What to Wear to Padel: Complete UK Clothing Guide
By Gary · 24 min read · 1 March 2026
What to Wear to Padel: Complete UK Clothing Guide
By Gary, founder of RacketRise. Playing padel in the UK and tracking the sport's explosive growth.
I earn a small commission from purchases through affiliate links in this article. This helps keep RacketRise free and costs you nothing extra.
Last Updated: March 2026
Quick Summary
- The short answer: Wear what you'd wear to the gym or a tennis session — sports top, shorts or leggings, and proper court shoes. No formal dress code
- The ONE strict rule: Non-marking soles are required at virtually every UK venue. Get this right and everything else is flexible
- Budget: A full padel outfit costs £30-£80, but most people already own suitable clothing. Shoes are the only thing worth buying new
- Find courts near you — use the RacketRise Court Finder to find padel and pickleball courts across the UK
If you're wondering what to wear to padel, the honest answer is simpler than you might expect. Padel doesn't have the stuffy dress codes that some tennis clubs enforce. There's no all-white rule. Nobody will inspect your collar. You can wear a plain t-shirt and gym shorts and fit in perfectly on any court in the country. The one thing you absolutely must get right is your footwear — non-marking soles are required at almost every UK venue, and proper court shoes will protect your ankles from the sport's constant lateral movement.
Beyond shoes, the rest is about comfort, freedom of movement, and dressing for the weather. This guide covers everything — what works, what doesn't, and what's worth spending money on.
Quick Answer: Wear moisture-wicking sports clothing (t-shirt or polo, shorts or leggings) and court shoes with non-marking soles. There is no formal dress code for padel in the UK. The only strict requirement is non-marking footwear to protect the artificial grass court surface. If you already go to the gym or play tennis, you own clothes that work for padel. The one worthwhile investment is proper court shoes — they make a genuine difference to performance and injury prevention.
Table of Contents
- Shoes — The ONE Thing That Matters
- Tops — What to Wear on Top
- Bottoms — Shorts, Skorts and Leggings
- What to Wear for Outdoor Padel in Cold Weather
- What to Wear for Indoor Padel
- Accessories Worth Considering
- What NOT to Wear to Padel
- Women's vs Men's Padel Clothing
- What to Bring to a Padel Session — Checklist
- Dress Codes at UK Padel Venues
- Budget Breakdown — How Much for a Full Padel Outfit
- Sources & Further Reading
- Related Articles
- Frequently Asked Questions
Shoes — The ONE Thing That Matters
Let me be blunt: you can wear almost anything on your body for padel and be fine. But your shoes can make or break your session.
Padel involves constant lateral movement — side-to-side shuffling, explosive direction changes, lunges, split steps. A typical match involves 1,000-2,000 changes of direction. That's an enormous amount of stress on your feet and ankles, and your shoes need to handle it.
The Non-Negotiable: Non-Marking Soles
Virtually every padel venue in the UK requires non-marking soles. If your shoes leave scuff marks on the artificial grass court surface, you'll be asked to stop playing. This isn't a suggestion — it's an enforced rule. Check the soles of your shoes before you arrive. Dark rubber that leaves marks on a clean floor is a problem. The pale gum-rubber or light-coloured soles found on court shoes are fine.
What Works
- Padel-specific shoes — The best option. Built for lateral movement on artificial grass with sand infill. Herringbone outsole patterns grip the surface without clogging. Brands like Asics, Head, Babolat, Joma, and Adidas all make padel-specific shoes. Budget £40-£100.
- Tennis shoes — A perfectly acceptable alternative, especially if you already own a pair. They have good lateral support and non-marking soles. The outsole pattern isn't optimised for artificial grass, but it works fine for recreational play.
- Indoor court shoes — Badminton or squash shoes work in a pinch. They have non-marking soles and decent lateral support, though they're designed for harder surfaces and may feel slightly different on artificial grass.
What Doesn't Work
- Running shoes — Dangerous for padel. No lateral support, elevated heels that increase ankle sprain risk, and soles that may mark the court.
- Casual trainers — Lifestyle trainers (Stan Smiths, Air Force 1s, Vans) have flat, hard soles with no grip, no cushioning for sport, and no lateral support.
- Football boots or astroturf trainers — The studs or nubs will damage the court surface. You'll be turned away.
