Best Padel Gloves UK 2026: Do You Actually Need One?

Best padel gloves UK 2026: most casual players don't need one - an overgrip is cheaper. When gloves help, half vs full finger, and what to look for.

Padel gloves and grip for better racket control
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By Rob Griffiths26 June 2026 · 5 min read

Padel gloves are one of the most over-bought accessories in the sport. They are not banned, some professionals wear them, and the shops are full of them, but the honest truth is that the average club player will get more out of a fresh overgrip. This guide explains who actually benefits, what to look for, and when to skip a glove entirely.

Do you need a padel glove at all?

Usually not. There is no rule against gloves in padel, but for most people they solve a problem an overgrip already handles. If you play once or twice a week on indoor courts, replacing a worn overgrip restores tackiness for a couple of pounds and keeps the direct racket feel that many players prefer. Before buying a glove, try a fresh overgrip first.

Where a glove genuinely helps is a narrower set of cases, covered next. If grip is your real concern, our how to choose a padel racket guide and the best padel rackets roundup are worth reading too, since racket weight and balance affect how hard you have to grip in the first place.

Who actually benefits from a padel glove?

Three groups get real value from a glove. First, players with sweaty palms: an absorbent or silicone-gripped palm adds control that an overgrip alone cannot match once your hand is wet. Second, high-frequency players: in long matches or hot conditions, a well-fitted glove reduces hand fatigue and blistering. Third, cold-weather outdoor players: a full-finger glove keeps your hand warm enough to actually feel the racket on a winter morning.

If none of those describe you, the money is better spent on overgrips or a lesson.

Half-finger or full-finger?

For most padel use, a half-finger glove is the right call. It covers the palm and the base of the fingers while leaving the fingertips exposed, so you improve grip and reduce blistering with minimal loss of feel. Full-finger gloves cover the whole hand and are warmer, which makes them the practical choice for cold outdoor play but slightly more muffling for touch shots.

Whichever you pick, fit matters more than anything: the glove should feel snug but not compress your knuckles. If your fingers feel pinched, size up.

What to look for in a padel glove

Fit
Snug, not compressive; size up if knuckles feel pinched
Coverage
Half-finger for feel and grip; full-finger for cold outdoor warmth
Palm grip
Silicone-dot or absorbent palm for sweaty hands
Breathability
Mesh or perforated panels on the back of the hand
Brands to consider
Bullpadel, NOX, Babolat (padel-specific); Macwet (grip-glove specialist)
Cheaper alternative
A fresh overgrip, if your only issue is occasional slip

How should you care for a padel glove?

Treat it like any technical sports fabric. Air it out after every session rather than leaving it balled up in your bag, where sweat and odour set in. Wash it according to the maker's instructions, usually a gentle hand wash and air dry, and replace it when the palm grip wears smooth or the fit stretches out. A glove that has lost its grip is doing less than a fresh overgrip would. For looking after the rest of your kit, see our racket care and replacement guide.

Q01Do padel players wear gloves?
Some do, especially in warm conditions or when managing hand issues, and there is no rule against them. But most casual UK club players do not need one - a fresh overgrip does the same job more cheaply with better racket feel.
Q02Are padel gloves worth it?
For players with sweaty palms, high-frequency players, and cold-weather outdoor play, yes. For the average once-or-twice-a-week indoor player, an overgrip is the more sensible buy.
Q03Half-finger or full-finger padel gloves?
Half-finger is best for most padel, keeping grip and feel while reducing blisters. Full-finger gloves are warmer and suit cold outdoor play but slightly muffle touch shots.
Q04What size padel glove should I get?
Choose a snug fit that does not compress your knuckles. If your fingers feel pinched at the base, go up a size. A glove that is too tight tires your hand faster, not less.