Spain is the global centre of padel, with over 6 million active players (roughly 13% of the population) and 7,000+ clubs nationwide. The sport arrived via Marbella in 1974 and grew through the 1980s-90s before exploding from 2015 onwards. Spain produces most top professional players, hosts the majority of Premier Padel tournaments, and has more padel courts than any other country.
Spain by the numbers
| Metric | Spain |
|---|---|
| Active players | ~6 million |
| Population | ~47 million |
| Player penetration | ~13% of population |
| Registered clubs | ~7,000 |
| Total courts | ~30,000+ |
| Federated players | 200,000+ |
| Courts per capita | Roughly 1 per 1,500 people |
These numbers make Spain extraordinarily dense in padel infrastructure. For comparison, Italy (the second-largest market) has roughly 3 million players across a larger population. The UK has roughly 150,000 active players. Spain is not just the biggest padel nation; it is an outlier.
How it started: Marbella 1974
Padel arrived in Spain through Marbella in 1974. Alfonso de Hohenlohe-Langenburg, a Spanish aristocrat who owned the Marbella Club, had visited the game's inventor Enrique Corcuera in Mexico and brought the concept back. He installed two courts at the Marbella Club - the first padel courts in Europe.
Through the late 1970s, padel spread through Marbella's wealthy networks along the Costa del Sol. The Spanish Padel Federation was founded in 1983 and the first Spanish championship in 1981. By the late 1980s there were enough players and clubs for a domestic competition circuit.
Growth was steady through the 1990s and 2000s - Spanish padel was an established but minority sport, dominated by Argentine players who had also picked up the game independently from Corcuera in the 1970s.
The 2015-2020 explosion
Spanish padel transformed from established minority sport to national obsession roughly between 2015 and 2020. Several factors combined:
- Commercial expansion - private investors saw an opportunity and built thousands of new clubs
- Celebrity endorsement - football players including Messi, Ronaldo and Neymar became public padel players, generating mainstream interest
- Media coverage - Spanish TV picked up WPT broadcasts, then Premier Padel, making pros into household names
- Accessibility - padel is significantly easier to pick up than tennis, which brought in people who had never played racket sports before
- Social factor - four players per court makes it more social than tennis doubles; built-in conversation point for group activities
Between 2018 and 2023, the number of padel players in Spain roughly doubled. The number of courts grew from around 12,000 to over 30,000. For a period of 3-4 years, new padel clubs were opening faster than Spanish city planning could accommodate them.
Spanish dominance of the professional tour
Spain produces most top professional players. Of the world top 20 men in 2026, roughly 60% are Spanish or Argentine-born Spanish residents. The women's side is even more Spanish-dominated.
Current Spanish top players include Arturo Coello (world No. 1), Alejandro Galan (No. 3), Juan Lebron (No. 6), Paquito Navarro, Ale Ruiz, Momo Gonzalez, Javi Leal and many more. On the women's side: Ari Sanchez, Paula Josemaria, Bea Gonzalez, Marta Ortega, Claudia Fernandez, Andrea Ustero - all Spanish.
Only Arturo Coello has relocated abroad (to Miami in 2024). The rest mostly base themselves in Spain during the season, training at elite academies in Madrid, Barcelona and Valencia.
Major tournaments in Spain
Spain hosts a large share of the Premier Padel calendar:
- Madrid Premier Padel Major - one of the four majors (equivalent to a Grand Slam)
- Premier Padel Barcelona Finals - season-ending event
- Gijon P2 - major spring tournament
- Valladolid events - historically important circuit stop
- Marbella Master - tied to the sport's Spanish origins
Attending a Spanish tournament is a significant experience - crowds are knowledgeable and passionate, matches are often the peak product of the pro tour, and venues mix top-tier competition with festival atmospheres.
Club culture and costs
Spanish padel is broadly accessible. Typical club costs:
- Court rental: EUR 15-25 per hour (shared between 4 players = EUR 4-7 each)
- Club membership: EUR 30-100 per month for unlimited play
- Racket rental: EUR 3-5 per session for first-time players
- Beginner coaching: EUR 20-35 per hour
Compared to most of Europe, Spanish padel is cheaper and more available. Major cities (Madrid, Barcelona, Valencia, Seville, Malaga) have hundreds of clubs each. Even small towns typically have 2-3 padel facilities.
The social culture around clubs is important. Post-match drinks at the club bar are expected. Clubs organise tournaments, social events and coaching programmes. Spanish padel is community sport more than individual sport - the reason for much of its growth.
Why Spain specifically
Several factors explain why Spain became padel's global capital rather than France, Italy or the UK despite all having long racket sport traditions:
- Climate - Spain has year-round outdoor playability in most regions, supporting both outdoor and indoor clubs
- Early adoption - 30 years head start on most of Europe meant the infrastructure was already extensive by the time amateur interest exploded elsewhere
- Cultural fit - strong tradition of outdoor social sports, and the four-player format suits Spanish social culture
- Investor interest - the Spanish property boom of the 2000s left developers looking for amenities; padel courts fit many sites that could not host tennis
- Pro pipeline - once Spanish players dominated the tour, domestic interest followed