Discover how padel and tennis clubs are structuring tiered memberships to boost predictable revenue, reduce churn, and fill courts year-round.
Most padel and tennis clubs leave serious money on the table. They fill courts with pay-per-play bookings, chase one-time players, and wonder why revenue dips every winter. The clubs that grow consistently — and profitably — have one thing in common: a structured membership model that converts casual players into committed, paying members.
This guide walks you through exactly how to design, price, and launch a membership program that creates predictable recurring revenue for your facility.
One-off court bookings feel like revenue, but they're expensive to generate. You're constantly marketing, filling gaps, and depending on good weather and player moods. Memberships flip the equation.
"Recurring revenue is the single biggest driver of club valuation. A facility with 300 active members is worth dramatically more than one generating the same monthly revenue from walk-ins." — Industry consultant, European Tennis Federation Summit, 2023
The numbers back this up:
The goal isn't to eliminate drop-in play — it's to make membership the obvious, attractive default for your regular players.
The most common mistake clubs make is building one membership tier and hoping it fits everyone. It won't. Your player base includes at least three distinct groups, each with different needs and willingness to pay.
They love padel or tennis but don't want a heavy commitment. They respond to entry-level memberships with modest perks — small booking discounts, priority access during off-peak hours, or a free guest pass per month.
This is your core demographic and your biggest revenue opportunity. They want guaranteed court time, meaningful discounts, and social belonging. They'll pay a premium for it.
They play 4+ times per week and want access to coaching, clinics, equipment storage, and top-tier facilities. Premium or Elite tiers should be designed specifically for this segment.
Before you set a single price, survey your existing players. A simple Google Form asking "How often do you play?" and "What would make you commit to a monthly membership?" will tell you more than any competitor analysis.
Three tiers is the proven sweet spot — enough choice to capture different segments, not so many that decision fatigue kills conversions.
Here's a framework that works for padel and tennis clubs across different market sizes:
Tier 1 — Starter (€/$/£ 25–45/month)
Tier 2 — Club Member (€/$/£ 60–100/month)
Tier 3 — Elite / Premium (€/$/£ 130–200/month)
Key principle: Each tier should feel like a clear upgrade — not just "more of the same for more money." Add qualitatively different benefits, not just quantity.
Many club owners price memberships by calculating costs and adding a margin. That's backwards. Price based on perceived value and your members' alternatives.
A regular player who books 3 hours per week at €20/hour is spending €240/month. A Club Member tier at €80/month with 6 included hours and 20% off additional bookings saves them over €100/month. That's not a hard sell — that's math.
Tactics to strengthen your pricing:
A membership model only generates revenue if it's easy to sign up for, easy to manage, and hard to accidentally cancel. Here's how to set up the operational backbone:
Clubs that review these four metrics monthly are 2x more likely to hit their annual revenue targets than those who check in quarterly or less.
Your first 90 members are the hardest. Here's a launch sequence that works:
Building a profitable membership model isn't complicated — but it does require deliberate design. Before you launch or restructure your program:
The padel and tennis clubs growing fastest right now aren't the ones with the most courts. They're the ones with the most members — and a system that keeps those members engaged, booking, and referring. Build that system, and revenue growth becomes predictable.
See how Book & Go can help you implement these strategies and grow your business.
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