Padel for Kids and Juniors
Padel is one of the most child-friendly racket sports. The enclosed court keeps the ball in play, the rules are simple, and the doubles format teaches teamwork from day one. Children as young as 3–4 can start with mini padel, and junior competition circuits are growing rapidly worldwide.
When to Start
| Category | Age | Description |
|---|---|---|
| Mini Padel | 3–7 | Foam balls, reduced courts (10 × 5 m), ultra-light rackets (230–280 g) |
| Kids Padel | 5–8 | Low-pressure balls (Stage 3/Red), smaller courts, rackets 280–320 g |
| Junior Padel | 8–12 | Stage 2/Orange or Green balls, standard courts, rackets 280–330 g |
| Youth Padel | 12–18 | Standard or Stage 1/Green balls, full-size courts, rackets 310–350 g |
Most academies accept children from age 4–5. The optimal age to begin structured training is around 7–8, when coordination and attention span allow for more focused learning.
Courts for Kids
Mini Padel Courts
Mini padel courts measure 10 × 5 m — exactly one-quarter of a standard court — with walls approximately 1 m high and a net height of 1 m. These smaller dimensions are designed for children under 8.
Research (MDPI, 2025) confirms that reducing court size from 20 × 10 m to 10 × 6 m with low-pressure balls improves skill development in children aged 8–10 without reducing the physical workout.
Mini courts are available as fixed, mobile, or temporary installations and fit in schools, clubs, beaches, and even shopping centres. Adults can also play singles on mini courts.
Equipment
Rackets
| Parameter | Kids (5–8) | Junior (8–12) | Youth (12–18) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Weight | 230–280 g | 280–330 g | 310–350 g |
| Thickness | 32–33 mm | 33–36 mm | 36–38 mm |
| Length | ~45 cm | 45–50 cm | Standard |
| Grip | Small | Small | Standard / adjustable |
| Shape | Round | Round / Teardrop | Teardrop / Diamond |
Key principle: Start with a round shape for the largest sweet spot and best control. A racket that is too heavy can cause muscle strain and early injury.
Recommended models (2025–2026):
- Wilson Minions Junior — fibreglass/EVA, ~300 g, designed for the youngest players
- Adidas Arrow Hit Junior 2026 — beginner-focused
- Head Coello Junior 2026 — teardrop, 310–330 g, versatile
- Nox AT10 Genius Jr — inspired by Agustin Tapia’s model
- Bullpadel Vertex Junior 2025 — diamond, 330–350 g (for experienced juniors)
Balls
| Type | Pressure | Bounce | Best for | Colour |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Stage 3 (Red) | 25% of standard | 75% slower | Ages 3–8 | Red, foam, larger diameter |
| Stage 2 (Orange) | 50% of standard | 50% slower | Ages 8–10 | Orange |
| Stage 1 (Green) | 75% of standard | 25% slower | Ages 10–14 | Yellow with green dot |
| Standard | Full pressure | Normal | Ages 14+ | Yellow |
The Stage 1/2/3 classification comes from tennis (ITF Play & Stay). In padel, both dedicated junior balls and tennis training balls are used.
Benefits for Children
Physical Development
- Coordination: develops hand-eye coordination, agility, and balance
- Cardiovascular fitness: moderate intensity (heart rate 140–160 bpm), gentler than tennis or squash
- Strength: 8 weeks of training improves grip strength and jump performance in children aged 11–15 (PMC, 2021)
- Cognitive stimulation: rapid decision-making and spatial awareness promote brain development
Low Injury Risk
Padel has an injury rate of approximately 2.75 per 1,000 hours of play — significantly lower than football (4–7 per 1,000 hours). The enclosed court prevents ball injuries, the soft ball and light racket reduce impact, and the small court means less running distance.
Social Skills
Padel is always played in pairs, which naturally teaches:
- Communication and trust between partners
- Sportsmanship — handling wins and losses together
- Friendship through shared teamwork
- Inclusivity — the sport’s low barrier to entry means children of different abilities can play together
Accessibility
Simple rules allow a quick start. The enclosed court “keeps” the ball in play, meaning longer rallies and more fun from the first session. Studies show that under-14 players demonstrate better psychological profiles: higher confidence and lower anxiety than older teenagers.
