Padel Blisters
Padel blisters are one of the most common skin injuries in the sport — friction from the grip, pressure from footwear, and moisture from sweat combine to strip away the outer layers of skin faster than it can adapt. They are uncomfortable, occasionally debilitating, and almost entirely preventable.
The raw patch on your palm after a hard smash session. The toe that pulses through your shoe on every serve. The heel blister that makes walking off court feel worse than the match itself. You know this. And you also know most players have no idea how to handle it properly.
Blister types — friction, pressure, and blood blisters each need different treatment
Blister locations — palm, fingers, toes, ball-of-foot, and heel are all common padel sites
Preventable — with correct grip technique, footwear fit, and moisture management
In short: blisters form when repetitive shear force separates the skin layers and fluid fills the gap. In padel, that happens faster than in most racket sports because of the grip friction during smashes, the lateral footwork demands, and the heat and sweat that soften the skin. The solution is not toughing it out — it is understanding exactly what is happening and stopping it before it starts.
The Three Types of Blisters Padel Players Get
Each type forms differently — and each needs a different response
Friction Blisters
Caused by repetitive rubbing between the skin and another surface — grip tape, shoe interior, or sock seam. The epidermis shears away from the dermis below it and lymphatic fluid fills the gap.
In padel: Classic location is the palm and the base of the fingers, from grip friction during drives and smashes. Toes get friction blisters from footwork.
Pressure Blisters
Caused by sustained downward pressure rather than lateral shearing. The tissue is compressed repeatedly against a hard surface — usually the sole of the foot against the midsole of a shoe.
In padel: Ball of foot and heel — areas that absorb impact during explosive starts and hard stops on the court surface.
Blood Blisters
Form when the shear or crush force is severe enough to rupture blood vessels beneath the skin. The fluid is blood rather than clear lymph, giving the blister its characteristic dark red or purple appearance.
In padel: Fingertip or toe injuries from sudden jamming or catching during play. Do NOT attempt to drain these at home.
Where Padel Causes Blisters — and Why Each Location Is Different
Five distinct zones, five distinct mechanisms
| Location | Padel Mechanism | Blister Type | Primary Fix |
|---|---|---|---|
| Palm | Grip rotation during smashes and drives; the hand twists against the grip tape | Friction | Grip technique + overgrip replacement |
| Index finger (pad) | The finger presses against the grip during the power phase; skin shears at the crease | Friction | Finger tape or padel glove |
| Toes (especially little toe) | Lateral direction changes push toes against the shoe sidewall; sock seams compound this | Friction | Padel-specific shoes with wider toe box + seamless socks |
| Ball of foot | Explosive starts and jumps concentrate impact force on the forefoot metatarsal heads | Pressure | Cushioned insoles + moisture-wicking socks |
| Heel | Hard stops cause the heel to slide forward inside the shoe, rubbing against the heel counter | Friction / Pressure | Secure heel fit + heel-lock lacing |
Treatment: What to Do (and What NOT to Do)
The fluid inside a blister is doing a job — respect it
- 1Clean the area with mild soap and water. Pat dry.
- 2Cover with a donut pad or hydrocolloid blister plaster. The donut pad redistributes pressure away from the blister roof. The hydrocolloid maintains moisture and accelerates healing.
- 3Leave the roof on. The blister roof is your best wound cover. It will naturally reabsorb or harden off over 3–7 days.
- 4Change the dressing daily or if it becomes wet. Check for signs of infection each time.
If a blister is large enough to significantly impair grip or walking, draining it may be appropriate. This is a sterile procedure — shortcuts increase infection risk substantially.
- 1.Wash hands thoroughly. Clean the blister and surrounding skin with antiseptic (iodine or chlorhexidine).
- 2.Sterilise a fine needle with an alcohol wipe. Pierce the edge of the blister, not the top — this preserves the roof.
- 3.Gently press to drain the fluid. Do not remove the overlying skin.
- 4.Apply a non-stick dressing and secure with medical tape. Replace every 24 hours.
Blood blisters contain blood from ruptured capillaries, not clear lymph fluid. Draining them breaks the protective seal and introduces bacteria directly into a wound with a compromised vascular bed. Cover with a hydrocolloid plaster and leave it to resolve on its own. If the blister is large, painful at rest, or shows any signs of infection, seek professional medical assessment.
Blister Prevention in Padel
Fix the friction source, not just the symptom
You know the feeling — that tight, hot patch forming on your palm halfway through the second set, when you know you still have another hour to play. Most players don’t realise that sensation is the skin telling you the grip has become wrong, not that the skin has become weak. What actually works is fixing the source: grip technique, overgrip freshness, shoe fit, and moisture management. Build those habits before the blisters form, not after.
Grip Technique
Gripping too tightly is the single biggest cause of palm blisters in padel. A death grip on the handle forces constant shearing friction. The correct hold should feel controlled but not white-knuckled. Practice relaxing the grip between points and re-setting it as you prepare to hit. This alone significantly reduces palm blister incidence in new players.
