The UK has experienced rapid padel growth from roughly 50 courts in 2018 to over 500 by 2026, with an estimated 150,000+ active players. The Lawn Tennis Association (LTA) became the governing body for padel in 2019, and clubs have been expanding in London, Manchester, Birmingham and Edinburgh. The sport is newer and less developed than in Spain but growing fast enough that by 2030 the UK could have 2,000+ courts.
The UK padel timeline
Unlike Spain, where padel arrived in 1974 and grew gradually, British padel has a much more compressed history:
- 2018 - fewer than 50 courts in the entire UK, mostly private club facilities
- 2019 - Lawn Tennis Association (LTA) becomes the governing body for padel
- 2020-2021 - first wave of commercial padel clubs open; COVID-19 boosts interest in outdoor sports
- 2022-2023 - court numbers double; first UK Premier Padel tournament announced (London)
- 2024 - Hexagon Cup held at O2 Arena; UK players start appearing in top international juniors
- 2025-2026 - 500+ courts, 150,000+ active players, LTA reports padel as fastest-growing sport in the UK
Where padel is big in the UK
Padel in the UK is concentrated in urban centres, with a clear regional pattern:
- London - by far the largest market, with 100+ courts across dedicated padel clubs, multi-sport facilities and repurposed tennis clubs
- Manchester - major northern hub, Padel4All and other chains expanding rapidly
- Birmingham - growing market supported by West Midlands commercial interest
- Edinburgh and Glasgow - smaller but growing Scottish scene
- Southern coastal areas - Bournemouth, Brighton have active clubs
- Home counties - Surrey, Kent, Berkshire - wealthy residential areas with new private clubs
Rural UK and smaller cities still have limited or no padel. A typical mid-sized British town of 100,000 people might have 0-2 courts as of 2026 - that will change over the next 5 years but slowly.
LTA and governance
The Lawn Tennis Association (LTA) became the UK governing body for padel in 2019. This integration is unusual globally - most countries have separate padel federations. The LTA decision reflects practical reality: many padel courts are added at existing tennis clubs, and the organisational infrastructure overlaps significantly.
LTA support includes national tournaments, junior development programmes, coaching qualifications, court funding schemes and a British Padel Tour circuit. British padel rankings are maintained alongside tennis rankings.
The downside of LTA governance is that padel is sometimes treated as a tennis sub-category rather than a sport with its own needs. As the UK market matures, there may be pressure for an independent British Padel Federation, though this has not happened as of 2026.
Clubs and costs in the UK
UK padel is more expensive than Spanish padel, reflecting higher real estate costs, newer infrastructure and less mature competition:
| Item | Typical UK cost |
|---|---|
| Court rental (peak hours) | GBP 40-80 per hour |
| Court rental (off-peak) | GBP 25-50 per hour |
| Membership (dedicated padel club) | GBP 50-150 per month |
| Racket rental | GBP 5-10 per session |
| Coaching | GBP 40-80 per hour |
Premium London clubs (Hurlingham, Rocket Padel, PadelStars) charge the high end of these ranges. Regional clubs outside London are significantly cheaper. Community and council-run courts are emerging and will lower prices over time.
British players on the international stage
No British player has yet cracked the world top 50 on Premier Padel as of 2026. British padel is building its talent pipeline from near-zero, and the gap to Spanish and Argentine players is significant. Most competitive British players are in their late 20s and 30s, having come from tennis or squash backgrounds rather than starting in padel as juniors.
Promising developments:
- Junior tournaments are growing; the first generation of players who started padel before age 12 will turn professional in the late 2020s
- British academies partnering with Spanish coaching networks to develop talent
- LTA funding for elite player pathways increasing year-over-year
- UK representation at Premier Padel lower-tier events increasing
A British world top-20 player by 2030 seems plausible. World top-10 or top-5 would be faster growth than any country has achieved historically.
Is it a good time to start padel in the UK?
Yes, with caveats:
Reasons to start now:
- Court availability is expanding but demand is growing faster - it gets harder to find a court each year
- Club communities are being built; joining early means being part of them
- Prices may rise as demand outstrips supply before stabilising
- Level of play is rising - starting now gives you time to develop before courts fill with better players
Honest caveats:
- Padel is still relatively expensive in the UK vs Spain or France
- Getting coaching is harder - qualified coaches are few
- Peak-time courts in London and major cities are already booked out weeks in advance
- If you live in a rural area or smaller town, you may have a long drive to your nearest court