Padel vs. Pickleball (2025): A crisp, no-fluff comparison

Pickleball Portal 2 hours ago 2 views
LinkedIn Telegram

We may earn a commission through affiliate links. Details

Drawing to scale

Quick take: Padel is played on an enclosed 20m × 10m court with glass/mesh walls that are in play and uses tennis-style scoring. Pickleball is played on an open 44′ × 20′ court with a 7′ non-volley zone, side-out scoring to 11, and a plastic perforated ball. Both sports are booming in participation worldwide, with pickleball passing 19 million U.S. players in 2024.

Padel shown on the left, Pickleball shown on the right

What is padel?

Padel blends tennis and squash. It is played on a 20m × 10m enclosed court with glass and mesh walls, which remain in play after the ball bounces. The net is 0.88m high at center and 0.92m at the posts. Doubles is the default, while singles is rare and played on a 20m × 6m court. Scoring follows tennis (games, sets, tiebreaks).

What is pickleball?

Pickleball uses an open 44′ × 20′ court with a 7′ non-volley zone, often called the kitchen, on each side of the net. The net height is 36″ at the sidelines and 34″ at the center. Singles and doubles are both common formats. USA Pickleball rules use side-out scoring to 11, win by 2.

TL;DR differences

Court

  • Padel: Played on a glass-walled court about two-thirds the size of tennis; walls are part of play.
  • Pickleball: Played on an open court about one-quarter the size of tennis, with a 7-foot no-volley zone near the net.

Format

  • Padel: Almost always doubles; singles is rare.
  • Pickleball: Commonly played as both singles and doubles.

Racket / Paddle

  • Padel: Smaller, stringless racket with holes; shaped for control or power.
  • Pickleball: Solid paddle a bit larger than ping-pong but smaller than tennis, made from wood, graphite, or composite.

Ball

  • Padel: Looks like a tennis ball but slightly less bouncy.
  • Pickleball: Hard plastic ball with holes, like a wiffle ball.

Serve & rules

  • Padel: Serve underhand after letting the ball bounce; you can use the walls during rallies.
  • Pickleball: Serve underhand or use a drop-serve; the ball must bounce once on each side before volleys; no volleys allowed in the kitchen.

Scoring

  • Padel: Scored like tennis with games, sets, and tie-breaks.
  • Pickleball: Games to 11, win by 2; only the serving team can score.

Equipment differences

  • Padel racket: solid, stringless; ≤45.5 cm × 26 cm × 38 mm; made of carbon fiber, fiberglass, or foam. Balls are pressurized with slightly less pressure than tennis balls, giving a lower, more controlled bounce.
  • Pickleball paddle: ≤17″ length and length+width ≤24″; no limits on thickness/weight. Balls are one-piece plastic with 26–40 holes; indoor balls usually 26 holes, outdoor balls 40.

Gameplay style

  • Padel: Serve underhand after a bounce with contact below waist. Walls keep rallies alive and create tactical depth, forcing players to use positioning, lobs, and counterattacks.
  • Pickleball: Serve underhand (volley-serve or drop-serve). The two-bounce rule slows early exchanges, and the non-volley zone forces soft play, resets, and dinking before attacks.

Which should you try?

  • Try padel if you like tennis or squash and want long rallies with wall rebounds and tactical depth.
  • Try pickleball if you want a small-court game with quick starts, lots of doubles play locally, and strategy based on precision and resets.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can you play singles in padel?

Yes, but it is uncommon. Singles is played on a narrower 20m × 6m court, while doubles is the standard format worldwide.

What ball is used in pickleball?

Pickleball uses a hard plastic ball with 26–40 holes. Indoor balls usually have 26 larger holes, while outdoor balls typically have 40 smaller holes.

Is padel scored like tennis?

Yes. Padel uses the same scoring system as tennis with games, sets, and tiebreaks.

How do you score in pickleball?

In standard USA Pickleball rules, games are played to 11 points, win by 2. Only the serving team can score points.

Which sport is easier to learn, padel or pickleball?

Pickleball generally has a shorter learning curve because of the smaller court, lighter ball, and straightforward rules. Padel takes more time to master due to the walls and tennis-style scoring.

Photo of author

With experience in hospitality and time well spent as a fly fishing guide in Wyoming for 6 years, Dan brings a unique perspective to the digital world. As Project Lead, Dan is now committed to revitalizing Pickleball Portal and plans to build a support system for content creators and provide helpful information for the pickleball community. [email protected]

Source: Pickleball Portal
Anuncie Aqui / Advertise Here

Sua marca para o mundo Pickleball! / Your brand for the Pickleball world!

Read the Original Content on Pickleball Portal

Disclaimer: Pickleball Unit is a Decentralized News Aggregator that enables journalists, influencers, editors, publishers, websites and community members to share news about Pickleball. User must always do their own research and none of those articles are financial advices. The content is for informational purposes only and does not necessarily reflect our opinion.