How to Start a Padel Club from Scratch: Step-by-Step Guide

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Introduction: from player to organizer

You play padel every week. You have a WhatsApp group with your regular crew, you organize matches on Tuesdays and Thursdays, and more and more people keep joining. At some point, the thought crosses your mind: why not start a club?

The idea sounds ambitious, but the reality is much simpler than it seems. A padel club does not need its own venue, a huge budget, or a lawyer. What it needs is a group of people who want to play in an organized way, a clear set of rules, and the right tools to manage the day-to-day.

This guide walks you through every step from the initial idea to having a functioning club: with members, regular matches, internal tournaments, and — if you want — even your own ranking system. Let's get started.

What do you need to get started?

Before getting bogged down with bylaws or paperwork, review this checklist. If you tick most of these boxes, you already have everything essential:

If you have the first four points covered, you can have your club up and running this very weekend.

Step 1: Define your club

The first step is to shape the idea. Keep it simple: it is about making a few decisions that will define your club's identity.

Choose a name

It can be something serious (Riverside Padel Club) or something fun (The Backhand Brigade). What matters is that it is easy to remember and identifies the group. The name will also appear in standings and tournaments, so pick something everyone is comfortable with.

Decide on the sports focus

Padel only or multi-sport? If your group also plays tennis or soccer, a broader club might make sense. But if padel is what brings you together, focus on that — you can always expand later.

Establish the basic rules

You do not need a 50-page rulebook. These four things are enough to get started:

  1. Who can join? Open to everyone, invitation-only, minimum skill level required?
  2. Is there a fee? Many informal clubs start with no fee. If there are expenses (court rental, balls), a small monthly fee (5-15 euros) avoids problems.
  3. When do you play? Fixed schedule (Tuesdays and Thursdays at 8 PM) or flexible with advance booking.
  4. How are courts booked? First come, first served; weekly rotation; by draw. Defining this from the start prevents conflicts.

For initial communication, a WhatsApp group works perfectly. As the club grows, you will need something more structured — but to get things rolling, WhatsApp is fine.

This is the question that holds most people back: do I need to register the club legally? The short answer: probably not, at least at the beginning.

When you do NOT need a legal structure

If your club is a group of friends who get together to play, share court costs, and organize internal matches, you do not need any legal formalities. You just play. Thousands of padel groups operate this way without any issues.

When it IS worth it

Things change if you want to:

How do you register a sports club?

The process varies by region, but generally involves:

  1. Drafting basic bylaws (free templates are available online).
  2. Holding a founding assembly with at least 3 people.
  3. Registering with the Sports Entities Registry of your region.
  4. Obtaining a tax identification number from the tax authority.

The process is usually free or involves a very small fee (10-30 euros). You do not need a lawyer, though an administrative consultant can save you time.

Practical tip: Start without a legal structure. If after 6 months the club has traction and you need any of the advantages mentioned above, then formalize it. Not the other way around. Bureaucracy can kill the excitement before you even hit your first shot.

Note: This information is for guidance only. Regulations vary by region. Check your local government's website for specific requirements.

Step 3: Organize the activities

A club without activity is just a dead WhatsApp group. The key to making it work is having a calendar of activities that keeps members engaged and builds routine. No need to reinvent the wheel — simple works.

Regular matches

The backbone of any club. Set one or two fixed days per week to play. Consistency matters more than frequency: a sacred Tuesday is better than three random days no one remembers. If there are more players than spots, rotate groups weekly so everyone participates.

Internal league

A round robin format (everyone plays everyone) is perfect for small clubs. Each pair plays against the others over several weeks. Points are tallied and there is a final standing. It is easy to organize and keeps interest alive throughout the season.

If you want something more dynamic, an ELO ranking updates the standings after every match, rewarding victories against higher-ranked opponents. BookrGo implements this system automatically for every club, included on the free plan.

One-off tournaments

A monthly or quarterly tournament in single elimination format adds excitement. It does not need to be long: with 8 pairs, you can play quarterfinals, semifinals, and the final in a single Saturday afternoon. It is also a perfect excuse to invite friends from outside the club and attract new members.

Other activities

Step 4: Member and booking management

When the club has 8-10 members, WhatsApp can work. When it reaches 15, 20, or more, chaos is guaranteed. Lost messages, duplicate bookings, people who do not know when they are supposed to play. You need a system.

The manual approach

A shared Google Calendar for bookings and a spreadsheet for the ranking. It works for very small clubs, but the manual upkeep is enormously time-consuming. Someone has to update results, send reminders, and manage new members and departures. If you want to dive deeper into organizing community bookings, we recommend our guide to organizing padel court bookings in communities.

The tool-based approach

An app designed for padel clubs solves all of this automatically. With BookrGo, for example, you can:

Setting all this up takes less than 10 minutes: you create the club, define the courts, share the invite link, and members start joining. For more information on available booking apps, check out our comparison of padel court booking apps.

Step 5: Grow your club

You have the club set up, members are playing, and the calendar is working. Now it is time to grow — but smartly.

Word of mouth is your best ally

Most new members will come because a current member tells them about the club. Make this easy: always have an invite link ready and encourage members to bring friends. A "bring a friend to try" approach works better than any ad.

Social media (without overthinking it)

An Instagram account where you post match photos, tournament results, and fun moments gives you local visibility. Facebook groups for your neighborhood or area are also a good channel. You do not need to be an influencer — one post a week is enough.

Welcome newcomers with patience

One of the most common mistakes is that the founders form a closed group and newcomers feel excluded. Assign someone a "buddy" role for each new member: someone to explain the rules, introduce them to the group, and play with them during the first few weeks.

Look outward

When the club reaches a certain size, organize inter-club matches. It is motivating for members, expands your network, and puts your club on the local scene. Many padel friendships start by playing "away" at another club.

Common mistakes when starting out

After watching many clubs get started, these are the most frequent stumbling blocks:

Remember: A padel club is not a business. It is a group of people who share a hobby. The organization should serve the fun, not the other way around. If running the club starts feeling like a second job, something is wrong.

Frequently asked questions

How many people do you need to start a padel club?

For an informal club, 8-10 people who play regularly give you enough critical mass to organize matches without difficulty. To officially register a sports club, most regions require a minimum of 3 people at the founding assembly, though the exact number may vary by local regulations. Ideally, start with a group of 12-20 players to have a buffer if some cannot attend every week.

Do I need to register my padel club legally?

Not to play. If your club is an informal group of friends who get together to practice padel, you do not need any legal formalities. It is only worth formalizing the club as a sports association if you want to charge membership fees through a dedicated bank account, access reduced rates at municipal courts, get collective insurance, or compete in official Federation leagues. Our advice: start without a legal structure and formalize later if you need to.

How much does it cost to start a padel club?

Starting an informal padel club can literally cost zero if you already have access to a court (residential complex, free municipal court). The typical expenses are court rental (if not your own), balls, and possibly a management tool. BookrGo offers a free plan that includes ${pEn.freeFeatures} for up to 1 court and 10 members. For tournaments and ELO rankings, paid plans range ${pEn.paidPlansRange}. If you decide to officially register the club, the registration fee at the Sports Entities Registry is usually 10-30 euros. In total, many clubs launch with less than 50 euros of initial investment.

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