- Sandals, flip-flops, or any open-toed footwear — This shouldn't need saying, but I've seen it attempted.
I've written a full guide to the best padel shoes for UK players, covering seven pairs across different price points. If you're buying shoes specifically for padel, start there. If you're attending your first session and already own tennis shoes or court trainers with non-marking soles, those will do the job while you decide whether you want dedicated padel shoes.
Bottom line: Shoes are the only piece of clothing where "good enough" doesn't cut it. Get proper court shoes with non-marking soles and lateral support. Everything else on this list is a nice-to-have. Shoes are a must-have.
Tops — What to Wear on Top
Good news: you almost certainly already own a top that works for padel. The key is fabric choice, not fashion.
Moisture-Wicking Fabrics Win
Padel is more physically demanding than it looks. A competitive session burns 400-600 calories per hour, and you'll sweat accordingly — especially indoors where venues can get warm during peak hours. Synthetic fabrics (polyester, nylon, elastane blends) wick moisture away from your skin, dry quickly, and keep you comfortable throughout a match.
Any sports top from Nike, Adidas, Under Armour, Decathlon, or your local supermarket's activewear range will work perfectly. You don't need to spend a fortune.
Avoid Cotton
Cotton absorbs sweat and holds it. A cotton t-shirt that weighs 200g dry can easily absorb 300-400ml of sweat during an intense session, becoming heavy, clingy, and uncomfortable. It also takes much longer to dry, which means you'll feel increasingly cold if you're playing outdoors in UK weather.
If you've only got a cotton t-shirt available for your first session, it's not the end of the world. But if you're buying something specifically for padel, choose a synthetic moisture-wicking fabric every time.
Padel-Specific Brands vs Regular Sportswear
Padel-specific clothing brands like NOX, Bullpadel, Adidas Padel, Head, and Babolat make tops designed for the sport — typically lightweight, stretchy, and cut for the overhead and rotational movements padel requires. They look the part and perform well.
But do you need them? No. A £10 Decathlon running top performs virtually identically to a £40 branded padel shirt in terms of moisture management and comfort. The padel branding is nice if you want to look like you know what you're doing, but it's cosmetic rather than functional.
What to choose:
| Option | Price Range | Performance | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Basic sports t-shirt (Decathlon, Primark Sport) | £5-£12 | Good | Best value. Does the job perfectly |
| Mid-range sportswear (Nike, Adidas, Under Armour) | £15-£35 | Very good | Slightly better fabrics and fit |
| Padel-specific brands (NOX, Bullpadel, Head) | £25-£50 | Very good | Sport-specific cut, looks the part |
| Cotton t-shirt | Free (you own one) | Poor | Gets heavy with sweat. Avoid if possible |
Fit and Freedom of Movement
Choose a top that doesn't restrict your arms. Padel involves overhead smashes, wide backhand swings, and reaching for volleys — your shoulders and arms need full range of motion. Avoid anything too tight across the chest and shoulders. Equally, avoid anything so loose it flaps around and catches your racket arm. A standard athletic fit works best.
Bottoms — Shorts, Skorts and Leggings
The same principle applies to your lower half: comfort, freedom of movement, and moisture-wicking fabric.
What Works
- Sports shorts — The most popular choice for both men and women. Any length works. Mid-thigh running shorts, longer basketball-style shorts, or classic tennis shorts are all fine. The only thing that matters is freedom of movement for lateral play — padel involves constant side-to-side shuffling and wide lunges.
- Skorts — Popular among women players, especially those coming from a tennis background. The built-in shorts underneath provide coverage during low lunges and wall shots.
- Leggings or compression tights — Increasingly common for both men and women, especially for outdoor padel in cooler weather. Full-length or three-quarter length both work. Choose a pair with decent stretch for lateral movement.
- Tracksuit bottoms — Fine for a casual knock-around, especially outdoors in cold weather. Avoid anything baggy that might restrict your footwork or catch on things.
Pockets for Spare Balls
In padel, the server needs to have a spare ball ready. Some players keep it in their pocket, others tuck it under their clothing or use a ball clip. Shorts or skorts with a pocket are handy for this, but it's not essential — plenty of players manage without. Most venues provide ball clips or you can simply place the spare ball by the back wall.
What to Avoid
Jeans, chinos, and any non-stretch trousers are a bad idea. They restrict lateral movement, absorb sweat, and are uncomfortable when you're working hard. If you wouldn't wear it to the gym, don't wear it for padel.
