Padel court positioning has two primary modes: attacking (both players at the net) and defensive (both players at the baseline). Teams should always try to be in attacking position, with both players roughly 2-3 metres from the net. When forced back, move together as a unit to the baseline. Partners should stay on the same horizontal line - one up and one back is the worst formation.
The two base positions
Padel positioning is binary. You're either attacking or defending. There is no middle ground you should aim for.
Attacking position
Both players at the net, roughly 2-3 metres from the net line. From here you can volley aggressively, cover most incoming shots, and dominate the point.
Defensive position
Both players at or just behind the baseline, 1-2 metres from the back glass. From here you can read balls coming off the back wall, defend lobs, and look for openings to counter-attack.
Move as a unit
Your partner is not a separate player - you're a team on one side of the court, and you should move together.
- If one player moves forward to attack, the other follows
- If one player gets pushed back to defend, the other drops back too
- If one player moves sideways to cover a wide ball, the other adjusts to close the new gap
Gaps between partners are where opponents win points. If you're in sync, there's no gap to exploit.
Attacking position in detail
"At the net" doesn't mean glued to the net tape. The optimal attacking position is 2-3 metres back from the net, sometimes called the "volley zone".
Why not closer?
Too close to the net and you can't defend lobs - the ball goes over your head and you can't recover in time. You also can't see balls coming at your feet.
Why not further back?
Too far from the net and your volleys lose power and angle. You also give opponents more time to see your shot and react.
Roughly midway between the net and the service line is the sweet spot. Exact position varies based on who your opponents are and what they're doing.
Defensive position in detail
When forced back, the right spot is 1-2 metres from the back glass. This lets you:
- Play balls directly off the back wall rebound
- See the full angle of incoming shots
- Have time to react to hard drives
- Position yourself for lobs back at the opponents
Standing too close to the back wall means you'll be cramped against it when rebounds come. Too far forward and you're stuck between positions - not at the net, not far enough back to defend cleanly.
Lateral position: left vs right
Along with forward/back positioning, you and your partner each have a side of the court to cover. Most doubles teams default to one player on the right and one on the left, with the centre line as the boundary.
The right-side player typically has the backhand facing the centre of the court. The left-side player has the forehand facing centre. Many teams organise around who has a better backhand vs forehand in the centre position.
Cross-covering happens when one player moves sideways and the other adjusts to cover the newly opened side. This is constant - every shot slightly shifts who covers what.
Transitioning between positions
The movement from defence to attack (or back) is where most tactical mistakes happen.
Defence to attack
After a good lob or deep return, move forward together toward the attacking position. Don't rush; move while the ball is high in the air. Arrive at the volley zone together before the ball comes back.
Attack to defence
When opponents hit a lob over your heads, both players retreat together. Never one stays forward and one goes back. Drop back to the baseline as a unit.
Diagonal movement
Sometimes a ball pulls one player wide. The other player moves diagonally - forward and across - to close the gap created by the first player's movement.
Reading opponents' positions
Position your shots based on where opponents are standing.
- Both at net: lob. Force them back.
- Both at baseline: drive deep or drop short. They're vulnerable to pace changes.
- One up, one back: target the weaker position - usually the one at the net with lobs
- Both moving: hit to the space they're vacating, not where they are
- Opponent off-balance: keep the ball away from their strong side and don't let them recover
Common positioning mistakes
- Drifting too close to the net after hitting an attacking volley. You get caught by lobs.
- Not moving up after a good lob. You miss the chance to take the net.
- Partner splits - one up, one back. The worst formation, always fix it immediately.
- Standing still after hitting a shot. Your position should adjust after every ball to anticipate the next one.
- Both partners on the same side. A big gap on the other side that opponents will exploit.