Best Pickleball Paddles for Beginners: What to Look For and What to Avoid

Why Most Beginners Pick the Wrong Paddle

Written By: Matt Khoury
Date Published
: June 22, 2025

Most new pickleball players make the same mistake—they choose a paddle that feels powerful during a quick hit but ends up working against them during real play. It’s not their fault. The paddle market is saturated with hype, jargon, and pro endorsements that mean nothing to someone still learning the basics.

You’ll see terms like “power,” “pop,” and “spin” thrown around constantly. What you won’t see is a warning: if you’re not yet consistent, these paddles can actually slow down your improvement. They amplify every mishit, punish late timing, and make resets and dinks harder to control.

Another common trap? Buying the paddle a friend uses, or worse, the one a pro endorses. Elite players modify their paddles, play with fast hands, and reset cleanly under pressure. That’s not where most beginners are. And copying them won’t magically bring their skills into your game.

The truth is simple: a paddle that’s too powerful, too stiff, or too heavy for your current mechanics won’t help you get better—it’ll just make the game more frustrating. The best beginner paddles help you control the ball, feel your contact, and recover from mistakes. That’s how you improve.

So before you chase spin, chase power, or chase someone else’s favorite setup—ask yourself: can I keep the ball in play with this paddle? If the answer isn’t yes, it’s the wrong tool for the job.

Beginner Paddle Picks That Actually Help You Improve

Not every paddle is built for learning—and most beginner options on the market cut corners where it matters. The paddles below aren’t just affordable. They’re tested, control-focused, and designed to give new players the margin, forgiveness, and comfort they actually need. Each one meets our performance standards for swing weight, stability, and feel—so you can focus on improving your game, not fighting your gear.

Control
Discount Available
Control
Discount Available
Control
Discount Available
All-Court
Discount Available
Control
Discount Available
Control
Discount Available
All-Court
Discount Available
All-Court
Discount Available
All-Court
Discount Available
All-Court
Discount Available

What Type of Paddle Should a Beginner Use?

Not all paddles are built the same—and not all beginners need the same thing. But if you're just getting started, the best paddle for you is usually one that emphasizes control over raw power.

Paddles fall into three general categories:

  • Control paddles are built to slow the game down. They offer a larger sweet spot, a softer response, and longer dwell time—helping you keep the ball in play and focus on placement. Most feature a 16mm core and prioritize forgiveness over force. This is the safest, smartest place for new players to start.
  • Power paddles are designed for pace. They often feature thinner cores (13–14mm), firmer faces, and sometimes higher swing weights. They’re great for hard drives and counters—but they demand precision and timing. If you’re still building consistency, these paddles will often work against you.
  • All-court paddles try to blend the two. They offer a bit more pop than pure control paddles without sacrificing too much touch. If you’re an athletic beginner or someone coming from tennis or racquetball, an all-court paddle might give you the balance you need as you learn.

Here’s the bottom line: most beginners benefit from a paddle that helps them slow things down. That means more forgiveness, more margin, and less punishment on mistakes. Control paddles let you work on dinks, resets, and soft shots—all the skills that actually build long-term success.

If you’re not sure which type is right, lean toward control or balanced models—not power-first builds. You’ll develop better habits, stay in more points, and actually enjoy the game more.

Key Specs That Actually Matter for Beginners

Walk into any paddle aisle—or scroll through any product page—and you’ll see a flood of numbers: weight, thickness, swing weight, spin rating, grit level, pop index… most of which sound more confusing than helpful.

Here’s the reality: only a few core specs actually matter when you’re starting out. And understanding them can make the difference between a paddle that supports your growth and one that sabotages it.

Static Weight

This is the actual weight of the paddle on a scale, usually measured in ounces. Most paddles range from about 7.3 to 8.5 oz.

  • For beginners, the ideal range is 7.8 to 8.1 oz.
  • Lighter paddles (<7.7 oz) can feel unstable or too twitchy.
  • Heavier paddles (>8.3 oz) might give you more power, but they can tire out your arm or slow your swing.

Think of static weight as the paddle’s physical mass—not how it feels when swinging (that’s swing weight, which matters more).

Swing Weight

Swing weight measures how heavy a paddle feels during the swing. It factors in balance and shape—not just scale weight.

  • For beginners, stick between 105 and 117.
  • Lower numbers feel quicker and easier to control.
  • Higher numbers add plow-through and power, but slow your hands and can flare up shoulder or elbow issues.

