Padel is the fastest growing racket sport in the world and UK coaching salaries are evolving rapidly alongside it. From sessional rates at independent clubs to full-time senior positions at premium venues, here is what coaches are actually earning right now.
How Pay Is Structured
Padel coaching pay in the UK falls into three broad categories. Employed full-time roles offer a fixed annual salary with holiday pay and pension at larger operators like David Lloyd and Everyone Active. Self-employed sessional arrangements pay a rate per hour or session — attractive in the short term but without the security of employment. Hybrid arrangements, increasingly common at independent venues, combine both.
Salary By Level
Level 1 Trainee Coach
Learning under supervision, typically part-time or sessional.
Employed: £18,000 – £22,000 | Sessional: £12 – £18/hr
Level 2 Club Coach
Delivering adult and junior programmes independently with two to four years experience.
Employed: £22,000 – £32,000 | Sessional: £20 – £30/hr
Head Coach
Running the full coaching operation at a venue — programmes, junior pathway, staff, commercial targets.
Employed: £30,000 – £45,000 | Bonuses: £2,000 – £8,000 at larger venues
Director of Padel / Head of Performance
Senior leadership across multiple sites or a national network. Still rare in the UK but growing fast.
Employed: £45,000 – £65,000
Centre Manager
Operations rather than coaching — bookings, staff, customer experience, financial performance.
Employed: £28,000 – £42,000
International Roles
This is where the numbers get interesting. UK coaches with solid credentials are in genuine demand internationally.
- Spain — £25,000 – £40,000 equivalent, often with accommodation included
- UAE / Dubai — £40,000 – £70,000 equivalent, frequently tax-free with flights and accommodation
- USA — £35,000 – £55,000 equivalent, fastest growing market outside Europe
- Australia — £30,000 – £50,000 equivalent, strong lifestyle draw with a growing padel community
What Increases Your Earning Potential
The gap between the bottom and top of each salary band is significant. What moves coaches towards the higher end is straightforward — a higher LTA qualification level, proven junior programme delivery, a commercial track record you can quantify, and a willingness to relocate. Coaches who can show they have grown a lesson diary, hit occupancy targets or increased venue revenue will always command more than those who can only talk about their on-court skills.
Is Pay Where It Should Be?
Not yet. The sport is growing faster than the salary structures supporting it and many coaches are still being paid rates that do not reflect the value they bring. The trajectory is positive — as venues compete harder for the best coaches, salaries at the top end will continue to rise. The coaches investing in qualifications and building commercial track records now will be best placed to benefit.
New padel coaching and management roles added every Monday at padeltalent.co/jobs
Salary data based on advertised roles and industry intelligence at time of publication. International figures are approximate GBP equivalents.