Solo Practice in Padel

• All levels
3 min read
Last updated: 13.03.2026

No partner? No problem. Solo training gives you total control over pace, repetitions, and movement patterns. No distractions, no score pressure — pure skill refinement.

Solo practice — player with ball on court Solo practice — player with ball on court

Photo credit

Photo by Andy Quezada on Unsplash

Why Train Alone

  • 100% of repetitions on your side — no waiting for a partner to feed balls
  • Focus on weaknesses — you choose what to work on
  • No social pressure — you can experiment without fear of making mistakes
  • Muscle memory — many repetitions = automatism on court

Wall Drills

Back Wall Rallies

  1. Stand 2–3 metres from the back wall
  2. Hit a controlled forehand at the wall
  3. Let the ball rebound, then strike again
  4. Maintain the rhythm for as long as possible
  5. Alternate between forehand and backhand

Targets on the Wall

  • Mark targets with chalk or tape on the wall
  • Hit at varying speeds and angles
  • Gradually reduce the target size
  • Add spin requirements (slice, topspin)

Serve Practice at the Wall

  • Stand 3–4 metres from the wall
  • Practise the serve (underhand — below waist level)
  • For the slice serve: shadow swings → half-speed serves → full serves
  • Hit against the back glass to observe the ball’s reaction to spin

Shadow Play

Practising movements without a ball:

  • Visualise a real game, follow an imaginary ball
  • Simulate shots: forehand, backhand, volley, lob
  • Typical movements: approach the net → bandeja → sprint forward → side step in the corner
  • Practise the split step between every shot

Physical Training

The Split Step

The most important movement in padel. A small hop before each opponent’s strike:

  • Land on the balls of the feet, feet apart
  • Eliminates inertia, speeds up reaction time
  • Practise 50 consecutive split steps — 3 sets

Agility Ladder

  • Side steps, high knees, crossover steps
  • Focus on quality and form, not speed
  • 10 minutes at the start of the session

General Conditioning

  • Interval training: sprints (15 sec) + walking (30 sec) × 10 rounds
  • Press-ups, squats, lateral lunges — 3 sets × 15
  • 20–30 minutes is sufficient

Ball Machine

If available:

  • 30 minutes on one shot = at least 300 repetitions
  • Programme speed, direction, and interval
  • Especially useful for refining the backhand and volleys
  • Removes social inhibition

Rebounder Net

A portable training tool for home or the court:

  • Lower section — for powerful shots (smash, vibora, bandeja)
  • Upper section — for volleys
  • Drill: hit into the lower net → rebound → smash into the upper net → catch → repeat

Visualisation

5 minutes before or after training:

  • Close your eyes, picture yourself playing with confidence
  • Replay rallies in your head: serve → return → approach the net → volley
  • Visualise the successful execution of each shot
  • Visualisation builds neural pathways that improve real-game performance

Sample Solo Session Structure

BlockTimeContent
Warm-up5–10 minJogging, dynamic stretching, ladder
Shadow play5–10 minMovement simulation, split step
Wall drills15–20 minForehand/backhand, targets, serve
Bandeja/smash10 minToss and hit
Ball machine15–20 minTargeted repetitions (if available)
Cool-down + visualisation5–10 minStretching + mental work

Total: 55–80 minutes

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