When a libero sees they had 20 digs, it validates their effort. Data drives accountability.

Look for patterns over multiple matches

One match can be misleading. Track stats over 5-10 matches to identify real trends. Who's your most efficient hitter? Who serves the most aces? Who has the most reception errors? These multi-match patterns should inform your lineup decisions, position assignments, and practice priorities.

Use two stat keepers if possible

One person tracks attacking stats (kills, errors, assists). The other tracks serving and defensive stats (aces, digs, blocks, reception errors). Splitting the workload produces more accurate numbers. If you only have one person, prioritize kills, errors, and aces since those are the easiest to track reliably at game speed.

Frequently Asked Questions

What stats should I track in a volleyball match?

The core volleyball stats to track are kills, attack errors, total attacks (for hitting percentage), assists, service aces, service errors, digs, solo blocks, block assists, and reception errors. For a more detailed breakdown, you can also track ball handling errors, setting errors, and pass quality ratings. Start with the basics and add complexity as your stat keeper gets comfortable.

How do you calculate hitting percentage in volleyball?

Hitting percentage is (kills minus errors) divided by total attacks. For example, a player with 12 kills, 4 errors, and 30 total attacks has a hitting percentage of .267 (8 divided by 30). A good hitting percentage in high school is .250 or above. A great hitter at the college level hits .350 or higher. This is one of the most important stats in volleyball because it measures offensive efficiency.

What's the difference between a kill and an attack?

An attack is any attempt to hit the ball over the net with the intention of scoring. A kill is an attack that directly results in a point, either by hitting the floor, causing a bad pass, or being blocked out of bounds. Not all attacks are kills. Some attacks are dug by the opponent (resulting in a rally continuation), some are errors (into the net, out of bounds, or blocked down), and some are just kept in play.

How do I keep volleyball stats during a fast match?

Focus on one stat at a time if you're new to it. Start with kills and errors since they're the easiest to track (did the ball hit the floor or not?). Use tally marks and convert to numbers between sets. If possible, assign different stat keepers to different categories. One person tracks attacks and kills, another tracks serving and passing. The more you do it, the faster you get.

Do I need different stat sheets for each set?

You can use one sheet per match and track totals across all sets, or use one sheet per set for more detailed analysis. Per-set stats are more useful for coaching decisions because they show you which players performed well in each set and where momentum shifted. This template supports both approaches with per-set columns and match total columns.

Ready to Outfit Your Volleyball Team?

Custom jerseys, libero jerseys in contrasting colors, shorts, and warm-ups. No minimums, no hassle.