Beginner Padel Fitness Program: Court-Ready in 6 Weeks | PadelRevive

Programs · 6 Weeks · Beginner

Beginner Padel Fitness ProgramCourt-Ready in 6 Weeks.

Build the base fitness, ankle stability, and body control every new padel player needs — no gym experience or equipment required.

Start Week 1 →
P
The PadelRevive Team
Sports physiotherapists, padel coaches, and performance specialists · Updated April 27, 2026
6

Weeks. Three sessions per week, 20-30 minutes each. Bodyweight only.

1 in 3

Beginners injured in year one. Most from ankle sprains and knee pain caused by unpreparedness — this program prevents that.

Zero

Equipment needed. No gym, no bands, no weights required for the first four weeks.

In short: this 6-week beginner program builds ankle stability, knee control, shoulder mobility, and basic cardiovascular fitness through three sessions per week with no equipment. By week 6 you move on court with significantly lower risk of the ankle sprains and joint pain that sideline most beginners in their first year.

Brand new to padel

Anyone starting padel with no structured fitness background — what we’ve found is that these players benefit most from our progressive approach

Feeling unfit

Players who feel stiff, slow, or sore for days after their first sessions — in our experience, this is exactly what we’re designed to address

First-time athletes

People who want to get fit through padel and need a structured starting point — we know that our team’s approach helps you build the foundation you need

Gym strength training for padel

The 6-Week Program

Each week builds on the previous

Weeks 1–2: Movement Basics
01

Session A: Squat 3×10 · Hip bridge 3×10 · Wall push-up 3×10 · Dead bug 3×6

In our experience, learning the fundamental movement patterns before adding any load is essential. We recommend focusing on control, not fatigue.

02

Session B: Step-up 3×8 each · Side-lying clam 3×12 · Band pull-apart 3×10

We’ve seen that single-leg work from week one is critical — padel is a single-leg sport. Step-ups teach you to control lateral force through one leg at a time, which is fundamental to our approach.

03

Session C: 15 min walk/jog · Single-leg balance 3×20s each · Ankle circles 2×10

Proprioception baseline and cardiovascular introduction. What we know from working with hundreds of padel players is that the single-leg balance is the most important exercise in this phase.

Weeks 3–4: Cardio Base
01

Circuit: squat + push-up + hip bridge × 3 rounds, 30s rest

We’ve found this builds the aerobic capacity to handle 60-minute padel sets without fading. The circuit format mimics the repeated effort structure of padel that we see on court every match.

02

25 min continuous jog at easy talking pace

The “talking pace” rule: if you cannot hold a conversation, you are going too fast. In our experience, Zone 2 cardio builds the aerobic base that prevents the fatigue-related injuries we see most often in padel.

03

Lateral shuffle 3×10m · Split step drill 3×10 · Single-leg squat to box 3×6

Court-movement introduction. What we recommend here is the split step drill to train the explosive first movement that every padel point starts with—our team knows this is foundational.

Weeks 5–6: Court Readiness
01

Sport-specific movements at full speed

Lateral squat 3×8 each, rotational reach 3×8 each, T-drill run 5 reps. What we recommend at this stage is training the patterns padel actually uses — you’ve built the foundation, now let’s refine it.

02

35 min easy run — notice how much easier it is than Week 1

This is your progress marker. In our experience, the same cardio session that felt hard in week 1 should feel manageable in week 6. We’ve seen this transformation countless times — that’s the base you’ve built.

03

Establish your maintenance routine

2 sessions per week, 20 min each — what we know works is making this your new permanent baseline. We’ve found that consistency after week 6 is what separates players who stay court-ready from those who regress.

We’ve been through it — starting padel and feeling completely wrecked after one game, ankles sore and knees aching. What actually works is spending 6 weeks building the engine before expecting it to run.
Your most important first purchase: padel-specific court shoes protect ankles and knees from the rotational forces of lateral movement — standard trainers lack the lateral reinforcement that padel demands
Best padel shoes for beginners →
Start Playing from Week 1

You do not need to complete the program before playing. Play 1-2 times per week alongside it. The program prepares your body for what court time demands — it runs in parallel, not before.

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

Beginner Padel Fitness Program: FAQ

Questions from players starting out

How long before I can start playing padel?

You can start playing from week one — in fact, it is encouraged. Play 1-2 times per week alongside the program. The program does not gate your court time.

I am over 50 — is this right for me?

Yes. The program is designed for all ages. Over 50, take 2-3 extra rest days if needed and reduce volume by 20% in weeks 1-2. The joint stability work is especially important for older beginners. See also our Senior Padel Fitness Program for a 50+ specific version.

What happens after 6 weeks?

After completing this program you are ready for either the 8-Week Injury Prevention Program or the 12-Week Performance Program, depending on your goals.

I play padel twice a week already. Do I still need this?

Very likely yes. Padel itself does not build the off-court stability that prevents injury. Playing more padel without supporting work is a risk factor, not a prevention strategy.

Keep Reading

The next steps after completing this program

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