Padel clubs by country.
Pick a country to see its clubs, court counts, indoor venues and city-by-city breakdowns. Filter by region, search by name or ISO code.
51 countries
Europe31
North America4
Asia10
Oceania1
South America3
Africa2
Understanding padel clubs and courts
What counts as a padel club
A padel club is any venue with at least one regulation court: a 10 by 20 metre enclosed box with walls that are part of play, usually tempered glass at the back and mesh or solid panels on the sides. Within that definition the variety is wide. Some clubs are dedicated padel centres with ten or more courts, a bar and a pro shop. Others are a single court bolted onto a tennis club, a gym or a hotel. Court construction matters more than the badge on the door. Panoramic courts use full glass back walls with no corner posts, which players tend to prefer for visibility. Standard crystal courts keep structural pillars in the glass. Indoor courts play slower and remove wind from the equation, while outdoor courts are cheaper to book but weather dependent. Most listings in our database carry the court count and the indoor split, which is the quickest way to judge how serious a venue is.
How availability differs by country
Padel density varies enormously from one country to the next. Spain is the deep end, with thousands of clubs and courts in almost every town, and Italy has followed with explosive growth since 2020. In both countries you can usually find a free slot at short notice outside peak hours. Sweden and Finland built their booms almost entirely indoors, in converted warehouses and purpose-built halls, because the season demands it; expect higher prices but year-round consistency. The Gulf states run premium air-conditioned indoor centres where evening play dominates and daytime courts sit empty in summer. The UK, Netherlands and the US are earlier in the curve, so courts cluster around big cities and weekend slots go fast. The practical consequence: in Madrid you browse and pick, in Manchester or Miami you book days ahead. Checking club and court counts for a country before you rely on finding a game saves real frustration.
Booking culture, peak hours and what a court costs
Almost everywhere, padel courts are booked through an app or the club's own website rather than by phone, typically in 60 or 90 minute slots. The court is rented as a whole and the price split four ways, which keeps the per-player cost modest. As a rough guide, an off-peak outdoor court in Spain can run 10 to 20 euros an hour, a prime-time indoor court in Stockholm or Dubai can pass 50, and most of Europe sits somewhere between 20 and 40 for 90 minutes. Peak time is remarkably consistent across countries: weekday evenings from six to ten, plus weekend mornings. If your schedule is flexible, late morning and early afternoon slots are cheaper and far easier to get. Many clubs also run open matches, where individuals join a game at their level instead of bringing three friends, which is the standard way to play when travelling alone.
Finding a court while traveling
Coverage data turns a trip into a playable one. Before you travel, look at the city pages for your destination and note three things: how many clubs are within reach, how many courts each one has, and whether they are indoor. A club with eight or more courts almost always has same-day availability and a steady stream of open matches, while a two-court venue near your hotel may be fully booked by locals every evening. In rainy or cold seasons, filter for indoor clubs first and treat outdoor courts as a bonus. Bring your own racket if you care about it, but do not let gear stop you; nearly every multi-court club rents rackets and sells balls at the desk. Finally, check the club's location against where you are actually staying. Padel clubs often sit in industrial zones or sports parks outside the centre, so a court that looks close on a list can be a 30 minute drive at peak traffic.