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How to Host a Pickleball Clinic: The Complete Organizer's Guide


Pickleball clinics are one of the highest-value events you can offer as a Play Provider. They attract new players, develop your existing community, generate strong revenue per court hour, and build your reputation as an organizer who invests in player growth. This guide covers everything you need to plan, promote, staff, and run a successful pickleball clinic — from choosing a format to managing the day-of experience.

Table of Contents

  1. Types of Pickleball Clinics
  2. Planning Your Clinic
  3. Hiring and Working with Instructors
  4. Setting Up Registration
  5. Clinic Day Operations
  6. Demo Days
  7. Mixers and Social Play Events
  8. Budgeting and Pricing
  9. Common Clinic Organizer Mistakes

Types of Pickleball Clinics

Not all clinics are the same. Choosing the right format for your audience and goals is the first and most important planning decision.

Beginner/introductory clinics

Designed for players who have never played or have played fewer than a handful of times. Cover the basics: rules, scoring, serving, the kitchen rule, and basic shot mechanics. These are the highest-demand clinic type in most markets because the sport is growing so fast. They also convert directly into new club members, league registrations, and long-term players for your community.

Skill-specific clinics

Focused on a single shot or technique: the third shot drop, dinking, serving, resetting, or overhead smashes. Best suited for intermediate players (3.0–4.0) who have basics down and want to refine specific aspects of their game. These can be run as standalone events or as a recurring series (e.g., "Third Shot Series" — four sessions covering drop, drive, lob, and reset).

Strategy clinics

Focused on positioning, doubles tactics, stacking, game management, and decision-making rather than shot mechanics. Best for 3.5+ players. Strategy clinics are highly engaging because they change how players think about the game, which tends to produce visible results quickly.

Drill-based clinics

High-repetition practice sessions where players rotate through structured drills on specific skills. Less instructional lecture, more active practice time. Popular with intermediate to advanced players who want to build muscle memory rather than hear more theory.

Round-robin play clinics

A hybrid format: some instruction followed by structured competitive play where an instructor circulates to provide real-time coaching. Players get the benefit of live feedback during actual game situations. Works well across skill levels.

Note

Match the clinic format to your audience's stage of development. Beginners need fundamentals and encouragement. Intermediate players want specific skill improvement. Advanced players want strategy, competition, and high-level feedback. A mismatch between clinic format and audience creates frustration on both sides.


Planning Your Clinic

Define your audience and skill level

Every clinic should target a specific skill level range — not "all levels." All-level clinics force instructors to split their attention across wildly different needs and leave everyone partially dissatisfied. If you want to serve multiple levels, run separate sessions at different times rather than combining them.

Choose your format and duration

  • 90-minute clinic: Ideal for introductory and skill-specific formats. Long enough for meaningful learning, short enough to fit busy schedules. The most popular duration for standalone clinics.
  • 2–3 hour clinic: Better for drill-based or strategy formats where more repetitions or game time is needed. Works well on weekend mornings.
  • Half-day clinic (4 hours): Suitable for intensive workshops or multi-topic formats. Requires more careful scheduling and breaks to maintain energy and focus.
  • Multi-session series: 4–6 weekly sessions on a progressive topic. Higher commitment from participants but higher revenue per player and stronger community outcomes.

Court and player ratio planning

The instructor-to-player ratio is the single biggest factor in clinic quality. General guidelines:

FormatRecommended ratioNotes
Beginner/introductory1 instructor : 6–8 playersMore individual attention needed for fundamentals
Skill-specific1 instructor : 8–12 playersHigher ratios workable with structured drills
Strategy/round-robin1 instructor : 8–12 playersInstructor circulates during play
Multi-instructor clinic1 instructor per 6–8 playersFor large events with multiple simultaneous courts

Court count determines your maximum group size. Each court typically supports one group of 4–8 players at a time in a clinic setting.

Set your capacity and registration limit

Set a hard registration cap based on your court count and instructor ratio. Overcrowded clinics with too little individual attention are the most common source of negative feedback. It's better to sell out a smaller clinic and run additional sessions than to overbook one session.


Hiring and Working with Instructors

Finding qualified instructors

  • PPR (Professional Pickleball Registry) certified instructors. PPR is the primary certification body for pickleball instruction. PPR-certified instructors have completed standardized training and demonstrated teaching competency. Search the PPR directory at pprpickleball.org.
  • IPTPA certified instructors. The International Pickleball Teaching Professional Association (IPTPA) is another major certification body. IPTPA-certified instructors are also a strong choice.
  • Local high-level players with teaching experience. Some 4.5–5.0+ players without formal certification are excellent teachers. Evaluate teaching ability separately from playing ability — they don't always go together.

