Hamptons Padel Scene Grows, Six East End Courts Now Serve Summer Players
Six padel venues now dot the East End from East Hampton to Westhampton Beach, giving Hamptons tennis players a ready-made conversion path this summer season.

Six padel courts have quietly landed across the East End, spread from East Hampton to Westhampton Beach, and if you've been watching the game explode elsewhere and wondering when it would reach the Hamptons in a serious way, the answer is: it already has. The real question now is which venue fits your schedule, your membership situation, and your willingness to look slightly lost for the first thirty minutes on court.
The Lay of the Land
The six active facilities now operating in the Hamptons span East Hampton, Southampton, Montauk, and Westhampton Beach. Four of those anchors are well-documented enough to plan a summer around. Brisas East Hampton sits at 174 Daniels Hole Road and frames itself as a wellness sanctuary, combining three outdoor padel courts with sauna, cold plunge, and lifestyle programming. Hampton Racquet is an established East Hampton racquet club that has added padel to its long-standing tennis program. The Racquet Lounge in Southampton operates as a premium members club with four padel courts. Triangle Tennis Club in Southampton rounds out the primary quartet, offering heated turf for earlier-spring and later-fall play.
Where to Show Up Without a Membership
For a visiting tennis player who wants to simply walk in, book a court, and figure out the game, Brisas is your starting point. Courts at Brisas are available for booking by both members and non-members, though rates and availability may vary for each. That open-access policy is genuinely rare among Hamptons racquet clubs and makes Brisas the most logical venue for a first-time session. Private and semi-private lessons are available on-site; to book, you can text or WhatsApp the Brisas pro at 646-305-7337. Given that courts fill up fast once Memorial Day weekend hits, reaching out early in the week, or even before your Hamptons trip begins, is the smarter play.
The wellness wrapper at Brisas isn't incidental, either. Brisas frames padel as both athletic and lifestyle-focused, combining on-court play with sauna and cold plunge programming, which means you can run a hard session, recover properly, and still make a dinner reservation. It's positioned as the Hamptons' local leader in that wellness-meets-padel niche, and its second location at CityView NYC suggests the model is working.
The Full-Club Experience
Hampton Racquet and The Racquet Lounge are more traditional club experiences where membership or invitational access may be required. Both venues leverage existing tennis infrastructure, including club restaurants, pro shops, and on-site fitness, to deliver a full-day racquet experience. Hampton Racquet in particular has built a wide programming slate: the club offers private lessons, group clinics, court rentals, events, and tournaments for padel specifically, alongside its existing tennis and beach tennis calendar. If you're already a member, or can get an invite from one, showing up at Hampton Racquet for a padel clinic followed by lunch is an easy way to sample the game in a structured setting.
The Racquet Lounge's four-court footprint makes it the largest dedicated padel facility of the named venues. Four courts running simultaneously means pickup games are more available when the club is busy, and there's a higher likelihood of finding an organized round-robin or social mixer on a Saturday morning.
Stretching the Season at Triangle
Triangle Tennis Club's heated artificial turf gives it a competitive advantage for early-season training, an important factor for juniors and competitive leagues that want to extend their calendar beyond typical outdoor months. Located in the heart of Southampton Village on Hampton Road, Triangle also maintains two Har-Tru hydrocourts for tennis alongside its padel offering, making it genuinely useful for players who want to run a mixed-sport morning. If you're arriving for a long spring weekend in late April or planning to stay through October, Triangle is the most weather-resilient option on the East End.

What to Expect Your First Time on Court
Your tennis instincts will carry you further than you think, but a few mechanics need immediate recalibration. The padel racket is a solid, perforated frame with no strings, shorter and noticeably heavier in the head than a tennis racket. Most venues will have loaners available, but if you're taking a lesson, ask in advance so you're not adjusting to borrowed equipment mid-session.
The court itself is roughly a third the size of a tennis court and fully enclosed by glass walls and metal fencing. Those walls are live, which is the single biggest mental adjustment for a tennis player: a ball that bounces off the back glass is still in play and can be returned, which completely changes how you defend a deep shot. The serve is underhand, must bounce once in the service box before being struck, and cannot be hit above waist height. That lowers the entry barrier dramatically. Scoring follows the same 15-30-40 structure you already know, and sets run to six games, so there's no learning curve there.
What padel punishes is exactly what tennis rewards: big swings, aggressive baseline power, and flat drives. The game rewards control, angles, and quick net positioning. Your volleys and net instincts will feel immediately useful. Your groundstroke power, less so. Padel is played exclusively in doubles, which makes it inherently more social than singles tennis and naturally lends itself to meeting new hitting partners. Showing up to an open mixer or a club round-robin is a legitimate strategy for finding regular partners for the summer.
Booking Playbook
Most Hamptons padel venues are outdoor and seasonal, running spring through fall, so early spring openings and membership arrangements are important for seasonal residents and visitors alike. Courts and programs fill quickly once the season opens. A practical checklist before your first session:
- Confirm whether a venue requires membership or accepts public bookings before making the drive.
- For early- or late-season play, prioritize Triangle Tennis Club, where heated turf extends the playable window.
- If wellness programming matters as much as court time, Brisas is the East End's clearest choice.
- For comprehensive access that combines tennis, padel, and fitness under one membership, Hampton Racquet and The Racquet Lounge are the venues to investigate.
- Book lessons early in the week, not day-of, especially from June through August.
Why This Is the Right Moment
The operators behind these venues see padel not as a replacement for tennis but as a complement to it, a high-engagement, social entry point that attracts couples, families, and social groups while adding revenue and activity to summer club calendars. For the Hamptons tennis community specifically, that framing matters: padel's growth here isn't pulling players away from existing clubs; it's filling the hours and court slots that a standard tennis program doesn't capture.
The East End now has enough critical mass, six venues, multiple access models, and at least one no-membership-required entry point, that the barrier to a first game is essentially a phone call. The courts are there. The only thing left is booking one before someone else does.
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