Space planner for
padel venues: Visuelles Layout.
Enter the length and width of your plot. We calculate how many padel courts fit using FIP playing-field dimensions and PadelCompass planning assumptions, including orientation and parking spaces.
info What do we calculate?
How many padel courts realistically fit on your space, including paths, safety buffer and optional reception building.
- FIP playing field
- Official inner dimensions of the world federation: 20 × 10 m. The PadelCompass planning dimension is larger because wall construction and operating buffer are added.
- Setback
- PadelCompass heuristic for the first check: 3 m outdoor, 1.5 m indoor. Local requirements can differ.
- Parking recommendation
- Four car parking spaces per court as an early planning assumption. The municipality clarifies the binding parking requirement.
How the courts fit on your plot
Turquoise: gross court area (22 × 12 m incl. walls) · gaps between courts: 1.5 m paths · yellow: reception building · dashed grey: plot boundary (setback is subtracted).
How large a padel court really needs to be.
The playing field is standardized, but anyone building must plan for a few metres more.
20 × 10 m
The pure playing area under FIP rules. The sport happens within these 200 m²: lines, service zone and net at 92 cm in the centre.
22 × 12 m
PadelCompass planning dimension including wall thickness, support structure and operating buffer. We use these 264 m² for the first footprint calculation, not as an official FIP dimension.
8 m / 6 m
The FIP states 6 m clear minimum height and recommends 8 m for new venues. Halls between 6 and 8 m can work, but should be checked more closely from sporting and building perspectives.
Space works: how viable is it?
The number of courts is the most important lever in the ROI model. With this recommendation, the ROI calculator adds a realistic cash-flow picture.