How to Find Padel Players in Your City with PADLR.
You just moved to a new city. You've got your racket, you've found a court — but you don't know a single person who plays padel. Here's how to fix that.
Padel is the fastest-growing sport in the world, but it has an awkward problem: finding people to play with is still unreasonably hard.
Courts are popping up everywhere — from Madrid to Manchester, Dublin to Dallas, Stockholm to Sydney. But booking a court is the easy part. Filling it? That's where most players get stuck.
If you're new to the sport, new to a city, or just tired of scrambling to find a fourth player, you already know the frustration. PADLR. was built to solve it.
The WhatsApp problem
Right now, most padel communities run on WhatsApp groups. If you're not in the group, you're invisible.
Maybe someone at your local club adds you to "Padel Thursday Crew." Maybe a colleague forwards an invite to "Dublin Padel Players." These groups work — until they don't. They're fragmented. They're chaotic. If you're a beginner, you have no idea whether the people posting are at your level or three tiers above you. And if you've just arrived in a new city, you don't even know these groups exist.
This is the reality for most padel players today: your ability to find partners depends entirely on who you happen to know. That's not a system — it's a bottleneck.
PADLR. replaces the bottleneck with a platform.
Seven ways to find padel players near you
PADLR.'s Discover tab is designed around one goal: connect you with the right people to play with, wherever you are. Here's every tool it gives you.
1. Find friends who already play
The fastest way to build your padel network is to start with people you already know.
When you join PADLR., the app can check which of your phone contacts are already on the platform. This uses privacy-preserving hashed matching — your actual contact details are never uploaded or stored. The app simply tells you: "Hey, these people in your phone are already here."
You'd be surprised how many people in your contacts play padel and you had no idea. A colleague who never mentioned it. A university friend in another city. Your neighbour. One tap and you're connected — ready to follow each other, see each other's matches, and start organising games.
This is the easiest on-ramp. You don't have to search for anyone. PADLR. finds them for you.
2. Browse players near you
Open the Discover tab and you'll see a Players Near You section — a live feed of PADLR. users in your area. Each player card shows everything you need at a glance: their name, handle, avatar, skill rating, confidence level, and location.
No scrolling through endless profiles. No guessing whether someone is active. These are real players, near you, who want to play.
If someone looks like a good match, tap their card to see their full profile — match history, rating progression, badges. And if you like what you see, hit Follow to add them to your network, or go straight to Challenge to set up a game.
For players who've just moved to a new city, this is transformative. Instead of weeks of awkward "does anyone here play padel?" conversations, you can see your local padel community the moment you open the app.
3. Filter by skill level to find your match
This is where PADLR. solves a problem that WhatsApp groups never could.
Every player on PADLR. has a verified rating between 0 and 7, calculated from actual match results using a Bayesian rating system. This isn't a self-reported "I'd say I'm intermediate" — it's a statistically derived measure of real on-court performance.
In the Discover tab, you can filter players by skill level using quick-select chips (levels 1 through 7) or dial in a precise rating range with the advanced rating slider. Looking for players between 2.5 and 3.5? Set the slider and see exactly who's in that window.
There's also a distance slider measured in kilometres, so you can widen or narrow your search radius depending on how far you're willing to travel for a game.
Why does this matter? Because playing against people at the wrong level isn't fun for anyone. A 2.0 player joining a 4.5 match is going to have a bad time — and so are the other three players. Skill-level filtering means every game you find through PADLR. has a better chance of being competitive, enjoyable, and worth your time.
For beginners especially, this is a game-changer. Finding other beginners to learn with is the single hardest part of getting into padel. PADLR. makes it as simple as sliding a filter.
4. Join open games near you
Sometimes you don't want to organise — you just want to play. The Open Games section in the Discover tab shows you bookable matches with open slots happening near you.
These are real bookings at real courts with real times. Someone has already reserved the court and they need players. Browse what's available, find a match that fits your schedule and skill level, and join with one tap.
No group chats. No "can anyone play Tuesday?" messages that get buried under 47 unread notifications. Just a clean list of games you can join right now.
Open games also show the skill level of the players already signed up, so you know what you're walking into before you commit. If it's a 3.5-average game and you're a 3.2, you'll fit right in. If it's a 5.0 group and you're a 2.5, you can keep scrolling.
This is how padel should work: open, accessible, and organised.
5. Create a public booking and let players come to you
The flip side of joining games is hosting them. When you create a match on PADLR., you can set it as Public — making it visible to every player in your area.
Here's the scenario: you and a friend have booked a court for Saturday morning, but you need two more players. Instead of firing messages into three WhatsApp groups and hoping someone's free, you create a public booking on PADLR. Players nearby see it in their Open Games feed. They check the time, the venue, the skill level, and if it works, they join.