What to Wear for Outdoor Padel in Cold Weather
The UK has a growing number of outdoor padel courts, and British weather being what it is, you'll need a strategy for staying warm without overheating.
The Layering Approach
Outdoor padel in the UK — particularly from October to April — requires intelligent layering. You'll be cold when you arrive, warm within ten minutes of playing, and potentially cold again during breaks between sets or when waiting for your turn in social sessions.
Base layer: A long-sleeved moisture-wicking top sits close to your skin and manages sweat. This is your most important layer. It should be snug but not tight, and made from synthetic fabric or merino wool. Avoid cotton — it holds moisture against your skin and makes you feel colder.
Mid layer (optional): A lightweight fleece or half-zip training top adds warmth during warm-up and can be removed once you're playing. Something with a zip is ideal because you can regulate temperature without stopping play.
Outer layer (warm-up only): A lightweight, wind-resistant jacket for the warm-up period and breaks. Take it off once you're playing — you'll overheat otherwise. A packable running jacket works well here because it folds small enough to stuff in your bag between points.
Arm Sleeves
Compression arm sleeves are a smart option for outdoor padel. They provide warmth without the bulk of a long-sleeved top, and you can pull them down or remove them entirely as you warm up. Several padel brands sell them, but any sports arm sleeves will do. Budget £8-£15 for a pair.
Lower Body in Cold Weather
Full-length leggings or compression tights under your shorts keep your legs warm without restricting movement. Alternatively, wear leggings alone — plenty of players do. In genuinely cold conditions (below 5 degrees Celsius), thermal leggings make a noticeable difference to comfort and performance. Cold muscles are more injury-prone, so keeping your legs warm isn't just about comfort.
Hats and Gloves
A lightweight beanie or running hat keeps your head warm during outdoor winter sessions. Remove it if you overheat. Gloves are tricky — you need bare hands for racket grip and feel. Some players wear thin running gloves during the warm-up and remove them for play. Padel-specific gloves exist but are rare in the UK market. Most players simply deal with cold hands for the first few minutes until they warm up through play.
What to Wear for Indoor Padel
Indoor padel is simpler from a clothing perspective. Most UK indoor venues are heated or at least enclosed, which means temperatures stay comfortable year-round.
Go Lighter
Indoor venues tend to be warm, particularly during busy periods when multiple courts are in use. Lightweight, breathable clothing is your friend here. A short-sleeved moisture-wicking top and sports shorts are the standard combination for indoor padel. Long sleeves and layers that make sense outdoors will leave you overheating indoors.
Ventilation Matters
Airflow varies enormously between indoor venues. Purpose-built padel centres tend to have decent ventilation. Converted warehouses and temporary structures can be stuffy. If you're playing at a venue for the first time, bring both a t-shirt and a lightweight long-sleeved option so you can adjust.
A Spare Shirt
This applies to indoor and outdoor play, but it's especially relevant indoors where you'll sweat more. Bringing a clean, dry shirt to change into after your session makes the drive home considerably more pleasant. It also matters if you're heading somewhere afterwards — nobody wants to sit in a coffee shop in a soaking-wet sports top.
Accessories Worth Considering
None of these are essential, but they can improve your comfort on court.
Wristbands
Wristbands absorb sweat before it runs down to your hands and affects your racket grip. If you're a heavy sweater, they're worth the £3-£5 investment. They're particularly useful in indoor venues where the warmth makes you sweat more.
Caps and Visors
Essential for outdoor padel, especially during summer when the sun sits low enough to catch your eyes during overhead smashes. A lightweight sports cap or visor blocks the glare without making your head too hot. Choose one with a moisture-wicking sweatband. Visors are popular because they provide shade without trapping heat — useful during intense rallies.
For indoor play, a cap is unnecessary unless the venue has particularly bright overhead lighting that bothers you.
Sports Sunglasses
For outdoor padel, a pair of sports sunglasses with UV protection and a secure fit can make a real difference. Padel involves a lot of upward-looking — tracking lobs, positioning for smashes, watching the ball come off the back glass in bright conditions. Choose glasses with a wraparound design and non-slip nose pads so they stay put during quick movements.
Avoid fashion sunglasses. They'll slide off your face the first time you sprint for a short ball.
