Discover how to organize padel tournaments that fill your courts, grow your member base, and create a reliable new revenue stream for your club.
Padel is the fastest-growing racket sport in the world — and the clubs that are winning aren't just offering great courts. They're creating experiences. A well-organized padel tournament does something remarkable: it transforms casual players into loyal members, turns one-time visitors into regulars, and generates revenue that extends far beyond a single event. If you've been treating tournaments as an occasional marketing expense rather than a strategic revenue driver, this guide is for you.
The numbers don't lie. Industry data consistently shows that club members who participate in organized competition have 40–60% higher retention rates than recreational-only players. Why? Because tournaments create stakes, social bonds, and a reason to keep showing up.
Beyond retention, a single well-run tournament can generate revenue from multiple streams simultaneously:
"The best tournament we ever ran brought in 12 new annual memberships the following week. Players came as guests, fell in love with the atmosphere, and signed up." — Club Director, Madrid
Think of your tournament not as a day on the calendar, but as a conversion funnel.
Not all tournaments are created equal. The format you choose should match your club's size, player base, and goals.
This is the go-to format for community building. In an Americano, players rotate partners every round, so everyone interacts with everyone else. It's social, inclusive, and perfect for mixed-skill groups. Mexicano adds a competitive twist by matching players based on running scores.
Best for: Social events, member appreciation days, introducing new players to your community.
Traditional brackets create drama and clear winners, which attracts your most competitive players. They're easier to sponsor and easier to promote on social media.
Best for: Serious competitive players, marquee events, sponsor-backed tournaments.
This is your recurring revenue goldmine. A 6–8 week padel league with weekly match play drives consistent court utilization and predictable income. Players pay upfront for the season and come back every week.
Best for: Building habit-forming engagement and steady revenue between peak seasons.
Random, one-off events don't compound. A strategic calendar does.
Here's a framework that works for clubs of all sizes:
Spacing your events intentionally keeps your courts busy year-round while giving each event its own identity and marketing moment.
Entry fees are just the beginning. The clubs that generate serious tournament revenue think holistically about the player experience.
Offer multiple tiers — early bird pricing, standard pricing, and a premium tier that includes extras like a team photo, a reserved warm-up slot, or a post-tournament dinner seat. Anchoring with a premium option increases average transaction value by 20–30% even if most players choose the mid-tier.
Local businesses — sports stores, physiotherapists, restaurants, athletic wear brands — will pay for access to your engaged, health-conscious audience. Build simple packages:
Even a small club with 100 participants can generate €500–€2,000 per event from local sponsors.
Tournament players spend hours at your facility. If you have a café or bar, tournaments can double your F&B revenue on event days. No café? Partner with a local caterer and take a percentage. Consider adding a post-match recovery package — a smoothie and a stretch session with a physio — as an upsell.
Every tournament guest is a warm lead. Create a "Tournament Guest" membership offer with a limited-time incentive — one month free, waived enrollment fee, or a discounted first quarter. Brief your front desk staff to have the conversation. This one habit can generate 5–15 new memberships per event.
Nothing kills tournament momentum like a messy sign-up process, scheduling confusion, or manual score tracking. The clubs that run the smoothest events are the ones that use their systems intentionally.
At minimum, your tournament operations should include:
Clubs that digitize their tournament workflow report saving 4–8 hours of admin time per event and consistently higher participant satisfaction scores.
A great event with poor promotion is a missed opportunity. Start your marketing campaign 4–6 weeks before the event and use a multi-channel approach:
The clubs with waitlisted tournaments aren't necessarily running bigger events — they're just promoting them earlier and more consistently.
Running padel tournaments that genuinely build community and drive revenue isn't complicated — but it does require intention. Here's what to take away:
The padel clubs that will lead their markets in the next five years aren't just the ones with the best courts. They're the ones that have mastered the art of community — and tournaments are one of the most powerful tools in that playbook.
See how Book & Go can help you implement these strategies and grow your business.
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