You can also share a link to your open booking — send it via text, social media, email, wherever. Anyone who taps the link can see the match details, and even non-users get prompted to download PADLR. and join. It's the simplest way to grow the padel community at your local club.
For players who like to organise regular sessions, public bookings turn you into a magnet. You're no longer chasing people — they're finding you.
6. Challenge any player directly
Found someone interesting on the Discover tab? Tap Challenge on their profile and PADLR. pre-populates a match booking with that player already included. Pick a venue, pick a time, and send the challenge.
This is especially useful when you've identified a player at your level and want to start building a regular playing relationship. Maybe you followed them after an open game. Maybe they appeared in your Players Near You feed and their rating is right in your range. Either way, the Challenge flow makes it effortless to go from "this person looks like a good opponent" to "we're playing Thursday at 7pm."
It also works socially. Challenge a colleague. Challenge someone you met at a tournament. Challenge the person who just beat you because you want a rematch. The flow is fast, direct, and skips all the back-and-forth.
7. Follow players and build your network over time
PADLR.'s Follow system is the connective tissue that turns one-off matches into a lasting padel community.
When you follow a player, their match results appear in your feed. You see when they play, who they play with, and how they're performing. Over time, you build a curated network of players you know, trust, and enjoy playing with.
But Follow does something more powerful: it unlocks the Friends leaderboard.
The Friends scope in PADLR.'s Rankings tab shows you exactly where you stand among the players you follow. Not a global leaderboard with thousands of strangers — a personal one with the people you actually care about competing with. It's your padel inner circle, ranked.
This creates a feedback loop that keeps your community engaged. You follow people you've played with. You see their results. You want to climb above them on the Friends board. You challenge them again. They challenge you back. Before you know it, you've got a regular group of partners and rivals — built entirely through the app.
Real scenarios, real solutions
You just moved to Lisbon. You don't know anyone who plays padel. You open PADLR., check Players Near You, filter for your skill level, and find twelve active players within 5 kilometres. You join an open game on Wednesday, play well, follow three of the players, and by the weekend you've been invited to a Saturday morning session. Within a week, you've got a padel network.
You're a beginner in London. You tried asking at your local club but the regular groups are all 4.0+ and you're a 1.5. On PADLR., you filter for players rated 1.0 to 2.5 and find other beginners who are just as keen to find people at their level. You create a public booking for a weeknight session, two players join, and you've found your crew.
You're a 5.0 player in Barcelona and you're bored of playing the same four people. You widen your search radius on the Discover tab, find competitive players at clubs across the city, and start challenging them. The Friends leaderboard adds a layer of rivalry that keeps things interesting.
You organise a regular Wednesday group in Dublin. You used to manage it through a WhatsApp group with 40 people, half of whom never replied. Now you create a public booking each week on PADLR. The right number of players join, they're the right level, and you spend zero time chasing confirmations.
Why skill-level matching changes everything
Most apps and platforms let you find a padel partner. PADLR. helps you find the right padel partner.
The difference is the rating system. When every player has a verified, match-derived skill rating, the guesswork disappears. You're not trusting someone's self-assessment ("I'm pretty good, I think intermediate?"). You're seeing a number backed by real match data, confirmed by opponents, and calculated by the same family of statistical models used in chess and competitive gaming.
This matters for every player at every level. Beginners find beginners. Intermediate players find competitive matches instead of mismatches. Advanced players find opponents who push them. And everyone has more fun because the games are balanced.
In a WhatsApp group, you have no idea what "intermediate" means to the person posting. On PADLR., a 3.2 is a 3.2. The language is universal, the data is real, and the matches are better for it.
Available where padel is growing
PADLR. is launching in Spring 2026 across the markets where padel is growing fastest: Austria, Bahrain, Belgium, Canada, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Ireland, Italy, Kuwait, the Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, the UAE, the United Kingdom, and the United States.
Whether you're in a padel heartland like Madrid or an emerging market like Toronto, PADLR. connects you with the players around you.
Your next partner is already on PADLR.
The hardest part of padel has never been the sport itself. It's been finding the right people to play with — at your level, in your area, at a time that works.
PADLR. fixes that. Contact matching finds friends you didn't know played. The Discover tab shows you every active player nearby. Skill filters make sure the games are competitive. Open games let you join in one tap. Public bookings bring players to you. Challenges make it personal. And the Follow system turns single matches into lasting communities.
Your next match partner is already on PADLR. You just haven't found them yet.
Have questions or want to get in touch? Reach out to us at rebellionlabsofficial@gmail.com
PADLR. is built by Rebel Lion Labs.