Hair Ties and Headbands
If you have longer hair, tie it back. Padel involves a lot of head movement — looking up, turning quickly, reacting to wall shots. Hair in your eyes at the wrong moment costs you points. A simple hair tie or a sports headband solves this.
Grip Overgrips
Not clothing, strictly speaking, but worth mentioning in the context of sweat management. If sweaty hands are an issue, an absorbent overgrip on your racket handle (changed every few sessions) makes a bigger difference than any wristband. Budget £3-£8 for a pack of three.
What NOT to Wear to Padel
Knowing what doesn't work saves you an awkward experience at the venue.
Jeans
No. Jeans restrict lateral movement, don't stretch, absorb sweat, and chafe. Padel involves constant side-to-side shuffling, lunges, and quick changes of direction — all of which require freedom in your hips and legs. Jeans fail on every count.
Casual Trainers and Running Shoes
Covered in detail in the shoes section above, but worth repeating here. Casual trainers (Converse, Vans, lifestyle sneakers) have no lateral support, poor grip, and will likely mark the court. Running shoes are designed for forward motion and actively increase your risk of ankle injury during padel's lateral movements. Court shoes with non-marking soles are the minimum.
Sandals or Open-Toed Shoes
A padel ball travelling at speed to an unprotected toe is an experience you want to avoid. Beyond the obvious safety issue, sandals provide zero support for a sport that involves hundreds of direction changes per hour.
Anything That Restricts Movement
Tight jeans, stiff jackets, non-stretch trousers, or overly baggy clothing that catches on your arms during swings. If you can't comfortably lunge sideways, reach overhead, and sprint a few metres without your clothes fighting you, change into something else.
Jewellery
Watches are fine (many players track fitness data). But dangling necklaces, large rings, and bracelets can be hazardous — they catch on rackets, nets, and fencing. Remove anything that hangs or protrudes before you play.
Ready to play? Find padel courts near you with the RacketRise Court Finder.
Women's vs Men's Padel Clothing
The core advice is identical regardless of gender: moisture-wicking fabrics, freedom of movement, and proper court shoes. But there are a few specifics worth noting.
Women's Considerations
Skorts are hugely popular in women's padel. They combine the freedom of shorts with additional coverage, and the padel-specific versions from brands like NOX, Bullpadel, and Adidas Padel are designed with deeper pockets for balls and flattering cuts for on-court movement. That said, shorts and leggings are equally common — wear whatever you're comfortable in.
Sports bras matter. Padel involves quick directional changes, jumping for overhead smashes, and lunging for low volleys. A supportive sports bra designed for medium-to-high impact activity makes a significant difference to comfort during play. If you already have one for running or gym sessions, it will work perfectly for padel. If you're buying new, medium-impact support is the minimum — high-impact is better for competitive play.
Padel dresses are available from several padel-specific brands. They're essentially a combined top and skort designed specifically for the sport. They look great and are designed for unrestricted movement, but they're a style choice rather than a performance necessity.
Men's Considerations
Men's padel clothing is straightforward: sports shorts and a moisture-wicking t-shirt or polo. The same brands that make good gym clothing make good padel clothing. Polos are slightly more common in padel than in other sports (the tennis heritage shows), but t-shirts are equally acceptable at every UK venue.
Compression shorts worn underneath regular shorts are popular among male padel players. They reduce chafing during lateral movement and provide a layer of muscle support. Not essential, but a comfort improvement if you play regularly.
What to Bring to a Padel Session — Checklist
Here's everything you need for a padel session, from essential to optional.
Essential:
- Court shoes with non-marking soles (padel shoes, tennis shoes, or indoor court shoes)
- Sports top (moisture-wicking fabric)
- Sports shorts, skorts, or leggings
- Water bottle (you'll sweat more than you expect)
- Sports bra (for women — medium-to-high impact support)
Highly Recommended:
- Towel (small sports towel for wiping sweat between games)
- Spare shirt (to change into after playing)
- Padel racket (most venues hire them out for £3-£5, but your own is better) — see our guide to the best padel rackets for beginners
- Socks (bring a spare pair if your feet sweat heavily)
Optional but Useful:
- Wristbands
- Cap or visor (outdoor play)
- Sports sunglasses (outdoor play)
- Overgrip for your racket handle
- Snack (banana, energy bar for longer sessions)
- Padel balls (venues usually provide these, but check when booking)
- Layers for outdoor play (see the cold weather section above)
You Don't Need:
- Special clothing — your regular gym kit is fine
- Expensive branded padel gear — nice to have, not essential
- A ball clip — helpful but most players use their pockets or leave the spare ball by the back wall
Dress Codes at UK Padel Venues
One of padel's appeals is its relaxed culture, and that extends to what you wear on court.
