Business Guide

How to Start a Pickleball Business

Everything you need to start a pickleball business: facility planning, court construction, membership models, revenue streams, marketing, and technology.

Overview

The pickleball industry is booming. With participation growing over 200% in the last five years and an estimated $2 billion being invested in dedicated pickleball facilities in the US alone, starting a pickleball business is one of the most compelling opportunities in the sports and recreation sector.

This guide covers everything from concept development to launch — whether you are building a dedicated pickleball facility, adding courts to an existing venue, starting a mobile coaching business, or creating a multi-sport complex with pickleball as the anchor attraction.

Market Opportunity

The US has over 48 million pickleball players, and demand for court time far outstrips supply in most markets. The average pickleball player plays 8+ times per month, creating consistent recurring revenue. The sport's demographics span all ages, with the 18-34 age group now the fastest growing segment.

Successful pickleball businesses focus on underserved markets with high population density, active lifestyle demographics, and limited existing court supply. Research local demand by checking waitlists at existing facilities, surveying community groups, and analyzing social media engagement for local pickleball communities.

Business Model Options

Dedicated indoor pickleball facility: The highest investment but strongest revenue potential. Purpose-built facilities with 8-16 courts, pro shop, food & beverage, and community space can generate $1M-$3M in annual revenue. Typical investment: $1M-$5M depending on size and location.

Outdoor court complex: Lower investment ($200K-$800K for 6-12 courts) with seasonal considerations in northern climates. Ideal for warm-weather markets. Can be combined with a small clubhouse for year-round programming.

Conversion or addition: Adding pickleball to an existing tennis club, gym, or recreation center. Lowest risk entry point at $50K-$200K for court conversion and equipment. Many tennis clubs are converting underused courts to pickleball to attract new members and increase revenue per square foot.

Startup Costs & Financing

A mid-size indoor facility (8-12 courts) typically requires $1.5M-$3M in total investment including: real estate/construction ($800K-$2M), court surfaces and nets ($80K-$150K), HVAC and lighting ($100K-$300K), furnishing and equipment ($50K-$100K), technology and software ($10K-$25K), and pre-opening expenses ($50K-$150K).

Financing options include SBA loans (up to $5M with 10-25 year terms), commercial real estate loans, private investors, franchise models (Chicken N Pickle, Ace Pickleball Club), and crowdfunding. Many successful operators start with a smaller format and expand as demand is proven. Angel investors and private equity firms are increasingly interested in pickleball real estate.

Revenue Streams

Core revenue comes from court rentals ($10-$30 per person per session) and memberships ($50-$200 per month). Additional streams include: programming and leagues ($15-$30 per person), coaching and clinics ($50-$100 per hour), tournaments and events (entry fees + spectator revenue), pro shop sales (10-20% margin), and food & beverage (25-40% margin).

Top-performing facilities achieve 60-80% court utilization and generate $100K-$250K per court annually. Open play sessions (drop-in format at $5-$15 per person) fill off-peak hours. Corporate events, birthday parties, and team building activities provide high-margin supplemental revenue. Many facilities also rent space for non-pickleball events during off-hours.

Technology Stack

A robust technology platform is essential for managing a modern pickleball facility. You need court booking and scheduling software, payment processing, membership management, league and tournament tools, and ideally a branded mobile app for member engagement.

The right technology platform reduces staffing needs, improves member experience, and provides data for optimizing operations. Features like automated waitlists, dynamic pricing, self-service booking, and push notifications can significantly increase court utilization and revenue. Solutions like Book & Go provide all of this in a white-labeled package customized to your brand.

Frequently Asked Questions

Yes, well-run pickleball facilities can be highly profitable. Indoor facilities typically achieve 20-35% EBITDA margins at maturity. Break-even typically occurs within 12-24 months for conversion projects and 24-48 months for new construction. Court utilization is the key metric to optimize.
A minimum of 6 courts is recommended for a standalone facility to offer sufficient scheduling flexibility and host leagues and tournaments. 8-12 courts is the sweet spot for most markets, allowing diverse programming without excessive overhead.
Indoor courts offer year-round play and higher revenue consistency, but cost 3-5x more to build. Outdoor courts have lower upfront costs but face weather limitations. Many operators start outdoors and add indoor courts as demand grows. Climate-controlled facilities command premium pricing.
No, many successful pickleball business owners are entrepreneurs, real estate developers, or hospitality professionals. Hiring experienced pickleball staff for programming and coaching is more important than personal playing experience. Understanding business operations, customer experience, and community building is what drives success.

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.