Padel is one of the fastest-growing sports in the world — and it’s no surprise why. It’s fast, social, forgiving, and one of the easiest racket sports to start enjoying right away, even if you’ve never played anything like it before.
This guide is made for complete beginners: no complicated terms, no assumptions about prior experience — just clear steps so you can understand the game and get on the court quickly.
What Makes Padel So Special?
It’s like tennis and squash combined, but simpler and more fun:
Small enclosed court (20 m × 10 m) with glass walls on the back and sides
Always played in doubles (2 vs 2)
You are allowed — and encouraged — to use the walls (the ball stays in play much longer)
Only underhand serves (no powerful overhead serves)
Solid racket with no strings, slightly softer ball
Short, dynamic rallies that reward reflexes, teamwork and smart placement over brute force
Because of the walls and small court, mistakes are less punishing, rallies feel exciting, and beginners can actually play a proper game from the very first session.
The Rules — Super Simple Version
Serving Bounce the ball once on the ground behind the service line → hit it underhand (below waist height) diagonally into the opponent’s service box. You get two attempts.
During the point
Ball must cross the net and land in the opponent’s half
It can bounce once on the ground — or rebound off any wall after the first bounce
Volleys (hitting before bounce) are allowed after the serve has bounced once
Walls are fully in play — use them creatively!
Point ends when
Ball bounces twice on your side
Ball hits the net and doesn’t go over
Ball goes out without touching a wall (after bounce)
Scoring Exactly like tennis: 15 – 30 – 40 – game 6 games win a set (tiebreak at 6–6) Matches are usually best of 3 sets A typical game lasts 60–90 minutes — perfect length for fun without exhaustion.
Most Common Beginner Mistakes & Easy Fixes
Hitting too hard → Prioritize control and placement — power comes later
Not using the walls → Practice high shots that bounce off the back glass — excellent defensive tool
Messing up the serve → Always remember: bounce once → underhand → correct box
Standing in the wrong place → One player at the net (for volleys), one at the back (to cover lobs). Switch sides when needed.
Why Padel Is Ideal for Beginners
Small court = much less running than tennis
Walls keep the ball alive longer → more action, fewer dead points
Underhand serve levels the playing field — no one dominates from the start
Doubles format = built-in friends, laughter and teamwork
Low learning curve — most people leave their first session wanting to play again immediately
Health & Feel-Good Benefits
Natural cardio from constant short bursts and movement
Full-body workout — legs, core, arms, shoulders — no gym required
Very low impact on joints — much gentler than running or tennis
Improves coordination, reaction time and balance
Big mental boost — social doubles play reduces stress, lifts mood and combats loneliness
Padel doesn’t feel like “exercise”. It feels like play — and that’s exactly why so many beginners stick with it long-term.
Ready to Give It a Try?
What you need:
Comfortable athletic clothes and sneakers
Rent a racket and balls at any padel facility (usually cheap or free for first-timers)
Just show up, have fun with your shots, use the walls, laugh at the mishits. The game is forgiving, the community is welcoming, and the enjoyment is instant.
Want more beginner-friendly explanations? Stay here on padel-sensation.com — everything is written with new players in mind.
See you on the court soon! MIRO
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