Building a Padel Court: Complete Guide

• All levels
3 min read
Last updated: 13.03.2026

Building a padel court is an investment that requires understanding FIP standards, material selection, and infrastructure planning. This guide helps clubs, investors, and municipalities make informed decisions.

Padel courts on a building rooftop Padel courts on a building rooftop

Photo: Jacek Janiczak / Unsplash / Unsplash License

Construction Stages

1. Design and Permits

  • Site selection: flat surface, minimum 15 × 25 m per court (including safety zones)
  • Soil testing: bearing capacity, groundwater level
  • Permits: building permission, environmental assessment, noise regulations
  • Orientation: north–south court axis to minimise sun glare

2. Foundation

ParameterRequirements
TypeMonolithic concrete slab
Thickness15–20 cm
ReinforcementWelded mesh
Slope0.5–1% for drainage (outdoor)
FlatnessMax 3 mm deviation per 3 m

3. Steel Frame

  • Material: galvanised steel (corrosion protection)
  • Height: 4 m around the perimeter
  • Mounting: bolted to foundation through anchors

4. Walls

Per FIP standards:

  • Back walls: glass 3 m + metal mesh 1 m
  • Side walls: stepped design (glass 3 m × 2 m, glass 2 m × 2 m, mesh to the net)
  • Glass: tempered, 10–12 mm thick
  • Mesh: galvanised, cell size max 7.08 × 7.08 cm

5. Surface

See Surface Types for details.

  • Standard: artificial grass with silica sand (12–15 mm)
  • Base: concrete slab with drainage
  • Alternatives: concrete (cheaper but harder), rubber crumb

6. Net and Posts

  • Height: 88 cm at centre, up to 92 cm at posts
  • Length: 10 m (wall to wall)
  • White tape along the top edge (5–6.3 cm)

7. Lighting

Court typeMinimumRecommended
Recreational400 lux500 lux
Competition500 lux750–1000 lux
Television1000 lux1500+ lux

LED floodlights: 4–8 per court, 200–400 W each.

Construction Costs

[UNVERIFIED] Approximate prices (Europe, 2025–2026):

ComponentOutdoorIndoor
Foundation€5,000–10,000€5,000–10,000
Frame + glass€15,000–25,000€15,000–25,000
Surface€5,000–12,000€5,000–12,000
Lighting€3,000–8,000€5,000–12,000
Building / roof€40,000–80,000
HVAC€10,000–25,000
Total€20,000–45,000€80,000–165,000

Additional costs: utility connections, landscaping, changing rooms, parking.

Return on Investment

[EXPERT OPINION] At an average court rental of €30–60/hour and 60–70% utilisation:

  • Outdoor court: payback in 2–4 years
  • Indoor court: payback in 4–7 years
  • Multi-court facility (4+): economies of scale reduce cost by 15–20%

Drainage

For outdoor courts:

  • Slab slope 0.5–1% towards drainage channels
  • Perimeter drainage channels
  • Connection to stormwater system
  • Artificial grass with perforated backing

Noise Control

Padel generates 70–85 dB (ball striking glass). For residential areas:

  • Acoustic barriers around the perimeter
  • Sound-absorbing ceiling panels (indoor courts)
  • Operating hour restrictions (typically 8:00–22:00)

Tips for Investors

  1. Start with market analysis — player count within 15 km, competition
  2. Minimum 2 courts — a single court doesn’t create a club atmosphere
  3. Plan infrastructure — changing rooms, café, shop, parking
  4. FIP standards — compliance enables hosting official tournaments
  5. Consider hybrid solutions — canopy roof as a compromise

FAQ

How much space is needed for one court? Minimum 15 × 25 m (10 × 20 m court + 2.5 m safety zones). See Court Dimensions.

Can a court be built on a rooftop? Yes, provided sufficient load-bearing capacity (minimum 500 kg/m²). Vibration-isolating base required.

How long does construction take? Outdoor court: 4–8 weeks. Indoor court: 3–6 months (including building).

See also

The light is on for free. But someone has to clean the lantern.

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