235 padel venues and clubs across the United States — the world's fastest-growing racquet sport. Tap a highlighted state on the map below.
Tap a highlighted state to find padel courts — grey states aren't listed yet
Looking for padel courts near you? This directory covers padel clubs and courts across the United States — from dedicated padel facilities to pickleball clubs that have added padel, with the most courts in Florida, Texas, California, New Jersey. Browse the venues below, then compare courts and get directions, or see our US padel statistics for market data and growth trends.
19 states with a dedicated padel page — updated as new clubs open
Every padel club and dual-sport facility we currently track

Padel — a doubles racquet sport played on an enclosed glass court, distinct from pickleball — is expanding rapidly in the US, with court counts growing roughly 80–100% year over year. Our directory tracks 235 padel venues and about 41 padel courts nationwide, including dedicated clubs and pickleball facilities that now offer padel.
Searching for padel courts near me, where to play padel, or an indoor padel club? Use the map and state list above to find a padel court near you. Every listing shows court counts, indoor or outdoor setting, ratings, and directions, so you can compare clubs and book a court in minutes — the most courts are in Florida, Texas, California, New Jersey.
Padel is most established in Florida, Texas, California, New York, and Arizona, with new clubs opening nationwide in cities like Miami, Houston, Dallas, Austin, Los Angeles, and New York City. Whether you're after a dedicated padel club, a public padel court, or a pickleball facility that has added enclosed glass padel courts, browse by state above to find padel courts near you.
Most US padel is played on indoor or covered courts for year-round play, though outdoor padel courts are growing fast too. Many clubs offer padel lessons and beginner clinics, coaching, leagues and tournaments, open-play matches, court rental by the hour, racquet and ball rental, and memberships — a great way to start playing padel even if you've never picked up a racquet.
Padel and pickleball are different sports, though many new clubs now offer both. Padel is played in doubles on an enclosed glass court with a solid racquet and a depressurized tennis ball; pickleball uses a flat paddle and a perforated ball on an open court. If you also play pickleball, use our pickleball court finder, and for market data and growth trends see our US padel statistics.
The list grows as new clubs open and as facilities are tagged in our directory. Don't see a padel club you know about? Add it for free — choose "Padel" or "Pickleball & Padel" as the sport.
See player counts, court totals, and growth trends by state.
View US Padel Statistics