Compensation structures

There are three common compensation models for clinic instructors:

  • Flat rate per session. You pay the instructor a fixed fee regardless of registration count. Simple and predictable. Typical range: $75–$200 per 90-minute session depending on instructor reputation and market.
  • Revenue share. The instructor receives a percentage of registration revenue (typically 50–70%). Aligns instructor incentives with filling the clinic. Works well once you have an established registration base.
  • Instructor-organized, facility-hosted. The instructor handles their own registration and marketing; you provide the courts for a flat court rental fee or percentage. Lower administrative burden for you; instructor takes on more risk and reward.
Note

Get your instructor compensation and cancellation terms in writing before promoting the clinic. If you need to cancel due to low registration, both parties need clarity on what happens to fees and deposits. Verbal agreements with instructors cause the same problems as verbal agreements with venues.


Setting Up Registration

Use your Pickleball Clubs (PC) or Pickleball Leagues (PL) platform tools to set up clinic registration on Pickleball.com. This gives you organized registration, payment processing, waiver collection, and participant communication in one place.

  • Set a clear registration deadline (typically 48–72 hours before the clinic) so you can confirm instructor, court setup, and participant count.
  • Collect skill level at registration — either a self-reported level or a DUPR rating — to confirm the participant fits the target audience.
  • Include your cancellation and refund policy clearly in the registration confirmation.
  • Send a pre-clinic reminder 24 hours before with logistics: location, parking, what to bring (paddle, water, court shoes), and what to expect.

Minimum viable registration

Set a minimum registration number required to run the clinic (typically 4–6 players for a single-court session). If you don't hit the minimum by your deadline, cancel promptly and offer full refunds. Communicate cancellations as early as possible — players who plan around a clinic schedule and find out the day before it's cancelled are far more frustrated than players who get 5 days' notice.


Clinic Day Operations

Pre-clinic setup checklist

  • Courts set up and nets at correct height (36" sidelines, 34" center).
  • Balls on court — clinic-appropriate balls (outdoor or indoor depending on facility).
  • Cones, targets, or drill markers set up per instructor's request.
  • Check-in list ready — confirm all registered participants and flag any no-shows.
  • Instructor briefed on logistics: participant count, skill level range, timing, and any special requests or accommodations.
  • Water and any planned refreshments available.

Running the session

Start on time. Players who arrive early are ready to go — don't make them wait for stragglers. A brief welcome and introduction (5 minutes maximum) sets expectations: what the clinic will cover, the format, and any ground rules. Then hand it over to the instructor and let them lead. Your job during the session is logistics and support, not instruction.

Managing ability mismatches on the day

Even with skill level screening at registration, you'll occasionally get participants who are above or below the intended level. If the mismatch is minor, most instructors can adapt. If someone is dramatically out of place (e.g., a 2.0 player in a 4.0 drill clinic), address it privately and compassionately — offer a transfer to a more suitable upcoming clinic or a partial refund. Don't let one significantly mismatched player derail the experience for everyone else.

Post-clinic wrap-up

  • Thank participants at the end of the session. Even a 2-minute closing from the instructor or organizer leaves a positive lasting impression.
  • Share what's coming next — upcoming clinics, leagues, or open play opportunities. The end of a clinic is a high-engagement moment; use it.
  • Send a follow-up email within 24 hours with a thank-you, a summary of what was covered, any drill resources the instructor wants to share, and links to your next clinic or event registration.
  • Request a review or feedback — a short survey or a direct ask for a Google review builds your reputation for future recruiting.

Demo Days

A demo day is a lower-commitment, higher-volume event where players try pickleball (often for the first or second time) in a structured but informal setting. Demo days are typically free or very low cost, run 1–3 hours, and serve primarily as a lead generation and community-building tool rather than a revenue event.

When to run a demo day

  • When launching a new club or league and you need to build a player base quickly.
  • At a community event, park day, or fitness fair where you can attract people who haven't discovered pickleball yet.
  • As a corporate or private group event — companies frequently look for group activity experiences for team building.
  • At a tennis club or gym as an introductory experience to convert existing athletes.

Demo day setup

  • Have loaner paddles available — most demo day participants won't own equipment yet.
  • Keep instruction minimal and fun-focused. The goal is to get people hitting the ball and enjoying themselves, not to run a technical clinic.
  • Capture contact information from every participant — a sign-in sheet or a QR code to a registration form. This is your lead list for future clinic and league registration.
  • Have a clear next step ready: "If you want to keep playing, here's how to join our club / sign up for our beginner clinic / find open play near you."
Note

A well-run demo day that captures 30 leads and converts 8–10 into paying club members or clinic participants is far more valuable than a free event with no follow-up. Always have a conversion path planned before you run the demo.


