
2614 W Nob Hill Blvd β Yakima, WA 98902
19 venues listed Β· Avg rating 4.4β Β· 3 indoor
Yakima sits in Washington's rain shadow β eastern Washington's Yakima Valley receives just 7 inches of rain per year compared to Seattle's 38, creating genuinely different outdoor baseball conditions. The outdoor season runs May through September reliably; October through April is indoor territory. The Valley's agricultural economy creates a hardworking athletic culture, and the Yakima Valley Pippins (West Coast League) bring collegiate summer baseball. Nineteen venues with 5 batting cage facilities and 3 indoor options serve the market at 4.4 stars. Travel ball connects into the Tri-Cities (Kennewick/Richland/Pasco) circuit for expanded competition. Pricing listed at 1 venue online.

2614 W Nob Hill Blvd β Yakima, WA 98902

301 N 1st Ave β Yakima, WA 98902

1900 Beaudry Rd β Yakima, WA 98901

1015 E Lincoln Ave Suite 105 β Yakima, WA 98901

HGR7+HQ β Yakima, WA 98901

2101 Tieton Dr β Yakima, WA 98902

1301 S Fair Ave β Yakima, WA 98901


2200 S 36th Ave β Yakima, WA 98903

501 S 12th St β Yakima, WA 98901

1800 Cornell Ave β Yakima, WA 98902

911 Hathaway St β Yakima, WA 98902


405 S Fair Ave β Yakima, WA 98901

7200 W Nob Hill Blvd #1928 β Yakima, WA 98908

7200 W Nob Hill Blvd β Yakima, WA 98908

721 Keys Rd β Yakima, WA 98901

The machine determines everything about rep quality. Arm-style machines deliver more realistic arm-action timing; two-wheel and three-wheel machines offer greater pitch variety β fastballs, curveballs, sliders, changeups. Look for machines that cover 35β90 mph with consistent release points. A machine that skips, stalls, or delivers erratic velocities teaches bad habits faster than good ones.
Standard tunnels run 55β70 feet. Anything under 55 feet compresses reaction time and builds bad habits at higher velocities. For travel ball players working on game-speed reps, 65β70 foot cages are the standard. Always ask about cage length when calling ahead β it varies significantly between facilities.
In summer markets, an uncooled facility becomes unusable during peak afternoon hours β heat degrades bat speed, focus, and player safety. In cold-weather markets, a heated building means training continues through winter instead of shutting down for months. Before committing to a membership, confirm the facility's HVAC situation and ask about temperature control in the tunnels specifically.
HitTrax systems track exit velocity, launch angle, and spray chart data β turning every swing into a measurable data point. Rapsodo units analyze spin rate and pitch movement for pitchers. Video analysis with slow-motion replay helps hitters and pitchers identify mechanical issues that verbal coaching often misses. Facilities investing in this tech are serious about player outcomes, not just selling cage time.
Open cage time has its place, but unsupervised reps ingrain whatever mechanics a player already has β good or bad. Facilities with certified hitting instructors, group clinics, and private lesson programs let players develop under qualified eyes. Ask about coach credentials: former college or pro players, or coaches certified through the ABCA, will give more specific feedback than general trainers.
Quality facilities post their rates. Expect $1β$3 per minute for open cage time, or $1β$3 per token for machine-based setups. Monthly memberships and bulk session packages offer significant savings for players training 3+ days per week. If pricing isn't posted anywhere online, call before driving β rates vary substantially between walk-in cages and premium training centers.
Washington hosts USSSA, Perfect Game, and other sanctioned tournaments throughout the spring and summer travel ball season. Stack cage work with competitive at-bats to accelerate development.
βΎ Browse Washington Tournaments βThe physical reps in the cage only go so far. Top travel ball players combine mechanical work with mental training β visualization, focus routines, and adversity management under pressure. Mind & Muscle delivers 3-minute daily mental training audio built specifically for baseball and softball players.
Showing area map for Yakima, Washington
Yakima has 5 batting cages and 13 baseball and softball fields listed on WhereToHit.
Yes. Yakima has 3 indoor batting cages listed on WhereToHit. Indoor facilities let players train year-round regardless of weather.
1 of the 19 venues in Yakima have pricing listed on WhereToHit. Batting cage rates typically range from $1β$3 per minute or $1β$3 per token. Check individual venue pages for current rates.
Yakima Sports Performance has the highest Google rating in Yakima β 5/5 from 21 reviews.
Yes. Yakima has 19 baseball and softball facilities on WhereToHit, including 5 batting cages. Many offer youth programs, group clinics, and private instruction alongside open cage time.
Hours vary by facility in Yakima. Check individual venue pages or call ahead to confirm current hours.