Pickle Money Balls Super Series moves to Daytona Beach, offers $250,000
Pickle Money Ball’s Super Series East is heading to Daytona Beach for Sept. 24-27, bringing a guaranteed $250,000 purse across 29 amateur divisions.
Pickle Money Ball has moved one of the year’s largest amateur pickleball events from the Boston market to Daytona Beach, placing the Super Series East at the center of a bigger late-season money race. The tournament is set for Sept. 24-27 at Pictona at Holly Hill and will carry a guaranteed $250,000 prize pool across 29 divisions.
The payout structure gives the event real weight for amateurs deciding where to spend their travel budget and competitive calendar. Each doubles division will pay $10,000, while each singles division will pay $5,000, a format that should draw players chasing both cash and ranking points. The field is open to players of all skill levels, with divisions listed for Men’s Doubles, Women’s Doubles, Mixed Doubles, Coed Singles and Women’s Singles Open.

The move to Holly Hill also puts the event inside one of the most developed pickleball venues in the country. Pictona at Holly Hill has 49 courts, including 13 covered courts, and its championship court seats up to 1,200 spectators. That scale matters for an amateur money event: it allows organizers to spread out a deep draw while still giving the final matches a true showcase setting.

Daytona Beach tourism has increasingly leaned into pickleball as part of its identity, and Pictona has been promoted as a leading destination in the sport. The relocation gives the Super Series East a Florida backdrop that fits the region’s growing pull for recreational and competitive players alike, especially as large-money amateur events continue to cluster in the state.

Pickle Money Ball’s wider circuit is also expanding beyond this stop. A Super Series qualifier in Dallas is being positioned as part of a path to a $600,000 Florida regional in Fort Lauderdale later in October, underscoring how the brand is building a larger amateur money ecosystem with Florida at its center. Players can nominate through the Pickle Money Ball app at tournaments, leagues and open play, keeping the series connected across events as the calendar builds toward its biggest prize pools.
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