Mixers and Social Play Events

Mixers are structured social play events where players rotate partners and opponents throughout the session. They sit between open play (fully unstructured) and a league (fully competitive) — providing enough structure to feel organized while remaining low-pressure and social.

Why mixers matter

  • They're the best onboarding experience for new players — low stakes, lots of variety, and immediate social connection.
  • They keep existing members engaged between seasons when league play isn't running.
  • They generate meaningful revenue at low administrative cost compared to tournaments.
  • They build the cross-skill-level relationships that make a club community feel tight-knit.

Running a mixer

  • Set a group size and rotation format. King-of-the-court, round robin rotation, and random partner assignment are the most common mixer formats. Choose based on your participant count and court availability.
  • Designate a host or MC. Someone needs to call time, manage rotations, and keep energy up. This is usually the organizer or a volunteer. Don't leave rotation management to participants — it always leads to confusion.
  • Skill-level guidance. Mixers work best when participants are within roughly one skill level of each other. A mixer spanning 2.5 through 4.5 will frustrate everyone. Segment if your participant pool spans more than one full skill level tier.
  • Social time after play. The social element is the point. Build in 20–30 minutes after play for conversation — at a minimum, provide water and a space to gather. Food or drinks significantly increase the community feel.

Budgeting and Pricing

ExpenseNotes
Court rentalTypically charged per session. Negotiate a flat rate for recurring clinic series.
Instructor feeFlat rate or revenue share — agree in writing in advance.
BallsBudget 1 ball per 2 participants per session, plus extras.
Cones/drill equipmentOne-time purchase. Cones, targets, and ball hoppers are useful for structured drills.
MarketingUsually minimal — email to existing players and social media posts are sufficient for most clinics.
RefreshmentsOptional but appreciated for longer sessions.
Loaner paddles (demo days)Needed if running demo days. Consider borrowing from a local retailer or paddle brand as a sponsorship opportunity.

Pricing guidance

  • Beginner/introductory clinics: $20–$40 per player for a 90-minute session. Lower price reduces commitment friction for first-timers.
  • Skill-specific and strategy clinics: $35–$65 per player for a 90-minute session. Intermediate and advanced players expect to pay more for quality instruction.
  • Multi-session series: $100–$200 for a 4–6 session series. Offer a modest discount vs. per-session pricing to incentivize the commitment.
  • Mixers: $10–$25 per player depending on duration and whether food/drinks are included.
  • Demo days: Free or $5 suggested donation. The goal is volume and lead capture, not revenue.

Common Clinic Organizer Mistakes

  • Running all-level clinics. Skill-mixed clinics consistently receive the worst reviews. Segment your audience — even a rough split (beginner vs. intermediate vs. advanced) dramatically improves outcomes.
  • Instructor ratios that are too high. More than 12 players per instructor in a skill-development clinic means not enough individual attention. Players notice and won't return.
  • No registration minimum enforced. Running a clinic with 2 players and a full-price instructor fee is financially unsustainable and often a poor experience for participants. Set and enforce a minimum.
  • No follow-up after the clinic. The clinic ends and participants hear nothing for weeks. The follow-up email, the next-event promotion, and the feedback request are where your long-term return on the clinic investment is generated.
  • Poor court-to-player ratio planning. Underprepared court setup (wrong net height, no drill markers, insufficient balls) signals disorganization and undermines instructor credibility before the clinic even starts.

Frequently Asked Questions

What type of clinic should I run first?

The most common and accessible format is an introductory clinic for beginners — 90 minutes, one instructor, 6–10 players, focused on the basics. This format fills easily (there are always new players), requires no prior experience from participants, and has a clear, teachable curriculum. It's also the best top-of-funnel event for converting new players into club members.

How many courts do I need for a clinic?

Most clinics can be run with 2 courts. One court per 4–8 players in a drill-heavy clinic; slightly more in a round-robin play clinic. For large-group events or multi-track clinics, 4–6 courts allow for meaningful segmentation by skill level.

How do I market my clinic to get registrations?

The most effective channels for filling clinics are: email to your existing player list, posts in local pickleball Facebook groups, your club or league's Pickleball.com listing, and personal outreach to regulars at open play. Paid advertising is rarely necessary for local clinics. Word-of-mouth from satisfied participants is your most valuable long-term marketing asset.

Can I get paddle brands to sponsor my clinic?

Yes. Paddle brands (Selkirk, Franklin, Joola, Paddletek, and others) actively sponsor clinics and demo events in exchange for product placement, logo visibility, and loaner paddles. Reach out to the brand's sponsorship or field marketing team with your event details and audience size. Local sporting goods retailers are also natural sponsors for demo days.



Have questions about running clinics or demo days that aren't covered here? Reach out to our support team at [email protected] — we're happy to help.


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