Guide · Padel

How long do padel balls last? The short answer will surprise you

Most padel players change balls far too early – not because the balls are worn out, but because they have lost pressure. Here's what you need to know about ball longevity, pressure drop, and what you can do about it.

May 3, 2026 · 3 min. læsning · Skrevet af Balcour

How quickly does the pressure in a padel ball drop?

A new padel ball typically has an internal pressure of 9-11 PSI (approx. 0.6-0.76 bar). This is the pressure that gives the ball its characteristic crispness and the precise bounce you know from a fresh tube of balls.

The problem is that this pressure is in a constant free fall - from the moment you open the tube.

📊 Fact Box - Pressure drop over time

Day 0 (new ball): ~10 PSI - maximum pressure, crisp and precise

After 1-2 matches: ~7-8 PSI - still good for experienced players

After 3-4 matches: ~5-6 PSI - noticeably softer bounce, lower speed

After 5-6 matches: Below 4 PSI - clinically dead. The ball is for recycling or the bin

It's not because the ball is worn out or old. It's pure physics: the rubber core of a padel ball is porous. Even without use, air slowly seeps out through the material. An unused padel ball loses up to 50% of its internal pressure in just 30 days if stored in a normal tube at room temperature.

When is a padel ball actually "dead"?

That depends on the player and the level - but there are a few rules of thumb that are widely used in the padel community:

Level Balls feel okay for... Typical number of matches
Beginner / recreational player The ball bounces fairly consistently 5-8 matches
Intermediate level The ball reacts precisely to spin and power 3-5 matches
Advanced / tournament The ball is like new - no compromise 1-2 matches

This means that an active padel player who plays 3 times a week can use 3-4 tubes of balls a month - just to maintain ball standards. Over a year, this quickly adds up to an amount most people haven't calculated.

Why are half-dead balls still played with?

The simple answer: most padel players don't know what a fresh ball actually feels like. The pressure drop happens gradually - the ball doesn't die in one match. It dies slowly over 3-4 weeks, and the brain adapts along the way.

Only when you place a half-old ball next to a new one do you immediately notice the difference. The bounce height is lower, the responsiveness to smash is sluggish, and the ball behaves unpredictably during hard shots near the court.

350 mio. padel and tennis balls are discarded globally each year - only 2% are recycled

It's a combination of ignorance, habit, and economics. New balls cost money, and most players make do with what they have - even when the ball has long since worn out. It's expensive in the long run, and it's unnecessary.

How to significantly extend the life of a padel ball

The best and most effective solution is pressure storage. The principle is simple: if you store the balls in a high-pressure environment, the air does not seep out of the rubber core - it stays there.

That's exactly what Pressurebox Pro is built for. You place your used balls in the container after playing, activate the compressor with a single press, and it automatically maintains the correct pressure - overnight, for a week, for two weeks. You take the ball out, and it feels like new.

longer ball life with pressure storage
80%savings on annual ball budget
3-4balls kept fresh with Pressurebox for the price of 1 new tube

Other things you can do:

  • Store balls at room temperature - heat and cold accelerate pressure drop
  • Do not open the tube until the ball is to be used - every second in open air is lost pressure
  • Use a closed tube during transport - not an open pocket in the bag
  • Rotate balls regularly - use the oldest ball first, the freshest last

But none of these habits can do what pressure storage can: actively counteract the natural pressure drop and give the ball exactly the lifespan it was designed for.

The padel cluster is now fully established. The felt quality of padel balls is described in detail here, the signs that it's time to change padel balls are here, the FIP bounce requirement and comparison with tennis is explained here, the difference between a fresh and a used ball is measured and described here, and winter storage for padel balls has its own guide.

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