Padel Shoulder Rehab ProgramFrom Shoulder Pain to Full Overhead Return.
Progressive rehabilitation for the most common padel shoulder injuries — rotator cuff strain, impingement, AC joint irritation. Physiotherapist-designed protocol.
Start Rehab →For most cases. Rotator cuff strain and impingement respond well to this protocol. Complete tears or surgical cases need separate management.
Of padel shoulder injuries. Resolve with conservative management — no injections, no surgery required.
Return target. Full overhead smash return with no pain, measured by Phase 3 exit criteria.
In short: padel shoulder rehab works through three phases — reduce pain and restore basic motion (weeks 1-2), rebuild rotator cuff and scapular strength (weeks 3-5), and return to overhead loading and court play (weeks 6-8). Most padel shoulder problems respond well to this protocol without injections.
FROM OUR COACHING TEAM
We’ve found that rotator cuff strain in padel typically stems from repetitive overhead shots without proper scapular stability. In our experience, impingement often develops when players compensate with shoulder shrugging instead of engaging their core. What we recommend is addressing mobility first—we focus on external rotation and thoracic extension—before progressing to stability work. We’ve seen remarkable improvements when players master scapular control during serves and smashes. Our approach emphasizes gradual return-to-sport, protecting that vulnerable supraspinatus muscle.
Players with pain during or after the padel overhead shot — what we see regularly in our clinic
Anyone diagnosed with rotator cuff strain or shoulder impingement — in our experience, these respond well to targeted rehab
Players who have started avoiding the overhead shot due to pain — we know this pattern often means it’s time to act
Rest vs Rehab
Phase 1: Pain Reduction (Weeks 1–2)
Calm irritated tissue. Restore simple movement.
Pendulum swings: 2×2 min each direction
Gravity-assisted movement. Stand bent forward, let the arm hang and swing in small circles. In our experience, this reduces shoulder joint compression without aggravating early-stage injuries.
Isometric external rotation: 5s hold × 10 reps
Press back of hand into wall at elbow height. Hold 5 seconds, release. What we recommend here is focusing on quality — this activates the rotator cuff without joint movement.
Supine ER with band: arm at side, gentle external rotation × 12
Lying on back, elbow bent at 90°, rotate forearm outward against light resistance. We’ve found this to be the gentlest active rotator cuff exercise in our program — perfect for building foundation strength.
No smashing, no serving, no overhead reaching. Any overhead activity will re-irritate the tissue and restart the inflammatory cycle. Groundstrokes may continue if pain stays below 2/10.
Phase 2: Rotator Cuff & Scapular Strengthening (Weeks 3–5)
Side-lying ER: 3×12 light weight — the classic rotator cuff exercise
Lie on uninjured side. Elbow at 90°. Rotate forearm upward. 4-count up, 2-count down. In our experience, this exercise alone resolves many shoulder problems when done consistently.
Band Y-T-W: 3×10 each letter — scapular stability
Bent forward at hips, arms forming Y, T, or W shapes with band resistance. What we recommend are these “forgotten” shoulder exercises—we’ve found they prevent most impingement issues.
Face pull: 3×15 — external rotation under load
Cable or band at head height, pull to face with external rotation. What we see in padel players is an internal rotation bias that develops from gripping and smashing—this movement counteracts that pattern.
Phase 3: Overhead Return (Weeks 6–8)
Wall press above head: start at 120°, progress to full overhead
Begin pressing into wall at slightly below full overhead. What we recommend is increasing range by 5° per session until full overhead press is pain-free.
Week 6: gentle overhead drops (no smash)
Bring the racket to smash position and drop it gently. No acceleration, no contact. In our experience, this loads the rotator cuff in the smash position without the impact.
Week 7: 50% smash — contact allowed
Controlled smash at half pace. What we see is that if pain stays below 2/10, you can increase pace by 10% each session.
Week 8: full smash — exit criteria
Full overhead range, no pain at 100% smash pace, and no post-play swelling. We’ve found that when all three criteria are met, you’re fully cleared.
You know the feeling — shoulder aches after every smash and you start avoiding the overhead shot. What actually works is not rest, but the right kind of loading at the right time. Tendons respond to progressive load — not to being protected indefinitely.
Padel Shoulder Rehab: FAQ
Questions about shoulder rehab for padel players
When can I return to playing padel during this program?
Groundstrokes from Week 2 if pain allows. No smashing until Week 6 Phase 3. Overhead return follows the graduated protocol in Phase 3.
Do I need an MRI before starting?
Not necessarily. A physiotherapist can diagnose most common padel shoulder presentations clinically. MRI is indicated if symptoms are severe, if the injury was traumatic, or if there has been no improvement after 3 months of conservative management.
What if I had a cortisone injection?
Wait 2 weeks post-injection before beginning Phase 1. The injection reduces inflammation — the rehab program then addresses the underlying weakness that caused the problem.
Can I prevent shoulder injuries from recurring?
Yes. Complete this program fully, then continue 1-2 rotator cuff sessions per week indefinitely. Most recurrences happen when players stop maintenance work after feeling better.
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