Hong Kong's Indoor Pickleball Scene Expands: Best Courts, Memberships, and Prices
Five indoor pickleball venues are reshaping Hong Kong's court scene, with memberships starting at just $300/year and hourly rates varying wildly by location.

Pickleball is officially blowing up in Hong Kong! From kids to adults, everyone's falling in love with this fast, fun, and super easy-to-learn sport." That line from a February 2026 roundup reads less like marketing copy and more like a straightforward observation of what's happening on the ground. Indoor courts are opening across the city, membership models are proliferating, and the pricing spread between venues is wide enough that knowing where to book matters.
Here's a breakdown of every indoor pickleball venue currently on the map, ranked by the depth of their offering, with every price figure sourced directly from venue listings.
1. 212HK (Wong Chuk Hang)
The boldest claim in Hong Kong pickleball right now belongs to 212HK, which has positioned itself as the city's largest indoor pickleball social club. It backs that claim with four spacious courts at its Wong Chuk Hang location, sitting directly next to the MTR station, making it the most accessible venue on this list by public transit. The social club framing matters: 212HK isn't just selling court time, it's selling membership value and community, and the pricing structure reflects that. Members pay $500 per court for non-peak rentals and $400 during peak hours, while non-members are charged $800 and $600 respectively for the same slots. A note on those figures: as published, the peak rates are numerically lower than non-peak rates, which is the inverse of the typical model. That's worth confirming directly with 212HK before booking, as it may reflect a labeling error in the original listing. One other detail that stands out: 212HK advertises "instant highlight output" as a venue feature. The exact meaning isn't spelled out, but it suggests some form of in-house video capture or clip-sharing capability, which would make it the only venue on this list explicitly catering to players who want to document their game. Website and booking details are available through 212HK's official channels.
2. PICKLE.READY (Tsuen Wan and Kowloon Bay)
PICKLE.READY operates two locations and runs the most structured membership model in Hong Kong's indoor pickleball market. Annual membership costs $300, which unlocks court booking access and member-only activities. That's a low barrier for consistent players. The catch: the venue accepts only 20 new members per month, which means a waitlist is effectively the entry point. Interested players can join via PICKLE.READY's Instagram at @pickle.ready or through their inquiry channel.
Court rates vary by site. At Tsuen Wan Plaza, peak hours run $320 per hour and normal hours drop to $200 per hour, giving it the widest peak-to-off-peak spread of any venue listed here. The Kowloon Bay location is priced at a flat $260 per hour and is highlighted for its family-friendly atmosphere: the listing specifically describes it as a "cozy vibe, ideal for family experiences." Access at Kowloon Bay is members-only, so casual walk-ins are not the model here. The combination of low annual dues, capped membership, and two-location coverage makes PICKLE.READY a serious option for players who want predictable access at controlled cost.
3. Pickle & Match (MegaBox, Kowloon Bay)

Located inside MegaBox in Kowloon Bay, Pickle & Match takes a different approach to pricing: the non-member rate of $600 per hour includes access for up to four players, which changes the per-player math significantly. Split four ways, that's $150 per person per hour before any membership discount. Every player beyond four is charged an additional $100, so group size management is part of the booking strategy here. Members receive at least 5% off, which is modest compared to the member/non-member differentials at other venues but may stack with other benefits not detailed in current listings. Pickle & Match maintains a website at thebaypickle.com, making it the only venue on this list with a confirmed direct web address available for booking inquiries. The venue also appears in some listings as "Pick & Match," so if searching online, either variant may surface.
4. Asia Aces Pickleball Academy (Wong Chuk Hang and Cyberport)
Asia Aces is the only venue on this list that functions explicitly as an academy, which signals a different use case: structured learning and skill development alongside open court time. It operates two locations, one adjacent to Wong Chuk Hang MTR station and a second at Cyberport, giving it the broadest geographic footprint of any single operator in this roundup. Pricing is time-of-day dependent rather than member/non-member tiered. Weekday sessions before 3:00 PM run $400 per hour; everything after 3:00 PM on weekdays and all weekend slots cost $460 per hour. That's a relatively transparent structure with no major peak surcharge. One quirk buried in the booking process: Asia Aces advises players to avoid using Hotmail addresses when registering, which suggests a technical issue with email delivery to that domain. Anyone booking through a legacy Microsoft email account should use an alternative address. The academy's website and booking link are accessible through their official channels.
5. Yama Pickleball Arena (Wong Chuk Hang)
Yama Pickleball Arena rounds out the known indoor venues, based in Wong Chuk Hang alongside 212HK and one of the Asia Aces locations. That concentration in a single neighborhood suggests Wong Chuk Hang is emerging as Hong Kong's pickleball hub, helped in no small part by its MTR connectivity. At this point, pricing, membership terms, court count, and contact details for Yama are not publicly listed in available sources, so it's impossible to compare it head-to-head with the other four venues. That absence of information doesn't diminish Yama's place on the map; it just means prospective players will need to reach out directly. As the scene continues to grow, expect more details to surface.
A note on pricing currency: all figures above are in Hong Kong dollars.
The geographic clustering tells its own story. Wong Chuk Hang alone hosts three venues, Kowloon Bay has two (including both PICKLE.READY and Pickle & Match at MegaBox), and Tsuen Wan and Cyberport each contribute one location. For players in the New Territories or on Hong Kong Island's southern side, options are narrowing considerably, which points to where the next expansion wave is most likely to land. The variety in membership models, from PICKLE.READY's $300 annual fee with a 20-person monthly cap to 212HK's tiered hourly structure to Pickle & Match's group-inclusive pricing, means there's no single right answer. The best venue depends entirely on how often you play, how many people you bring, and whether you want a social club, an academy, or a straight court rental.
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