Most beginners make the mistake of choosing paddles with swing weights over 120 because they “feel solid.” But that added mass usually costs you hand speed, especially during fast kitchen exchanges.

Twist Weight

Twist weight is about forgiveness—how stable the paddle is when you mishit toward the edge.

  • Higher twist weight = more stability on off-center hits.
  • Lower twist weight = more twisting, more mishits, and more unpredictability.
  • Look for paddles with 6.5 or higher twist weight to keep things playable.

This spec won’t always be listed, but if a paddle is marketed as having a “large sweet spot” or “excellent forgiveness,” it’s often a sign of higher twist weight.

Core Thickness

  • 16mm = more control, more dwell time, softer feel
  • 14mm or less = more pop, quicker rebound, less margin for error

Beginner takeaway: go with a 16mm core unless you know you need more pop. The thicker core helps you slow down the game, which is exactly what you need early on.

Shape (Standard, Hybrid, Elongated)

  • Standard (16″ x 8″) = most forgiving, biggest sweet spot
  • Hybrid (16.25″ x ~7.6″) = balanced blend of reach and stability
  • Elongated (16.5–17″ x 7.5″) = more reach, smaller sweet spot, higher swing weight

For most new players, standard or hybrid shapes are ideal. Elongated paddles may offer reach, but they often punish you on mis-hits.

Handle Length and Grip Size

  • Handle length: 5.0"–5.5". Go longer if you use a two-handed backhand.
  • Grip size: 4.0"–4.25" is ideal for most. Smaller is safer—you can always build it up with overgrips.

Comfort is the priority here. If it feels awkward or you have to squeeze hard to control it, it’s the wrong grip size.

You don’t need to memorize a paddle chart to choose wisely. Stick to moderate weight, manageable swing weight, high forgiveness, and control-oriented builds. Those will help you stay in more points—and make the game feel better from day one.

Surface Materials & Spin – Don't Get Distracted

As a beginner, it’s easy to get drawn in by talk of raw carbon fiber, grit levels, or spin ratings. Paddle companies love to hype their surface materials—but here’s the truth: most of that doesn’t matter if you can’t yet control the ball.

Let’s break it down.

Raw Carbon Fiber

This is the most common face material on modern performance paddles. Usually labeled as T700 or Toray carbon, it’s naturally textured and gives you good grip on the ball for spin. It also has a muted, soft feel—which is why it’s a go-to for control paddles.

  • Pros: Durable, consistent, spin-capable, good feel
  • Ideal for beginners? Yes—as long as the paddle isn’t overly stiff or power-oriented

Fiberglass

Fiberglass paddles tend to feel livelier and springier. That pop can feel good in quick volleys, but for beginners, it often makes touch shots harder to control.

  • Pros: Lively response, helps add pop
  • Cons: Wears faster, doesn’t grip the ball as well
  • Ideal for beginners? Sometimes, but only if paired with a thick core and lower swing weight to tame the pop

Kevlar or PET Blends

These materials are softer and more dampened. You’ll see them blended with carbon to soften the feel or reduce vibration.

  • Pros: Arm-friendly, comfortable on contact
  • Cons: Less spin potential on their own
  • Ideal for beginners? Yes, especially if comfort and control are your top priorities

Don't Chase Spin Too Early

It’s tempting to pick a paddle that claims “maximum spin” or advertises crazy RPM numbers. But spin doesn’t help if you’re sailing balls long or hitting the net. And if your swing mechanics aren’t there yet, the spin potential won’t translate.

Focus on control. Focus on placement. A mildly textured raw carbon face is plenty to learn spin basics down the road. You don’t need the grittiest surface to improve—and some of the most textured paddles actually play firmer and less forgiving.

Ignore the hype. Surface material affects feel and spin, but it won’t make or break your game if you’re still working on contact and consistency. Pick a paddle with a face that offers control and comfort. The spin will come later.

Core Materials and Internal Construction – What's Under the Hood Matters

Most beginners focus on the face of the paddle—but what’s inside the paddle can be just as important. The core material and how it’s constructed directly impact how the paddle feels on contact, how much energy it absorbs, and how consistent it is across the face.

Let’s break down the key core types:

Polypropylene Honeycomb Core (Traditional)

This is the industry standard. You’ll find it in 90% of paddles on the market, from entry-level models to high-end designs.

