Padel vs Beach Tennis: What's the Difference? (UK 2026)
Padel vs beach tennis compared: courts, nets, the no-bounce rule, equipment and where to play each in the UK - and which racket sport suits you.

Padel and beach tennis look like cousins - both use solid bats and thrive as social, mixed-doubles games - but they play nothing alike. One is a walled, bounce-based game; the other is a no-bounce volley sport on sand. If you're deciding which to try, here's an honest, factual comparison of how they differ and which might suit you.
Padel vs beach tennis at a glance
- Surface
- Padel: hard court (artificial grass). Beach tennis: sand
- Court size
- Padel: 20x10m. Beach tennis: 16x8m
- Net height
- Padel: 0.88m centre. Beach tennis: 1.7-1.8m
- Walls
- Padel: enclosed, in play. Beach tennis: none
- Bounce
- Padel: one bounce allowed. Beach tennis: no bounce - volley only
- Racket
- Both solid + stringless; beach tennis is longer/flatter, padel thicker
- Ball
- Both low-pressure; beach tennis even softer
- Format
- Both mostly mixed doubles
How do the courts and nets differ?
A padel court is a 20m by 10m hard court (usually artificial grass) fully enclosed by glass and mesh walls, with a low net at 88cm in the centre. A beach tennis court is smaller - 16m by 8m - laid out on sand with no walls at all, and crucially a much higher net at 1.7 to 1.8 metres, similar to beach volleyball. That high net and open sand court completely change how the game is played.
The big difference: bounce vs no bounce
This is the heart of it. In padel, the ball bounces once and can then be played off the back and side walls - the walls are part of the game, which is what gives padel its long, tactical rallies. In beach tennis, the ball must not bounce at all; because there's no rebound off sand and no walls, you have to return every ball before it touches the ground. That makes beach tennis a fast, reflex-driven volleying game - essentially beach volleyball played with rackets - while padel is a positional, wall-reading game. Beach tennis also uses a single serve (a fault loses the point), whereas padel's serve is underarm and diagonal.
Equipment differences
Both sports use solid, stringless, perforated rackets rather than strung ones, so they look similar at a glance - but they're not interchangeable. Beach tennis rackets are longer and flatter (up to around 50cm long) to volley balls out of the air, while padel rackets are shorter and thicker (around 38mm) and built for bounce-and-wall play. The balls differ too: a padel ball is a slightly smaller, lower-pressure tennis ball, while a beach tennis ball is softer still (even more depressurised) to suit the no-bounce, slower-flight game. If you play both, you need separate kit - see our how to choose a padel racket guide for the padel side.
Which should you play, and can you play beach tennis in the UK?
For availability, padel wins easily in the UK. Padel is booming, with new clubs opening across the country, whereas beach tennis is niche here - it needs sand courts, so it's largely limited to a handful of beach and indoor-sand venues. If you simply want a game you can play near home, padel is almost certainly the realistic choice.
On style: choose padel if you like tactical, rally-based play, the walls, and a game that's easy to keep going as a beginner. Choose beach tennis if you can access a sand court and enjoy fast, reflex volleying in a holiday-feeling setting. They scratch different itches - and the racket skills don't fully transfer, so treat them as separate sports. New to padel? Start with our beginner's guide.