Padel is the fastest-growing racquet sport in America. Here's everything you need to open a padel club in the USA — from permits to profitability.
Padel is exploding across the United States. With over 10,000 courts projected to be built in North America by 2030 and participation growing at a rate that outpaces nearly every other racquet sport, the business opportunity is real — and the window to get in early is still open. If you've been searching for a clear roadmap on how to open a padel club USA, you're in the right place. This guide walks you through every major step, from feasibility and financing to launch day and beyond.
Padel was played by fewer than 50,000 Americans in 2020. By 2024, that number has grown to an estimated 1.5 million recreational players, according to US Padel Association data. Coastal markets like Miami, Los Angeles, and New York were the early adopters, but now Sunbelt cities — Austin, Dallas, Atlanta, Phoenix — are seeing explosive grassroots demand.
The business case is compelling:
"Padel is where tennis was in the 1970s and pickleball was in 2018. The clubs that open now will define the sport's culture in their cities." — US Padel Association spokesperson
The infrastructure gap is enormous. Spain has over 20,000 padel courts for a population of 47 million. The US has fewer than 2,000 for 335 million people. First-mover advantage is still very much available.
Before signing a lease or hiring an architect, validate your market. Padel works best in areas with:
Key questions to answer in your feasibility study:
Cities like Miami, Houston, and parts of New Jersey and California have significant Spanish-speaking communities where padel culture is already embedded. These markets often require less demand-generation marketing at launch.
There are several viable business models for a padel club in the USA:
For most first-time operators, a 4–6 court hybrid membership model is the sweet spot. Register your business as an LLC or S-Corp (consult a CPA familiar with sports or hospitality businesses), get a Federal EIN, and open a dedicated business bank account before you spend a single dollar.
Location is everything. You need a space that can accommodate padel court dimensions of 10m x 20m (roughly 33 x 66 feet) per court, plus buffer space, locker rooms, reception, and parking.
Common venue types:
Permits you'll likely need (varies by municipality):
Engage a local architect and a real estate attorney early. Permitting timelines in major US cities can range from 3 months to over a year, so this step should happen in parallel with financing, not after.
Understanding the full cost to open a padel club USA is critical to securing financing. Here's a realistic breakdown for a 4-court indoor facility in a mid-size US market:
| Item | Estimated Cost |
|---|---|
| Court construction (4 courts) | $200,000 – $320,000 |
| Facility build-out / TI | $100,000 – $250,000 |
| Equipment (balls, racquets, accessories) | $10,000 – $25,000 |
| Technology & booking software | $5,000 – $15,000 |
| Marketing & pre-launch | $15,000 – $40,000 |
| Working capital (6 months) | $80,000 – $150,000 |
| Total | $410,000 – $800,000 |
Financing options include SBA 7(a) loans (well-suited for this type of business), private investors or angel groups, family offices interested in sports & wellness, and revenue-based financing for working capital.
Use the Book & Go revenue calculator to model your court utilization rates, pricing tiers, and membership scenarios before you go to investors.
Not all padel courts are created equal. Work with an ITF or FIP-certified court supplier to ensure your courts meet international standards — this matters if you want to host tournaments or affiliate with USA Padel.
Key construction considerations:
Lead time on courts from European manufacturers (who dominate the quality market) can be 12–20 weeks, so order early.
Your team will make or break the member experience. Core roles to hire before opening:
Programming drives utilization and retention. Launch with:
Modern players expect to book, pay, and manage their memberships from their phones. A clunky reservation system or no-app experience will cost you members — especially younger, tech-savvy players.
Your tech stack should include:
A white-label branded app — one that carries your club's name and logo, not a third-party platform's — dramatically improves perceived professionalism and member loyalty. Players stay inside your ecosystem rather than browsing a marketplace where they can see competitor venues.
Explore more resources and industry insights on the Book & Go blog to see how leading padel and racquet clubs across the US are building their digital infrastructure.
Opening a padel club in the USA is a serious undertaking — but the market timing has rarely been better. Here's what to remember:
Ready to give your padel club the tech infrastructure it deserves? Book & Go builds custom white-label booking and management apps for padel and racquet clubs across the USA — no generic platforms, just your brand, your players, your data. Get a free demo today and see why 500,000+ sports club members are already booking through Book & Go-powered apps.
See how Book & Go can help you implement these strategies and grow your business.
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