Injury Guide

Padel Finger Injuries

Jammed fingers, mallet finger, ligament sprains, and pulley injuries — what they are, how serious each one is, and exactly what to do about it.

P
The PadelRevive Team
Written by players, for players — built in Zanzibar · Updated May 2026
Reviewed by a sports physiotherapistLast updated: May 2026 · Evidence-based content
4

main injury types in padel finger injuries

6-8 wks

mallet finger splinting — non-negotiable

48 hrs

window to see a specialist if mallet finger suspected

In short: most finger injuries in padel are caused by ball impact at awkward angles or by grip forces under a hard smash. The four types behave very differently — and the one most players dismiss (mallet finger) is the one that requires the most urgent and exact treatment.

Anatomy of the Finger

Understanding the structures before understanding the injuries

Your finger contains two joints that matter most for padel: the PIP joint (proximal interphalangeal — the middle knuckle) and the DIP joint (distal interphalangeal — the end knuckle). Both are hinge joints, meaning they bend and straighten but do not rotate. When a ball or grip force pushes them sideways or hyperextends them, the supporting structures tear.
The Joints

PIP and DIP Joints

The PIP joint (middle knuckle) takes the most punishment in padel — it is where jammed finger forces and lateral sprains concentrate. The DIP joint (end knuckle) is the site of mallet finger, where the extensor tendon attaches to the terminal phalanx. Both joints are stabilized by collateral ligaments running down each side (radial and ulnar) and a volar plate on the palm side that resists hyperextension.

The Tendons

Extensor and Flexor Systems

The extensor tendon runs along the back of the finger and inserts at the base of the distal phalanx. When a ball strikes the fingertip with the finger flexed slightly, this tendon can avulse (tear off the bone) — creating mallet finger. The flexor tendons run through a series of fibrous tunnels on the palm side called pulleys (A1 through A5), with the A2 pulley at the base of the finger being the most commonly injured in grip-loading sports.

The Ligaments

Collateral Ligaments and Volar Plate

Each finger joint has a radial collateral ligament (thumb side) and an ulnar collateral ligament (little finger side). These prevent sideways movement. The volar plate is a thick fibrocartilage structure on the palm side of the PIP joint that stops hyperextension. In a jammed finger, the volar plate is typically the first structure to fail — often before the collateral ligaments give way.

Types of Finger Injuries in Padel

Four injuries with four different mechanisms, severities, and treatment paths

Padel creates two distinct injury mechanisms for the fingers: ball impact (a ball travelling at speed hits the fingertip or the finger at an angle) and grip loading (the force of a hard smash or defensive lob loads the flexor pulleys through grip pressure). The four injuries below map to these two mechanisms.
Ball Impact Mild — Moderate

Jammed Finger

A ball strikes the fingertip while the PIP joint is slightly extended, driving an axial (along the bone) compression force into the joint. The volar plate stretches or partially tears, and the collateral ligaments may be involved. The finger swells, stiffens, and is painful to bend fully. Most jammed fingers in padel are Grade I or II — the volar plate is strained but not fully ruptured.

What to do: Buddy tape to the adjacent finger. Keep it mobile — immobilisation makes jammed fingers stiffer. Ice and elevation for 48 hours. Most resolve in 2–6 weeks.

Ball Impact — URGENT See Specialist

Mallet Finger

A ball strikes the tip of an extended finger, forcibly flexing the DIP joint. The extensor tendon avulses from its insertion at the distal phalanx — sometimes pulling a small bone fragment with it (bony mallet). The defining sign: the DIP joint droops and cannot be actively straightened. The player can straighten it passively (using the other hand) but it flops back down when released. This is a splinting emergency.

What to do: Splint in full DIP extension immediately. Do not wait. See a hand specialist within 48 hours. Failure to splint correctly means the tendon will not heal. See the warning section below.

Ball Impact Mild — Moderate

Collateral Ligament Sprain (PIP)

A ball strikes the finger from the side, or the grip slips and a lateral force is applied to the PIP joint. The radial or ulnar collateral ligament stretches or tears. The finger is painful on the side of the joint, swells quickly, and is tender to sideways pressure. Grade I: stretched, tender, stable joint. Grade II: partial tear, some instability. Grade III: complete rupture — the joint opens sideways under gentle stress.

What to do: Grade I–II: buddy tape and early active motion. Grade III: see a hand surgeon — operative repair is sometimes needed. Timeline: 3–8 weeks depending on grade.

Grip Loading Moderate

Pulley Injury (A2 Pulley)

Unlike the other three injuries, pulley injuries are not caused by ball impact — they come from grip loading under force. A hard smash with a tightened grip, or a reactive grip on a ball travelling at unexpected pace, can overload the A2 pulley at the base of the ring finger (occasionally the middle finger). The hallmark is a sharp “snap” or “pop” sensation at the base of the finger during a grip-intensive shot, with immediate pain and tenderness on the palm side.

