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Padel Rebound ShotsPlaying Off the Glass

Playing off the glass is the skill that separates padel from every other racket sport. Read the rebound wrong and you'll always be a step behind. Here's how to see what the ball is going to do.

Updated2026 Read6 min LevelAll levels EditorialNo sponsored content
Quick answer

Padel rebound shots are hit off your own walls after the ball has bounced on the floor. Reading the rebound requires tracking where the ball hits the glass, predicting the angle it will come off, and positioning yourself to strike it with a controlled shot. Most wall shots should be defensive - lobs or deep returns - rather than attacking drives.

The rule: bounce first, then wall

Before anything else - the rule. The ball must bounce on the floor at least once before hitting any wall. A ball that hits the wall directly without bouncing is dead - you cannot play it.

After the first floor bounce, the ball can hit your own back wall, side wall, or both, in any sequence, and you can still play it back over the net. The only limit is that the ball cannot bounce on the floor twice on your side.

Reading the rebound

Wall physics are simple: angle in equals angle out. But there are modifications based on spin, ball height and ball speed.

Back wall

A ball that hits the back glass high will rebound flat and deep. A ball that hits the back glass low will rebound steep and come up slowly. High rebounds give you less time but more reach; low rebounds give you more time but require you to bend.

Side wall

A ball coming off the side wall changes direction sideways. If opponents hit cross-court and the ball rebounds off your side glass, it will continue toward the back of your court. You need to adjust your position laterally to reach it.

Two-wall rebounds

The ball hits the side wall first, then the back wall. This creates a complex angle that takes experience to read. The ball ends up bouncing toward the centre of the court. Time to read it: you have until the ball is coming off the second wall.

Body positioning

Where you stand determines what you can do. The three positioning principles:

  • Give yourself space. Move back and sideways as needed so you're not cramped against the wall when the ball arrives.
  • Keep sight lines clear. Don't let the ball get behind your shoulder - you can't swing at a ball you can't see.
  • Low and balanced. Bend your knees, get low enough that even a skidding wall ball is at waist or chest height.

Movement before the ball arrives is more important than racket work at contact. If you're positioned well, any competent swing works.

What shot to hit off the glass

The default off-the-glass shot should be a defensive lob or a deep controlled return. Attacking drives from wall rebounds are risky and rarely high-percentage.

The defensive lob

Send the ball high and deep. This resets the point, buys time to recover court position, and forces opponents off the net. See our lob guide for technique.

The deep drive

Hit the ball flat and deep, aiming for the opponents' feet or back corner. Doesn't try to win the point - just keeps you alive in the rally.

The attacking counter (rare)

If the rebound sits up perfectly at mid-height and you have time, you can attack. Usually only possible when the ball rebounds high off a cross-court shot. Requires committed footwork to get there before the ball drops too low.

Common wall situations

Deep lob from opponents

Ball bounces near the back wall, rebounds off the glass, comes up toward you. Most common wall situation. Response: move back early, play a deep return or lob to reset.

Cross-court drive into side wall

Ball bounces deep near the side, rebounds off the side glass across the court. Response: move laterally to intercept - you often need to step well across the court to reach the rebound.

Hard flat drive into back glass

Ball hits the back wall hard and rebounds fast and flat. Response: you need quick reactions. Block it with a short stroke - don't try to counter-attack unless you have clear time.

Soft short ball off the side

Ball drops near the side wall, rebounds weakly off the glass. Opportunity: you can take this high and attack if you move forward quickly.

Two-wall rebounds

When the ball hits the side wall first and then the back wall, it ends up at an unfamiliar angle for most players. Reading these takes experience.

  • The ball will end up bouncing toward the centre of the court after the back wall
  • Speed decreases with each wall hit
  • The ball sits up higher than a single-wall rebound, giving you more reach
  • You have more time than you think - the full journey from opponent to your racket is long

Drills for wall play

  • Self feeds: hit the ball into your back wall and practice reading and returning rebounds
  • Partner lobs: have a partner hit deliberate lobs to your back court so you get repetitions on defensive wall returns
  • Cross-court drill: partner feeds cross-court drives into the side glass - practice adjusting position and playing returns
  • Two-wall drill: partner feeds balls to hit the side wall first then the back glass - practice reading these complex rebounds
  • Shadow movement: walk through the movement pattern of reaching wall rebounds without a ball - builds muscle memory for the positioning

Frequently asked questions

Can I hit the ball before it bounces on my side?
Yes, that's a volley - legal and often preferred. The wall-rebound rule only applies when you're letting the ball bounce first. You don't have to let it bounce; you have the choice.
Is it better to volley or let balls bounce against the wall?
Depends on the ball. Easy, high balls at the net should be volleyed to maintain pressure. Deeper balls that would require stretching volleys are often better played off the glass for more control.
How do I know if a ball will rebound off the back glass?
Watch the bounce point. If the ball bounces close to the back wall (within 1-2 metres), it will almost certainly rebound off the glass. If it bounces near the service line, it won't reach the back wall.
What if the ball hits the wall first without bouncing?
Dead ball - you can't play it. This is a fault against whoever hit it if they were trying to hit it legally. Most commonly this happens if an opponent hits a very high lob that lands in the mesh or on top of the glass without bouncing on the court.
Can the ball bounce twice off the walls before I hit it?
Yes, as long as it has bounced on the floor at least once. Ball can hit floor, side wall, back wall, then you - still legal. The only double-bounce rule is on the floor.
Whats the hardest type of wall rebound to return?
The hard flat drive that rebounds off the back glass at chest height with speed. You have minimal time to react, you can't step far back because the wall is behind you, and the ball is moving fast. Block it with a short stroke and try to reset the point.
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