Padel Tournament Formats

• All levels
3 min read
Last updated: 13.03.2026

Padel tournaments come in many formats — from the classic single-elimination draw to the social “Americano”. The format determines the number of matches, duration, and spirit of the competition.

Padel tournament bracket board Padel tournament bracket board

Photo: J. Schiemann / Unsplash / Unsplash License

Main Formats

Single Elimination (Knockout)

The standard for professional tournaments, including Premier Padel.

  • Principle: a loss means elimination
  • Used in: final stages of major tournaments
  • Total matches: N−1 (for 16 pairs — 15 matches)
  • Pros: fast, intense, clear winner
  • Cons: one loss = end of the tournament

Draw for 16 pairs:

Round of 16 → Quarter-finals → Semi-finals → Final
(8 matches)    (4 matches)      (2 matches)   (1 match)

Double Elimination

  • Principle: elimination after two losses
  • Used in: amateur tournaments, club championships
  • Pros: a second chance after a loss
  • Cons: takes longer

Group Stage + Knockout

A combined format used in major tournaments.

  1. Groups: 3–4 pairs play round robin
  2. Knockout: top finishers advance to a single-elimination draw

Used in: Premier Padel Majors, World Team Championships.

Americano

The most popular social format. Ideal for club events and meeting new partners.

  • Principle: pairs are randomly drawn before each round
  • Scoring: individual (each player accumulates their own points)
  • Round: a short match (typically to 32 points, 8 serves each)
  • Number of rounds: 5–8 (depends on the number of participants)
  • Winner: the player with the highest total across all rounds

Variations:

  • Team Americano — fixed pairs, random opponents
  • Mixicano — one man + one woman per pair (randomly drawn)

Round Robin

  • Principle: every pair plays every other pair
  • Tiebreakers: wins → set difference → game difference
  • Used in: leagues, regular championships, small tournaments (4–8 pairs)
  • Pros: everyone plays the same number of matches
  • Cons: time-consuming with many entrants

Match Scoring Format

The scoring format depends on the tournament level:

FormatUsed in
Best of 3 setsProfessional tournaments
2 sets + super tie-breakAmateur tournaments, qualifying
1 setAmericano, short formats
Fixed point totalAmericano (typically 32 points)

Tournament Levels

Professional

  • Premier Padel: Major, P1, P2 (men’s and women’s)
  • FIP Tour: Cupra FIP Tour (intermediate level)
  • National leagues: country championships

Amateur

  • Club tournaments: internal championships
  • Leagues: city-wide, regional
  • Social: Americano, mixed events, corporate

Player Categories

Most tournaments divide players by level:

CategoryDescription
Open / AAdvanced and professional
B / IntermedioIntermediate
C / IniciaciónBeginners
MixtoMixed pairs (man + woman)
Veteranos40+, 50+ age groups

Seeding and Rankings

Major tournaments use seeding — placing the strongest pairs in the draw to prevent them from meeting early.

  • Basis: FIP ranking, national ranking, or club ranking
  • Rule: seeded pairs are placed in different quarters of the draw

Choosing a Format for Your Tournament

CriterionRecommended format
4–8 pairs, full dayRound Robin
8–16 pairs, half daySingle Elimination
16–32 pairsGroups + Knockout
Social eventAmericano
Regular meetupsLeague (round robin by season)

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