What to do: Rest from gripping sports. H-taping for return to play. Grade I–II pulleys (partial tears) heal in 4–8 weeks. Grade III (complete rupture) may need surgery. Ultrasound confirms diagnosis.

Mallet Finger: The Most Commonly Mismanaged Finger Injury

This is not a “shake it off and keep playing” situation

CRITICAL — Read This Before You Do Anything Else

Mallet Finger Must Be Splinted Continuously for 6–8 Weeks

The extensor tendon that has avulsed from the DIP joint will only heal if the two ends are held together continuously. This means the DIP joint must be held in full extension at all times — including while sleeping, showering, and washing hands.

Even removing the splint for a few seconds resets the healing clock. If you take it off to wash the hand and the DIP joint flexes even slightly, the tendon ends separate again. The 6–8 week countdown starts from that moment, not from the original injury. Many players end up in an 8-week extension + 4-week extension + 4-week extension cycle because they keep interrupting the healing process.

The correct technique for safe splint removal (which should be rare): hold the DIP joint in extension with the other hand, keep the fingertip pressed back, and only then slide the splint off. The finger must never flex at the DIP joint during this process.

Signs you have mallet finger:
  • The end joint of the finger droops and will not actively straighten
  • You can push the fingertip straight with the other hand but it falls back down when released
  • A ball struck the extended fingertip during play
  • There may be a small bony fragment visible on X-ray (bony mallet)

If in any doubt: see a hand specialist or emergency department within 48 hours of injury. Do not wait. An untreated mallet finger that has passed 3 weeks becomes exponentially harder to treat conservatively.

Most mallet fingers treated within 48 hours and splinted correctly for the full 6–8 weeks heal completely without surgery. The failure rate is almost entirely caused by non-compliance with the splinting protocol. There is also a surgical option (pin fixation) but it carries risks of its own and is typically reserved for bony mallets with large fragments or for patients who cannot comply with splinting.
You know the feeling — a ball hits your finger funny, you shake it out, and carry on. Most players don’t realise that a dropped fingertip is a mallet finger and that every extra minute without a splint counts. What actually works is treating it as a medical emergency from the moment it happens, not after the match.

Treatment by Injury Type

Immediate actions, week-by-week progression, and return-to-play benchmarks

The table below gives the treatment pathway for all four injury types. The most important variable in every case is when you act — early treatment consistently produces better outcomes across all four categories.
InjuryImmediate (0–48 hrs)Week 1–4Return to Play
Jammed FingerIce, elevation, RICE protocol. Buddy tape to adjacent finger. Gentle active range-of-motion from day 1.Continue buddy taping for play. Active and passive flexion exercises to prevent stiffness. No forced extension.2–6 weeks. Continue buddy taping for 1–2 weeks after return. Full motion expected at 6–12 weeks.
Mallet Finger URGENTSplint DIP joint in full extension immediately. See hand specialist within 48 hours. X-ray to exclude bony fragment. DO NOT remove splint.Maintain DIP extension splint at all times — including sleep and showering. PIP joint remains free. Review at 4 weeks for compliance assessment.8 weeks + 4-week gradual weaning. Total 12 weeks before full match play. Night splinting often continued for a further 4 weeks after daytime weaning.
Collateral Ligament SprainRICE. Buddy tape to adjacent finger (Grade I–II). Grade III: immobilise and see specialist within 48 hours for stability assessment.Grade I: buddy tape for play, active ROM. Grade II: 2–3 weeks buddy taping before progressing. Grade III: may require surgical consultation.Grade I: 2–3 weeks. Grade II: 4–6 weeks. Grade III: 8–12 weeks minimum. Persistent instability may need operative repair.
A2 Pulley InjuryStop gripping activities immediately. Rest from padel and any gripping sport. Ice and anti-inflammatories. Ultrasound at 5–7 days for grading.Grade I: gentle range-of-motion from week 2. Grade II: H-tape or ring-pulley tape. Grade III: consider surgical referral. No heavy grip loading for 6 weeks minimum.Grade I: 4–6 weeks with H-taping. Grade II: 6–10 weeks. Grade III (conservative): 4+ months. H-tape the A2 pulley region for all play on return.

Buddy Taping Technique

The right way to tape — most players do it wrong

Rule 1

Tape the injured finger to the adjacent finger (index to middle, ring to little). Use 1.25 cm zinc oxide tape in two strips: one above and one below the PIP joint. Never over the joint itself — this blocks the range of motion that buddy taping is meant to preserve.

Rule 2

Buddy taping for collateral sprains should still allow full flexion and extension. The healthy finger acts as a splint against lateral force, not as a cast. Players who tape too tight create stiffness that outlasts the ligament injury by weeks.

Rule 3

Never buddy tape a suspected mallet finger. Mallet finger needs rigid extension splinting of the DIP joint. Buddy taping does not hold the DIP in extension and will not achieve tendon healing. These are two completely different treatment approaches for two different injuries.

