Business Guide

How to Choose a Court Booking System

Compare court booking systems: key features, pricing models, white-label options, payment integration, and what matters most for your sports club.

Overview

Choosing the right court booking system is one of the most consequential technology decisions a sports club makes. The right platform streamlines operations, improves member experience, and drives revenue. The wrong one creates frustration, limits growth, and locks you into an ecosystem that does not serve your interests.

This buyer's guide helps you evaluate court booking systems based on the factors that matter most: features, pricing, branding control, scalability, and long-term value. Whether you run a single-sport padel club or a multi-sport complex, these criteria will guide you to the right choice.

Must-Have Features

Every court booking system should offer: real-time court availability and online booking, mobile-friendly (or native app) interface, integrated payment processing, recurring booking support, automated confirmations and reminders, member management and profiles, and admin dashboard with analytics.

Advanced features that differentiate the best platforms include: white-label mobile apps (your brand, not theirs), dynamic pricing, tournament and league management, coaching booking, waitlist management, POS integration, multi-location support, and custom communication tools (push notifications, SMS, email). Prioritize platforms that offer a comprehensive suite rather than piecemeal solutions that require multiple integrations.

Pricing Models

Court booking systems use several pricing models. Subscription-based (monthly fee per court or flat rate) offers predictable costs — typically $50-$200 per court per month. Commission-based models take a percentage of each booking (3-15%), which can become expensive as volume grows. Some platforms combine a lower subscription with a small commission.

Be wary of "free" platforms that monetize your members through their own marketplace, advertising, or data. You may save on software fees but lose control of your customer relationships and brand. Calculate the total cost of ownership over 3-5 years including subscription fees, transaction fees, setup costs, and any marketplace commissions.

White-Label vs Marketplace

This is the most important strategic decision. White-label solutions give you your own branded app and booking system — members interact with your brand, not a third-party platform. Marketplace platforms (like Playtomic or OpenCourt) list your club alongside competitors, giving you exposure but at the cost of brand dilution and commission fees.

White-label is the right choice for clubs that want to build their own brand, own their customer data, and avoid paying commissions to a marketplace. Marketplace listings can complement a white-label system for discovery, but should not be your primary booking channel. The most successful clubs use their own branded app for members while selectively listing on marketplaces for acquiring new customers.

Integration & Scalability

Your booking system should integrate with your existing tools: payment gateways (Stripe, PayPal), accounting software, communication platforms, and POS systems. API access is valuable for custom integrations. Multi-location support is essential if you plan to expand.

Evaluate scalability — can the platform handle growth from 4 courts to 20 courts? Can it support multiple locations under one management dashboard? How does the pricing scale? Some platforms become prohibitively expensive at scale. Choose a platform built for growth, not one you will outgrow in 2-3 years.

How to Evaluate & Choose

Create a shortlist of 3-5 platforms and evaluate them against your specific requirements. Request demos from each, focusing on the admin experience (how easy is it to manage day-to-day?) and the member experience (how easy is booking for your players?). Ask for references from clubs similar to yours in size and sport.

Key questions to ask vendors: What is included in the base price? Are there setup or migration fees? Who owns the customer data? Can members book without creating an account on a third-party platform? What is the contract term and cancellation policy? How often is the platform updated? What does onboarding and support look like? Choose the platform that best balances feature depth, user experience, branding control, and total cost of ownership.

Frequently Asked Questions

Subscription-based systems typically cost $50-$200 per court per month ($600-$2,400 per court annually). Commission-based models charge 3-15% per booking. White-label app solutions range from $200-$800/month for the complete platform. Calculate total cost including transaction fees, not just the subscription.
Use your own branded booking system as the primary channel for existing members. Marketplaces can supplement for new customer acquisition but should not be your main platform. Owning the customer relationship and data is a long-term strategic advantage that outweighs the short-term convenience of a marketplace.
Yes, but migration involves effort — transferring member data, rebooking recurring reservations, and retraining staff. Most platforms offer data export capabilities. Plan for 2-4 weeks of transition. This is why choosing the right platform initially is so important.
A native mobile app significantly outperforms a mobile website for engagement and bookings. Push notifications, saved payment methods, and quick-access booking drive 3-5x more engagement than web-only solutions. A white-labeled app also builds brand credibility and member loyalty.

Ready to Launch Your Club?

Book & Go gives you a white-labeled mobile app, court booking, tournament management, and everything else you need to run a successful sports club.