The Standard Rule: Non-Marking Soles
This is the only universal requirement across UK padel venues. Non-marking soles protect the artificial grass court surface from scuffing and damage. Every venue enforces this, and most will check your shoes before you go on court. If your soles leave marks on a clean floor when you twist your foot, they'll mark the court. Bring the right shoes and you won't have a problem.
Beyond Shoes: Very Few Rules
The vast majority of UK padel venues have no formal dress code beyond non-marking soles. You can wear any colour, any style, any brand. T-shirts, vests, polos — all fine. Shorts, leggings, tracksuit bottoms — all acceptable. This is a significant departure from some traditional tennis clubs, where all-white dress codes and collared shirts are still enforced.
Premium Clubs
A small number of premium or country club-style venues that offer padel alongside tennis, swimming, and gym facilities may have broader dress code policies that apply across the entire facility. These are rare, but it's worth checking the venue's website or calling ahead if you're playing at a high-end club for the first time. Even at these venues, the padel-specific requirements are typically limited to non-marking soles and "appropriate sportswear" — which means standard gym clothing.
Social Etiquette
While there's no dress code, there is an unwritten social element. Padel is an inherently social sport — you're sharing a small court with three other people. Clean, appropriate sportswear is respectful to your playing partners. This doesn't mean expensive or branded — just clean, functional, and suitable for sport. Nobody will judge you for wearing a basic t-shirt. People might notice if you turn up in your gardening clothes.
Budget Breakdown — How Much for a Full Padel Outfit
The good news: padel is one of the most affordable sports to dress for. Most people already own suitable clothing, which means the only purchase they actually need is shoes.
If You Already Own Gym Clothing
| Item | Cost | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Court shoes (new purchase) | £40-£100 | The only essential buy. See best padel shoes UK |
| Sports top | £0 | Use what you already own |
| Sports shorts/leggings | £0 | Use what you already own |
| Sports socks | £0 | Use what you already own |
| Total | £40-£100 | Shoes are the only real investment |
If You're Buying Everything New
| Item | Budget Option | Mid-Range Option | Premium Option |
|---|---|---|---|
| Court shoes | £40-£55 (Joma T.Slam) | £55-£80 (Asics/Head) | £80-£100 (Adidas Barricade) |
| Sports top | £5-£10 (Decathlon) | £15-£25 (Nike/Adidas) | £30-£50 (NOX/Bullpadel) |
| Sports shorts | £8-£12 (Decathlon) | £15-£25 (Nike/Adidas) | £25-£40 (Padel brand) |
| Sports socks | £3-£5 | £5-£8 | £8-£12 |
| Total | £56-£82 | £90-£138 | £143-£202 |
The honest take: You don't need to buy padel-specific clothing. Gym clothes work perfectly. The only thing worth investing in is proper court shoes with non-marking soles and lateral support. Everything else — shorts, tops, layers — you already own. Don't let brands convince you that you need a £60 padel-specific polo shirt. You need shoes, and you need to show up.
If you enjoy the sport and want to invest in padel-specific clothing later, the mid-range brands offer the best value. A moisture-wicking top from Decathlon (£8-£12) performs almost identically to one from a padel brand costing three times as much. Save the premium spend for your racket and shoes — that's where equipment quality genuinely affects your game.
The complete first-session kit on a budget:
- Joma T.Slam Padel shoes: ~£45
- Decathlon sports t-shirt: ~£8
- Decathlon sports shorts: ~£10
- Total: approximately £63
That's everything you need to walk onto a padel court and play comfortably. Not bad for a sport that's taking over the UK.
New to padel? Read What Is Padel? Complete UK Beginner's Guide before your first session. It covers rules, scoring, court layout, and everything else you need to know.