Overgrip and Grip Tape
An old, glazed overgrip is essentially a friction machine. Fresh overgrip has slight tackiness that reduces sliding. Replace it every 2–4 sessions or whenever you notice it becoming slick. In hot conditions, grip a moisture-absorbing overgrip (look for absorbent rather than tacky). In cooler, dry conditions, a tackier overgrip is fine. Never play through a soaked overgrip — the skin softens rapidly in moisture and blisters form at a fraction of the normal friction load.
Padel Gloves — Helpful or Not?
Opinion is split. A thin padel glove does reduce palm friction substantially and is especially useful during the skin-hardening phase when returning after a break. The downside is reduced tactile feedback from the grip — some players find their touch suffers, particularly on dinks and delicate volleys. The practical answer: use a glove to protect an existing blister while it heals, and consider one for the first 2–3 sessions back after a long break. For established players with hardened palms, gloves are rarely necessary.
Moisture-Wicking Socks
Wet skin blisters at roughly half the friction force of dry skin. A synthetic moisture-wicking sock keeps the foot surface drier for longer than cotton. Double-layer socks (two thin layers that slide against each other rather than against the skin) are the gold standard for blister prevention in high-friction footwear. Avoid cotton sports socks for padel entirely — they retain sweat and provide no moisture management once saturated.
Padel Shoe Fit
Shoe fit is the most overlooked variable in foot blister prevention. The correct fit leaves approximately one thumb-width of space between the longest toe and the end of the shoe. The heel should not lift during walking — a loose heel creates constant rubbing on every step. Lacing technique matters too: a heel-lock lacing pattern (using the extra eyelet at the top) dramatically reduces heel movement inside the shoe and is one of the most effective free interventions available.
Gradual Volume Build-Up
Skin adapts to friction stress by thickening and hardening at pressure points — this is the same process that gives experienced players calluses where new players get blisters. But adaptation takes time, and over-loading the system too quickly overwhelms it. Players returning after a break or ramping up session frequency are most at risk. Increase play volume by no more than 10–20% per week. Pre-tape known blister sites during the adaptation phase.
Return to Play With Blisters
You can usually keep playing — but protect the wound properly
Match-Day Protocol for Active Blisters
When to Seek Medical Attention
Most blisters are self-limiting — but some are not
- •Red streaks radiating outward from the blister (sign of spreading infection / lymphangitis)
- •Pus (thick, cloudy, or coloured fluid) — clear fluid is normal, coloured fluid is not
- •Increasing redness or warmth well beyond the blister edge over 24–48 hours
- •Swollen lymph nodes in the arm (for palm blisters) or groin (for foot blisters)
- •Fever, chills, or feeling systemically unwell alongside a blister
- •A very large blood blister (larger than 2cm) that is painful at rest and not reducing in size
Keep Reading
Frequently Asked Questions
Should I pop a blister I get from padel?
For most small friction blisters, the answer is no. The fluid-filled roof protects the raw skin underneath and maintains a moist healing environment. Leave it intact, cover it with a hydrocolloid blister plaster, and let it reabsorb naturally over 3–7 days. For large blisters that actively impair grip or walking, careful draining using a sterile needle at the edge of the blister is acceptable — but never remove the roof, and never drain blood blisters.
Why do I keep getting blisters on my palm from padel?
Recurring palm blisters almost always come from one of three causes: gripping the racket too tightly, playing with an old or glazed overgrip, or a combination of both with excessive moisture from sweat. Start by relaxing your grip between points and replacing your overgrip every 2–4 sessions. In hot or humid conditions, switch to an absorbent overgrip. If the blisters persist, a thin padel glove can break the cycle while your skin hardens.
How do I prevent blisters on my toes in padel?
Toe blisters in padel are almost always caused by the toes being pushed against the shoe sidewall during lateral direction changes, combined with moisture softening the skin. The primary fixes are: (1) ensure your padel shoes have enough toe box width and at least one thumb-width of length, (2) switch to moisture-wicking or double-layer socks, and (3) use heel-lock lacing to prevent the foot sliding forward inside the shoe during play.
Can I play padel with a blister?
Yes, in most cases. Blisters do not require time off court as long as the wound is properly covered, there are no signs of infection, and the pain is manageable. Apply a hydrocolloid blister plaster or donut pad over the blister before play, secure it with medical tape, and replace the dressing between sessions. Never play with an open, uncovered blister — this risks infection and significantly slows healing.
What is the fastest way to heal a padel blister?
The fastest healing environment is a moist one with the blister roof intact. A hydrocolloid plaster (such as Compeed) maintains exactly this environment and typically accelerates healing by 40–50% compared to leaving the blister uncovered. Keep it dry, change the dressing daily, and avoid activities that repeatedly stress the site. Resist the urge to expose the blister to air — this dries it out and slows cell migration.
When should I see a doctor about a blister?
See a doctor if you notice: red streaks spreading from the blister, pus or cloudy fluid, fever or feeling unwell, swollen lymph nodes, or if the area is getting significantly worse rather than better after 3–5 days of proper care. Players with diabetes, poor circulation, or immune conditions should apply a lower threshold and seek assessment for any blister that does not improve within 48 hours.
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