Padel Injuries: The Complete Guide to All 8 Common Injuries & How to Fix Them

All Injuries

All Common Padel Injuries — and How to Fix Them

You love padel. Your body is starting to pay for it. Eight injuries, one system, and a clear plan for each — so the next time pain shows up, you know exactly what to do instead of Googling in panic at midnight.

8injuries covered
3treatment phases per injury
0gatekeeping — all guides free
How to Use This System
1

Identify your injury

Scroll the grid below and find the guide that matches your pain. Each card shows severity and recovery time so you know what to expect.

2

Follow the treatment plan

Each injury guide walks you through 3 phases: acute, sub-acute, and return to play. Skip a phase and the problem usually comes back.

3

Build prevention habits

Treatment gets you back on court. Prevention is what keeps you there. The prevention cluster covers warm-up, mobility, and strength work.

Where Do You Feel the Pain?

Tap a zone on the body map to jump straight to the right guide.

← Tap an injury zone to learn more

Upper Body

Upper Body Injuries

Padel puts enormous repetitive load on the arm chain. Overhead shots, volleys, and grip pressure all compound over weeks — and usually show up as pain in the weakest link first.

Padel Elbow

Overuse tendinopathy on the outside of the elbow. The most common padel injury — especially in players who increase match frequency too fast. Typical player: amateur 30–50, playing 3+ times a week.

Mild to Moderate 2–12 weeks
View full guide

Padel Shoulder Pain

Rotator cuff irritation from repeated smashes, bandejas, and viboras. Builds quietly until a routine overhead shot feels wrong. Typical cause: high overhead volume with weak rotator cuff.

Mild to Moderate 4–16 weeks
View full guide

Padel Wrist Pain

Strain from grip pressure and poor backhand contact. Often appears alongside elbow issues — same underlying chain. Typical cause: gripping the racket too tight under pressure.

Mild 2–8 weeks
View full guide
Lower Body

Lower Body Injuries

The legs absorb every split-step, every lateral cut, every hard stop. Lower body injuries are the most common reason recreational padel players miss entire weeks of play.

Padel Knee Pain

Overload from lateral cuts and hard stops. Usually the hips and glutes are the real problem — the knee is just where it shows up. Typical player: weekend warrior playing on hard courts.

Mild to Moderate 4–12 weeks
View full guide

Padel Ankle Pain

Rolled ankles from sudden direction changes. The injury everyone knows — and the one most players return from too soon. Typical cause: one bad landing on a wet or uneven surface.

Moderate 3–10 weeks
View full guide

Calf & Achilles

Tightness and Achilles strain from sudden sprints on cold muscles. Underestimated — and often the first warning sign of bigger problems. Typical cause: skipping the warm-up before an explosive first set.

Mild to Moderate 3–10 weeks
View full guide

Padel Foot Pain

Builds slowly from wrong shoes, hard surfaces, or accumulated impact. If ignored, it cascades up into knees and hips. Typical cause: running shoes or worn-out trainers on padel courts.

Mild 2–8 weeks
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Core & Spine

Core & Spine Injuries

Padel demands rotation — and rotation is where most back pain actually comes from. Usually the hips are stiff, the core is weak, and the spine ends up doing work it was never designed for.

Padel Lower Back Pain

Almost always hip stiffness in disguise. Common in players who sit all day and then jump into high-rotation matches without proper mobility prep. Typical player: desk worker who plays evenings straight from the office.

Mild to Moderate 3–10 weeks
View full guide
Muscle Injuries

Muscle Strains

The ninth and final injury in our complete guide — a torn or pulled muscle. Happens in a split second and costs you weeks. Almost always preventable.

Padel Muscle Strain

A partial tear of the muscle fibers — most commonly in the hamstrings, adductors, calves, or obliques. Happens the instant the muscle is asked to do more than it can handle. Typical cause: explosive movement on cold or fatigued muscles.

Mild to Moderate 2–10 weeks
View full guide

Where on Court Do Injuries Happen?

Different zones produce different injury types. Here is the epidemiology.

NET OPPONENT’S HALF YOUR HALF
Where Injuries Happen
Back corners — Knee & Ankle
Lateral cuts and rapid direction changes at the back glass. High load on knee and ankle ligaments.
Back baseline — Lower Back
Trunk rotation on overhead smashes and lobs. Repeated rotation without recovery leads to muscular strain.
Net zone — Calf & Achilles
Explosive forward starts from the back court. The calf absorbs the initial push-off force on every sprint.
Mid-court overhead — Shoulder
Smash mechanics and overhead volleys. Rotator cuff load spikes during the deceleration phase of each swing.
Side walls — Wrist & Elbow
Glass retrieval shots require wrist and elbow stabilisation against the rebound angle — high eccentric load.

Sources: Del Corral et al. (2021); Fernández-García et al. (2021).

The 4 Reasons Every Padel Injury Happens

Four system-level causes — not one big mistake

01

Load

Going from 1–2 matches a week to 3–4 without letting tendons and joints adapt. The #1 cause of every injury on this page.

02

Technique

Bad grip pressure, poor overhead timing, collapsing knees on cuts. Small technical mistakes compound over hundreds of shots.

03

Recovery

No cooldown, no stretching, no sleep priority. Recovery is where the actual adaptation happens — skip it and load becomes damage.

04

Mobility

Stiff hips, tight ankles, locked mid-back. When one joint can’t move, another takes the load — which is why most injuries travel up and down the chain.

The Real Fix Is Not Just Treatment

Every injury guide points back to these two systems

Start Here

Prevention System

Stop injuries before they happen. Four guides that build the habits most padel players never develop. Warm up properly, train for the movements padel demands, and keep the pain from starting in the first place.

Full injury prevention guidePadel warm-up routinePadel mobility routinePadel strength training
Recover Smart

Recovery System

Come back faster — and stronger. Recovery is where actual healing happens. Four guides covering the 30-minute post-match protocol, cold vs heat therapy, and the sleep rules that make everything else work.

Padel recovery guideRecovery after padel matchIce vs heat decision guideSleep recovery for padel

Padel Injuries: Frequently Asked Questions

Quick answers to the general pain questions players ask most

What are the most common padel injuries?

The most common padel injuries are padel elbow, knee pain, shoulder pain, and ankle sprains. Together they account for the vast majority of time-off-court cases we see in recreational players.

Why are padel injuries so common?

Padel looks easy but it’s explosive, repetitive, and full of lateral movement. Most players increase match frequency faster than their bodies can adapt — and skip warm-up, mobility, and strength work that would actually protect them.

How do I know if my padel injury is serious?

If the pain is sharp, prevents sleep, doesn’t improve after 4 weeks of rest, or involves visible swelling or instability, see a physiotherapist. Each guide on this page has a “when to see a doctor” section with the specific red flags for that injury.

Can I keep playing padel with an injury?

Almost never a good idea. Playing through pain turns short-term problems into long-term ones. The fastest way to get back on court is usually to stop early, follow the treatment plan, and return gradually based on strength — not on how the pain feels.

What is the one thing that prevents most padel injuries?

A consistent 5-minute padel warm-up before every match. If you only change one thing after reading this page, make it that. Our warm-up routine is the single highest-return habit you can add to your game.

Start Fixing Your Injury Today — Not After the Next Match

Every match you play on an untreated injury doubles the time it will take to heal. Every week you wait, the problem compounds. Pick your guide from the grid above, start today, and get back to playing the way you used to.

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