2–6 wks
jammed finger recovery
8 wks
mallet finger splinting minimum
4–8 wks
A2 pulley Grade I–II recovery

Preventing Finger Injuries in Padel

Ball impact cannot always be avoided, but grip and reaction habits can reduce severity

Finger injuries from ball impact are partly a matter of timing and reaction, but several habits consistently reduce both frequency and severity. Grip injuries (pulley) are more directly preventable through technique and load management.
Grip Technique

Avoid the Death Grip

Most pulley injuries occur because players grip the racket harder than necessary — especially under pressure. A grip pressure of around 6 out of 10 is sufficient for most shots. The fingertip joints and tendons take far less load when the grip is relaxed between shots and only tightens at the moment of impact. This is a direct parallel to padel wrist pain prevention.

Reaction and Positioning

Track the Ball, Not Just the Opponent

Most finger impacts happen when a ball comes at an unexpected angle — a ball off the glass, a drop in trajectory, or a shot that clips the frame and flies unpredictably. Players who track the ball path rather than just the opponent position more effectively to intercept with the racket face rather than catching the ball with fingers extended. Good movement training habits reduce awkward defensive positions.

Equipment

Gloves and Overgrip Condition

Padel gloves (half-finger design) are controversial — some players find they reduce ball-impact trauma to the fingertips while others report reduced shot feel. They do not prevent mallet finger (the ball still hits the fingertip) but may absorb some of the energy in lower-velocity impacts. More relevant: a worn, slippery overgrip forces unconscious grip tightening which increases pulley load. Replacing overgrips regularly (every 3–5 sessions for regular players) is one of the cheapest injury-prevention habits in padel.

Hand Conditioning

Tendon and Ligament Preparation

Progressive grip strengthening — using a therapy putty, stress ball, or light resistance exercises — prepares the finger tendons and pulleys for the load of match play. This is especially important after a break from the sport. A2 pulley injuries are more common at the start of a season when players return to full grip loads before the tissue has adapted. See our prevention hub for the full warm-up protocol.

Keep Reading

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I know if my jammed finger is actually mallet finger?

The key test is active extension at the DIP joint (the end knuckle). With a jammed finger, you can still fully straighten the tip of the finger under your own power. With mallet finger, the fingertip droops and you cannot actively straighten it — you can push it straight with the other hand, but it falls back as soon as you let go. If you have any doubt, treat it as a mallet finger and see a hand specialist.

Can I play padel with a jammed finger?

Yes, with buddy taping to the adjacent finger — but only once you have confirmed it is a jammed finger (volar plate or collateral ligament sprain) and not a mallet finger. Playing with an undiagnosed mallet finger is a common mistake that significantly worsens outcomes. If the DIP joint droops, stop playing immediately.

How long does buddy taping take for a collateral ligament sprain?

Grade I sprains typically need 2–3 weeks of buddy taping for match play, with full recovery expected at 4–6 weeks. Grade II sprains need 4–6 weeks before returning to unrestricted play, with buddy taping continuing for the first 2–4 weeks back on court. The buddy tape is not a permanent fixture — it is removed at rest but used during any activity where lateral force could be applied.

What is the A2 pulley and why does it get injured in padel?

The A2 pulley is a fibrous ring at the base of the finger (just past the MCP joint) that holds the flexor tendons close to the bone, allowing them to transmit grip force efficiently. In padel, an unexpectedly heavy ball — a hard return on a defensive shot, or a smash with a tightened grip — can generate enough flexor tendon force to overload the pulley. The A2 pulley of the ring finger is the most commonly injured. The characteristic sign is a sharp pop at the base of the finger, immediately followed by tenderness on the palm side.

Does mallet finger always need surgery?

No. The majority of mallet fingers — including those with small bony fragments — heal completely with conservative splinting if treated promptly and the protocol is followed without interruption. Surgery (pin fixation) is reserved for mallet fingers with large bony fragments that are displaced or rotated, for patients who cannot comply with splinting, or for cases that have failed prolonged conservative treatment. Most hand surgeons will trial conservative management first for 6–8 weeks before considering operative intervention.

Can a finger injury stiffen permanently after padel?

Persistent stiffness is the most common long-term complication of PIP joint injuries, particularly jammed fingers and collateral ligament sprains. It is almost always caused by excessive immobilisation (keeping the finger completely still) rather than by the original injury itself. Early active range-of-motion with buddy taping, combined with gentle passive stretching, prevents the scar tissue buildup that leads to stiffness. Players who are put in rigid splints for jammed fingers (rather than buddy-taped) often develop stiffness that takes months to resolve.

Should I have an X-ray for a finger injury in padel?

X-ray is recommended for any finger injury where: the injury was caused by a direct high-velocity impact, there is significant swelling or deformity, the DIP joint droops (mallet finger — to check for a bony fragment), or you cannot bear weight through the fingertip. X-rays do not show ligament or tendon injuries (those need MRI or ultrasound) but they can confirm or exclude fractures and bony mallet fragments, which change the treatment approach.

Part of the PadelRevive padel injury + recovery system. Built by players, for players.
Scroll to Top