EVA foam padel racket cores are made from ethylene-vinyl acetate, a closed-cell foam used as the central layer inside the frame. EVA is the most common core material in modern padel rackets, valued for its balance of energy return, vibration absorption, and durability. The density of the EVA, measured in shore hardness, controls how soft or firm the racket feels and how the ball reacts on impact. Soft EVA gives more dwell time and comfort; hard EVA gives more power and a sharper response.
What EVA foam in a padel racket actually is
EVA - ethylene-vinyl acetate - is a closed-cell foam used in everything from running shoes to ski boots to padel rackets. In padel, EVA forms the central layer of the racket, sandwiched between two thin faces of carbon fibre or fibreglass. When the ball strikes the face, the EVA core compresses and rebounds, transferring energy back into the ball. The density and thickness of the EVA core directly determines what the racket feels like.
EVA replaced earlier core materials like polyurethane and ethylene-propylene foam because it offers a better balance of weight, durability and response. Almost every modern padel racket uses some form of EVA, though some manufacturers brand their proprietary blends with names like Black EVA, Cloud EVA or HR3.
Soft EVA vs hard EVA
Density is the single most important EVA spec. It is measured in kilograms per cubic metre (kg/m3) and determines whether the racket feels plush or punchy.
| Density | Range (kg/m3) | Feel | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|
| Soft EVA | 28-35 | Plush, absorbs vibration | Beginners, arm injuries |
| Medium EVA | 35-45 | Balanced, all-round | Most intermediate players |
| Hard EVA | 45-55+ | Lively, responsive, less forgiving | Advanced, power players |
Soft EVA absorbs more impact energy, which makes the racket feel more comfortable but reduces power. Hard EVA returns more energy to the ball, which generates more power but also transmits more vibration to your arm. The tradeoff between comfort and power is the central decision when picking a racket core.
How to feel EVA density on a racket
You can roughly assess EVA density before buying. Press your thumb hard into the centre of the racket face. A soft EVA racket will give visibly under thumb pressure. A hard EVA racket will feel almost solid. This is not a perfect test - it cannot distinguish between 35 and 40 kg/m3 - but it instantly separates very soft from very hard cores.
A more accurate method is the bounce test. Drop the racket face-down from chest height onto a hard surface carefully. A soft EVA racket bounces lower with less ringing. A hard EVA racket bounces higher with a sharper sound.
Which EVA density should you choose
Beginners
Always soft EVA. The forgiving feel hides off-centre hits, the absorbed vibration protects your arm while you build technique, and the lower power keeps the ball in court while you learn. See our best beginner rackets guide for soft-core picks.
Intermediates
Medium EVA in the 35-45 kg/m3 range. This is the sweet spot for most club players - enough response to develop power, enough comfort to play multiple times a week without arm fatigue.
Advanced and competitive players
Hard EVA, but only if your technique can handle it and your arm is conditioned. The Bullpadel Hack 04 (HR3 core) and Adidas Metalbone (hard EVA) are examples of pro-level hard cores. They reward clean technique and punish bad habits.
Players with arm injuries
Always soft EVA, regardless of level. Vibration is the primary cause of padel-related tennis elbow. Soft EVA is the single best racket-side intervention for arm health. See our best rackets for tennis elbow guide.
Branded EVA technologies
Major manufacturers brand their EVA blends with proprietary names. Here are the ones youll see most often.
- Bullpadel Black EVA - high-density EVA used in Hack and Vertex flagships. Hard, responsive, power-focused.
- Bullpadel Cloud EVA - softer blend in the Neuron range. Comfort and feel oriented.
- Nox HR3 - high-density EVA in the AT10 Genius range. Maximum power.
- Adidas EVA Soft Performance - balanced medium density across the Match and Adipower ranges.
- Head Power Foam - softer EVA blend used in Delta and Radical ranges for arm comfort.
Does EVA wear out
Yes. EVA degrades with use. The closed cells gradually lose their rebound, which is why a 2-year-old racket feels noticeably softer and less responsive than the same model new. Heavy hitters notice this within a year. Casual players can play the same racket for 3+ years before they feel the difference.
Storage matters. EVA degrades faster in heat, so leaving your racket in a hot car or unheated garage shortens its life significantly. Keep your racket indoors at room temperature and it will hold its core for longer.
Find a racket with the right core for you
Three questions, one personalised pick.