New: New rackets 2026 · Best for beginners
Gear Guides Play About padel News Find my racket →
Padel guide

Padel Serve RulesLegal Serves, Faults and Lets

Padel has the most rule-heavy serve in racket sports. Foot position, ball bounce, waist height, diagonal box - here is exactly what makes a serve legal.

Updated2026 Read6 min LevelAll levels EditorialNo sponsored content
Quick answer

Padel serve rules require the server to stand behind the service line, bounce the ball once on the floor, and strike it underarm at or below waist height. The ball must cross the net and land in the diagonally opposite service box without touching the side wall. Players get two attempts - a second fault loses the point.

Foot position and the service line

The service line runs across the court 3 metres in front of the back glass. The server stands behind this line in the appropriate service box (right for even-numbered points, left for odd). Both feet stay behind the line until you have made contact with the ball.

You can drag one foot along the ground during the serve motion, but it cannot touch or cross the line. Lifting a foot briefly during the motion is fine as long as neither foot is touching the line when you strike the ball.

The underarm requirement

The defining feature of the padel serve is that it must be underarm. You cannot toss the ball overhead and strike it like a tennis serve.

The strict rule: the racket must contact the ball at or below waist height. Most players use a motion where they drop the ball, let it bounce, and strike it on the rise at about mid-thigh to hip height. Striking the ball after it has bounced above waist height is also a fault, even if your racket stays low.

Where the ball must land

The serve must travel diagonally - from your service box to the one on the opposite side of the net. The receivers service box is the rectangle bounded by the net, the service line, the centre line and the side wall.

If the ball lands outside the correct box, its a fault. If the ball lands in the box and then rebounds off the side glass before the receiver plays it, that is legal - the receiver must try to return it.

Faults and the second serve

Each point gets two serve attempts. If you fault on the first, you serve again. A second fault means you lose the point outright.

What counts as a fault

  • Foot on or over the service line at contact
  • Striking the ball above waist height
  • Failing to bounce the ball before striking
  • Serve that misses the correct service box
  • Serve that hits the side glass before bouncing on the floor
  • Serve that hits the net and lands outside the service box
  • Serve that flies over the fence or hits the ceiling

Lets: serves you get to retry with no penalty

A let is a do-over - no fault counted, no point lost. The two common situations are clipping the net and interference.

  • Serve that clips the top of the net and lands in the correct service box - called "let, first serve"
  • Serve that clips the net and fails - replay the serve
  • Interference from a ball rolling onto court or a similar disruption

There is no limit on consecutive lets. If your serve keeps clipping the net and landing in, you keep serving. See our full let rules for non-serve lets.

Who serves and when

One team serves for a whole game, then serve passes to the opposing team. Within each team, the two players alternate who serves each game. So if you and your partner are serving this game, your partner will serve the next time your team is on serve.

Within a game, the server alternates service boxes each point. Point 1 serves from the right box to the receivers right box. Point 2 serves from the left box, and so on.

Frequently asked questions

Can the serve hit the side glass?
Yes, but only after bouncing on the floor in the correct service box. If the serve lands in the box and then rebounds into the side glass, the receiver must play it back. If it hits the glass before bouncing, its a fault.
What if my serve hits the receiver before bouncing?
If the receiver catches or gets hit by the ball before it bounces, the server wins the point. The only exception is if the ball was clearly going to land outside the box.
Can I jump on my serve?
Technically yes, as long as both feet are behind the line at the moment you strike the ball. In practice nobody jumps on a padel serve because the underarm height rule makes it pointless.
What is the fastest allowed padel serve?
There is no speed limit. The underarm and waist-height rules naturally cap serve speed at maybe 100-110 km/h even for pros. Compare that to tennis serves over 200 km/h and you see why returning serve is much easier in padel.
Do I have to call the score before serving?
Yes. The server should call the score clearly before each serve - servers score first, then the receivers score. At a club level this is less strict but you should still confirm the score after every point.
Can the receiver return the serve before it bounces?
No. The serve must bounce once on the floor before the receiver hits it. Hitting a volley return on serve is a fault against the receiver and the point goes to the servers.
How we cover padel PadelGearFinder is independent, with no brand deals or paid placements. Guides are reviewed against current FIP and Premier Padel frameworks before publication. Read our review methodology.