--- title: "How to Build a Padel Hall: The 5-Phase Process from Feasibility to Opening Day" slug: padel-hall-build-guide language: en url_path: /padel-hall-build-guide meta_description: "Complete guide to building a padel hall. All 23 steps across feasibility, design, construction, pre-opening, and operations. Realistic timelines and what to watch out for." cornerstone: C8 --- # How to Build a Padel Hall: The 5-Phase Process from Feasibility to Opening Day The realistic timeline from first concept to opening day is 12 to 18 months. Operators who plan for 9 months almost always run late. Those who budget 18 months negotiate better, handle surprises better, and open with less stress. This guide walks through all five phases and 23 steps between your initial market research and a running facility. No glossy success stories — a practical account of what actually happens, in what order, and where things commonly go wrong. --- ## The 5 Phases at a Glance
Underestimating HVAC complexity and budget. Large indoor courts need precise temperature and humidity control — not just for player comfort, but for playing surface longevity and air quality. Courts installed in a poorly climate-controlled building will degrade faster and generate complaints. Budget for it properly from the start, not as a value-engineering target.
Rushing court installation sequencing under schedule pressure. The pressure to hit an opening date is real — but installing courts into an unenclosed building is one of the most reliable ways to add cost and delay, not reduce them. Hold the sequence.
The booking system isn't fully configured, tested, and working on day one. A broken booking flow, failed test payments, or a QR code that leads to an error page on opening day kills your launch momentum in a way that's difficult to recover from. Test the system end-to-end — including real bookings, real payments, and real cancellations — two to four weeks before opening.
Almost always cut at the wrong place early — too little HVAC budget, no construction contingency, a cheap general contractor without adequate contractual protection. The savings on the way in become much larger costs on the way out.
Consistently underestimate the regulatory process. Permits, noise assessments, and change-of-use applications take time that money cannot buy once you've started too late. Start conversations with authorities before you need the approvals.
Started marketing too late and tested the booking system too late. An empty calendar on day one and a broken booking page create impressions that stick longer than the opening week.
Treat all three phases — planning, build, and opening — with equal rigor, and invest early and consistently in community and repeat customers.