Four things nobody else in British padel can do
Every other padel operator in the UK is chasing the same commercial real estate — retail parks, industrial units, urban leisure sites. We are not competing with them. We are accessing land they cannot touch, in catchments they cannot reach, with planning advantages they do not have, and with an operating model designed from scratch for schools, universities and the communities around them.
Join the Squad and back a genuinely different model →Four structural advantages that compound every time we open a new facility
01 – Our sole focus is schools and universities
How commercial operators typically work
Every other padel operator in the UK is chasing the same commercial real estate — retail parks, industrial units, urban leisure sites. They compete for the same sites, bid against each other on rent, and live or die by footfall economics that get tougher every year. Their safeguarding, governance and timetabling are bolted on afterwards, because their sites were never designed with children or institutions in mind.
Click to see The Padel Squad difference
01 – Our sole focus is schools and universities
Every other padel operator in the UK is chasing the same commercial real estate — retail parks, industrial units, urban leisure sites. They compete for the same sites, bid against each other on rent, and live or die by footfall economics that get tougher every year. Their safeguarding, governance and timetabling are bolted on afterwards, because their sites were never designed with children or institutions in mind.
02 – We cover both capex and opex — backed by deep ties to the City of London
How commercial operators typically work
Most padel proposals ask the host institution to fund the courts, or co-invest, or underwrite the operating losses, or carry the planning risk, or find the coaches, or take on the staff — or some combination of all of the above. For a school bursar or university estates director already stretched thin, every one of those asks is a reason to say no. The conversation dies in the first meeting.
Click to see The Padel Squad difference
02 – We cover both capex and opex — backed by deep ties to the City of London
Most padel proposals ask the host institution to fund the courts, or co-invest, or underwrite the operating losses, or carry the planning risk, or find the coaches, or take on the staff — or some combination of all of the above. For a school bursar or university estates director already stretched thin, every one of those asks is a reason to say no. The conversation dies in the first meeting.
03 – We are building squads of specialists who understand education, the sport, and the business of padel
How commercial operators typically work
Schools and universities do not say no to padel because of demand — they say no because they hit a specific technical barrier that nobody in the room can answer. The bursar asks about balance sheet treatment. The governor asks about safeguarding liability. The head of grounds asks about acoustic impact on neighbouring classrooms. The chair of governors asks about planning risk. A commercial operator with one sales rep in the room cannot answer those questions, and the conversation dies.
Click to see The Padel Squad difference
03 – We are building squads of specialists who understand education, the sport, and the business of padel
Schools and universities do not say no to padel because of demand — they say no because they hit a specific technical barrier that nobody in the room can answer. The bursar asks about balance sheet treatment. The governor asks about safeguarding liability. The head of grounds asks about acoustic impact on neighbouring classrooms. The chair of governors asks about planning risk. A commercial operator with one sales rep in the room cannot answer those questions, and the conversation dies.
04 – Every new facility makes the next one faster, cheaper and easier
How commercial operators typically work
Most padel operators grow site-by-site, treating each venue as a one-off: new lease negotiation, new planning application, new suppliers, new staff, new coaching framework. There is no compounding benefit — the hundredth site is no easier than the first, and often harder as the best locations are taken and rents rise. Institutional customers have nowhere to visit, no comparable precedent to point to, and no shared operating platform behind them.
Click to see The Padel Squad difference
04 – Every new facility makes the next one faster, cheaper and easier
Most padel operators grow site-by-site, treating each venue as a one-off: new lease negotiation, new planning application, new suppliers, new staff, new coaching framework. There is no compounding benefit — the hundredth site is no easier than the first, and often harder as the best locations are taken and rents rise. Institutional customers have nowhere to visit, no comparable precedent to point to, and no shared operating platform behind them.
“We are not the fastest padel operator in Britain because we are the best-funded, or the loudest, or the first to a site. We are the fastest because every other operator is solving a harder problem than we are.”
Join the Squad and back a genuinely different model →