Quick Answer: Padel is the global giant — a doubles sport on an enclosed glass court with walls in play, deeper strategy, and a bigger workout. Pickleball is America’s favorite — a smaller, cheaper, easier-on-day-one game you can play almost anywhere. If you have both nearby: pick padel for dynamic, tennis-like rallies; pick pickleball for the lowest barrier to entry and the fastest social game. Either way, starter gear runs well under $100.

The two fastest-growing racket sports on earth get confused constantly, and no wonder: both are doubles-first, both are easy to start, and both exploded out of the 2020s boom in social sports. But on court they’re genuinely different games — different courts, balls, gear, movement, and strategy. We play both weekly. Here’s the honest comparison, plus what it costs to start in each.

By the numbers

Padel vs pickleball at a glance

PadelPickleball
Court20x10 m, enclosed in glass/mesh; walls in play44x20 ft, open; no walls
BallLow-pressure felt ball (tennis-like)Plastic wiffle ball with holes
Racket/paddlePerforated foam-core racket, no strings (~$65–$330)Solid composite paddle (~$60–$250)
Serve & scoringUnderhand serve; tennis scoring (15/30/40)Underhand serve; rally or side-out scoring to 11
FormatAlmost always doublesDoubles and singles both common
Cost to playCourt rental ~$10–$25 pp/hourOften free public courts
Learning curveEasy; walls take 2–3 sessionsEasiest; rallies on day one

The court and the game feel

Padel is played inside a glass box, and the walls change everything. Balls rebound like in squash, so points last longer, defense is real, and smart lobs beat raw power. The game rewards patience, positioning, and creative use of the glass — it feels like tennis crossed with squash and chess.

Pickleball is an open mini-court game built around the net battle. The no-volley “kitchen” zone forces a soft dinking game punctuated by sudden speed-ups. Points are shorter and the action is concentrated in quick hand exchanges — it feels like doubles ping-pong at human scale.

Gear: what you need and what it costs

Padel needs a stringless foam-core racket, a can of pressurized balls, and — non-negotiable — shoes that grip sanded turf. Our full beginner racket guide and padel shoe rankings go deep, but the short version is below. Pickleball needs a solid paddle and a few plastic balls; court shoes help but any grippy trainer survives day one.

Starter itemSportRolePrice
Nox X-One EvoPadelBest starter racket~$65
Head Padel Pro S (can of 3)PadelStandard match ball~$6
K-Swiss Express Light PadelPadelBudget turf-grip shoe~$85
Vatic Pro Prism FlashPickleballBest starter paddle you won't outgrow~$85
Franklin Signature paddlePickleballBest paddle under $60~$60
Franklin X-40 outdoor balls (12-pack)PickleballStandard outdoor ball~$25

Starter picks if you choose padel

Nox X-One Evo

Padel starter racket · Round · ~$65
  • Forgiving round shape with a soft, arm-friendly core — the default first racket worldwide.
  • Durable enough to survive your first season of wall scrapes.
  • Cheap enough that upgrading later won't sting.
Check price on Amazon →

Head Padel Pro S balls

Padel match balls · ~$6 per can
  • The consistency benchmark — the can most clubs and leagues reach for.
  • Legal FIP bounce out of the can, and it lasts 3–4 sessions.
Check price on Amazon →

Starter picks if you choose pickleball

Vatic Pro Prism Flash

Pickleball starter paddle · ~$85
  • Thermoformed carbon paddle with a big, forgiving sweet spot.
  • The rare beginner paddle you won't need to replace as you improve.
Check price on Amazon →

Franklin X-40 outdoor balls

Pickleball balls · ~$25 per 12-pack
  • The standard outdoor tournament ball — consistent flight and bounce.
  • A dozen lasts a casual group months.
Check price on Amazon →

Fitness, injuries, and who each sport suits

Workout: padel edges it. The bigger court and lob-heavy rallies keep all four players moving, and match-tracking studies consistently show more distance covered per hour than rec pickleball doubles. Pickleball singles closes the gap; rec doubles is lighter exercise.

Injury profile: both are far kinder than tennis, but each has a signature risk. Padel’s is lower-limb — ankle and knee tweaks from lateral moves on sanded turf, which proper padel shoes largely prevent. Pickleball’s is falls and Achilles strains, especially in older players backpedaling for lobs.

Choose padel if you want longer rallies, tennis-like strokes, walls that add a whole strategic layer, and a serious-but-social workout — and you have a court within reach.

Choose pickleball if you want the cheapest, fastest way into a racket sport, courts on every corner (in the U.S.), and a game the whole family can genuinely play together on day one.

The bottom line

There’s no wrong answer — these are the two most welcoming racket sports ever invented. In the U.S., court access often decides: pickleball courts are everywhere, padel clubs are still arriving. But if you’ve got both options, try padel — the glass-wall game is the one growing on every continent, and a $65 starter racket plus one court booking is all it takes to find out why. When you’re ready to take it seriously, our best padel racket guide covers the upgrade path.

Check the Nox X-One Evo price on Amazon →