Teaching Methodology
Game-Based Learning
Scientific research confirms that search-based methodology (learning through varied game situations) is significantly more effective than traditional drill-based teaching for children.
Best practices:
- Modified equipment (smaller court, lower net, softer balls) combined with game situations
- Target-based exercises, scoring rallies, mini tournaments
- Stroke progression: forehand/backhand → volley → bandeja
- Beginners: rally duration 7–9 seconds. Advanced juniors: 9–12 seconds, shot frequency rising from 4 to 6–9 per rally
Federation Programmes
| Organisation | Programme | Description |
|---|---|---|
| FIP | FIP Academy | Standardised coach training, 3 certification levels |
| FEP (Spain) | Circuito Menores Babolat | Largest junior competition in the world |
| LTA (UK) | Youth Tour + School Programmes | Free school sessions, FIP Promises events |
| USPA (USA) | Junior Elite Program | Padel X programme for juniors |
| Rafa Nadal Academy | Summer Padel Camp | Ages 12–18, methodology co-developed with FEP |
Junior Competitions
FIP Promises
The international junior circuit has grown dramatically:
| Year | Tournaments |
|---|---|
| 2021 | 3 |
| 2022 | 12 |
| 2023 | 18 |
| 2024 | 41 |
| 2025 | 90 |
Age categories: Under-12, Under-14, Under-16, Under-18 (boys and girls).
From 2026, FIP Promises adopts a continental structure (Europe, America, Asia/Oceania, Africa), each with its own rankings and finals. A planned Global Under-18 Circuit (from 2027) will feature 10 international tournaments plus a Master Final, with top-10 players earning access to Premier Padel and CUPRA FIP Tour events.
FIP Junior World Championships
National team competitions with categories U14, U16, and U18. The XIV edition (Asuncion, Paraguay, 2023) was won by Spain in both men’s and women’s categories. The XV edition took place in Reus, Spain (2025).
National Age Categories (Spain Example)
| Category | Age |
|---|---|
| Benjamin | 8–9 |
| Alevin | 10–11 |
| Infantil | 12–13 |
| Cadete | 14–15 |
| Juvenil | 16–18 |
Players Who Started Young
| Player | Started padel at | Career highlight |
|---|---|---|
| Arturo Coello | ~7 years old | World No. 1 at 21 — youngest ever |
| Agustin Tapia | ~9 years old | No. 1 in U12/U14/U16 for 5 years |
| Fernando Belasteguin | ~13 years old | World No. 1 for 16 consecutive years |
| Alejandra Salazar | ~8 years old | One of the greatest female padel players |
| Juan Lebron | ~7–8 years old | Multiple Spanish junior champion |
Guide for Parents
Costs
| Item | Approximate cost |
|---|---|
| Junior racket | €30–80 (beginner), €80–150 (advanced) |
| Balls (3-pack) | €5–10 |
| Shoes | €40–80 (non-marking sole) |
| Court rental | €30–60/hour for 4 players (€7–15 per person) |
| Racket rental | €5–10 per session |
| Group lesson | €15–30 per person for 60–90 min |
| Private lesson | €50–120/hour |
Tip: Many clubs offer racket rental and free introductory sessions. Start with rental before investing in equipment.
Supporting Without Pressure
Research in sports psychology consistently shows that excessive parental pressure reduces enjoyment and can cause lasting psychological harm. Autonomous support (rather than controlling behaviour) increases confidence, enjoyment, and long-term engagement.
Guidelines:
- Praise effort, not results
- Do not criticise after losses
- Let the child determine their own level of involvement
- Participate actively — play mini padel together
- Choose a club with trial sessions and observe the coaching style
- Use padel’s doubles format to encourage socialising with friends
Finding a Junior Programme
- Check your national federation’s website (FEP, LTA, USPA, etc.)
- Ask at local tennis clubs — many now offer padel
- Search Decathlon or sports retailers for local programme information
- Browse the FIP calendar for junior events
- Request trial sessions — most clubs offer them
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