Sources & Further Reading
- LTA Padel — Getting Started — Official guidance on equipment and venue requirements
- International Padel Federation — Official rules, regulations, and sport overview
- Padel Magazine UK — Independent UK padel news, venue reviews, and equipment guides
- Decathlon Padel Clothing Range — Budget-friendly padel and racket sport clothing available in the UK
- NOX Official — Padel-specific clothing and equipment brand
Related Articles
- What Is Padel? Complete UK Beginner's Guide
- Best Padel Shoes 2026: Tested & Reviewed for UK Courts
- Best Padel Rackets for Beginners UK
- Is Padel Good Exercise? Calories, Fitness Benefits & More
- How to Play Padel: Rules & Scoring Explained
- Padel vs Tennis: What's the Difference?
Frequently Asked Questions
What should I wear to my first padel session?
Wear what you'd wear to the gym or a fitness class: a moisture-wicking sports top, comfortable shorts or leggings, sports socks, and court shoes with non-marking soles. That's genuinely all you need. There is no formal dress code for padel in the UK. The only strict requirement at venues is non-marking footwear. If you already own tennis shoes or indoor court trainers, those work perfectly for a first session.
Do I need special shoes for padel?
You need court shoes with non-marking soles — this is enforced at virtually every UK padel venue. Padel-specific shoes are ideal because they're designed for lateral movement on artificial grass, but tennis shoes and indoor court shoes also work. Running shoes are not suitable — they have no lateral support and increase your risk of ankle injury. See our full guide to the best padel shoes for UK players for specific recommendations.
Is there a dress code for padel in the UK?
No. The vast majority of UK padel venues have no formal dress code beyond requiring non-marking soles on court. You can wear any colour, any style, and any brand of sportswear. This is one of the ways padel differs from traditional tennis clubs, where dress codes can be strict. A small number of premium clubs may have broader facility-wide dress codes, but even these are rarely more restrictive than "wear appropriate sportswear."
Can I wear running shoes to play padel?
This is strongly discouraged. Running shoes are designed for forward (linear) motion and have no lateral support. Padel involves 1,000-2,000 lateral movements per match — side-to-side shuffling, quick direction changes, and wide lunges. Running shoes leave your ankles unsupported during these movements and significantly increase your risk of sprains. Additionally, many running shoes have soles that mark the court surface, which will get you asked to stop playing. Use court shoes with non-marking soles instead.
What should I wear for outdoor padel in winter?
Layer up. Start with a moisture-wicking base layer (long-sleeved top), add a lightweight mid-layer (half-zip or fleece) for the warm-up, and bring a wind-resistant jacket for breaks. Full-length leggings or thermal tights keep your legs warm. You'll likely shed the outer layer within ten minutes of playing as your body heats up. Arm sleeves are a smart option — they provide warmth without bulk and are easy to adjust during play. Avoid cotton in cold weather, as it holds moisture and makes you feel colder.
How much does a full padel outfit cost?
A complete padel outfit costs £30-£80 if you're buying everything new on a budget. The biggest expense is shoes (£40-£100 for a decent pair of court shoes). A sports top and shorts from budget retailers like Decathlon cost £15-£25 combined. However, most people already own suitable gym clothing, which means the only new purchase needed is shoes. You don't need padel-specific branded clothing — regular sportswear performs just as well.
Should I buy padel-specific clothing brands?
You can, but you don't need to. Brands like NOX, Bullpadel, Adidas Padel, Head, and Babolat make clothing designed specifically for padel — typically lightweight, stretchy, and cut for racket sport movements. They look great on court. But a £10 moisture-wicking t-shirt from Decathlon performs virtually identically to a £40 branded padel shirt in terms of comfort and sweat management. Spend your money on quality shoes and a good racket first. Upgrade your clothing later if you want the padel-specific look.
What do I need to bring to a padel session?
The essentials: court shoes with non-marking soles, a water bottle, and sportswear you can move freely in. Highly recommended additions: a small towel, a spare shirt to change into after playing, and your own racket (though most venues hire them for £3-£5 per session). Venues typically provide balls. If you're playing outdoors, bring layers for warmth and a cap for sun protection. For a complete rundown, see the checklist section above.
Free Download: First Padel Session Checklist
Everything you need to know before stepping on court for the first time — what to wear, what to bring, basic rules, and court etiquette. One printable page, completely free.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only. Equipment recommendations are based on research and testing — individual preferences may vary. Always consult venue staff about court-specific requirements. Prices and availability are subject to change.