  • Pros: Lightweight, durable, consistent response
  • Core thickness options: 13mm (power), 14mm (balanced), 16mm (control)
  • Best for beginners? Yes—especially in 16mm thickness, which offers more dwell time and margin for error

Honeycomb cores give paddles structure while allowing manufacturers to tune the feel through thickness, layup, and shape. They’re also more cost-effective to produce and widely supported by warranty programs and USA Pickleball certification.

Solid Foam Core (Full-Foam Construction)

These are newer, emerging designs that ditch the honeycomb structure entirely. Instead, the paddle is filled with a lightweight, dense foam block from edge to edge.

  • Pros: Plush feel, large sweet spot, soft on contact
  • Cons: Often lower top-end power; feel can be too muted for some
  • Best for beginners? Yes, especially if you're focused on resets, dinks, and arm comfort

Paddles like the CRBN TruFoam Genesis, Honolulu J2NF series, and Selkirk Labs 008 use full-foam designs to improve dwell time and reduce vibration. They’re ideal if you’re looking for extra control and comfort—but they won’t give you the explosive drive potential of thinner honeycomb builds.

Hybrid Cores and Edge Foam

Some paddles now include edge-injected foam or multiple core densities to enhance performance at the perimeter and minimize vibration. Others notch or segment the core to fine-tune flex.

  • Edge foam: Increases stability, enlarges sweet spot
  • Dual-density cores: Add dwell in the center and rebound on the edges
  • Ideal for beginners? Yes, if present—but not necessary. Think of this as bonus tech, not a must-have

Start with a 16mm honeycomb or full-foam core that gives you a soft, consistent feel. Don’t get caught up in marketing language around “thermoforming,” “hot mold fusion,” or “Gen 3” unless it’s paired with real on-court benefits like better touch or forgiveness.

Your first paddle should help you control the ball, reduce mishits, and play comfortably for longer sessions. Let the tech serve those goals—not distract you from them.

What to Avoid as a Beginner

Knowing what not to buy is just as important as knowing what to look for. Many beginner frustrations don’t come from bad coaching or bad luck—they come from using the wrong paddle.

Here are the most common traps new players fall into—and how to avoid them:

Buying Based on Power or Pop

It feels good to crush a ball—until you realize you can’t keep anything in play. Paddles marketed for power often have thinner cores, stiffer faces, and higher swing weights. That combo rewards perfect timing… and punishes everything else.

If you’re still learning resets, dinks, and soft shots, that pop becomes your enemy. You’ll pop balls up, sail returns long, and feel out of control on short contact.

Chasing Spin Like It's a Shortcut

Spin looks cool. But if you can’t control depth, direction, or tempo, spin won’t save you. Many textured paddles that generate high RPMs also feel firmer and less forgiving—which is the opposite of what you need early on.

Spin becomes effective when you’re consistent. Don’t skip that step.

Copying the Pros

You are not Ben Johns. You are not Anna Bright. And the paddle they use is likely customized, weighted up, or built for elite-level play speed.

A pro-level paddle might work against you in every way—too stiff, too heavy, too demanding. Use the gear that fits your game now, not the one you hope to grow into six months from now.

Picking Whatever Your Friends Use

This is a social game. You’ll get plenty of well-meaning advice from fellow players. But your hand size, timing, swing path, and play style might be totally different.

Try their paddle if you’re curious—but don’t assume what works for them will work for you.

Going Too Cheap (or Too Expensive)

Most sub-$60 Amazon paddles are built with low-grade materials, fake textures, and bad balance. They feel dead, wear out fast, and usually hurt your game more than help it.

At the same time, dropping $250 on a high-end paddle as your first one usually doesn’t make sense either. You won’t notice the fine-tuned differences until your mechanics catch up.

Aim for the middle ground: $90–$150 from a trusted brand with real engineering behind the build.

Switching Paddles Too Often

Every paddle has a learning curve. If you keep changing sticks every few sessions hoping to find “the one,” you’re stunting your own development.

Pick a paddle with solid fundamentals and stick with it. Learn its sweet spot. Understand how it behaves. Let your game grow into the paddle—not the other way around.

Bottom Line:

Avoid paddles that are too hot, too stiff, too cheap, or too advanced. You’re not shopping for a highlight reel—you’re shopping for a training partner. The right paddle won’t just feel good on one shot. It’ll make the entire game easier to learn.

Our Criteria for Beginner Paddle Recommendations

When we flag a paddle as “beginner-friendly” at Matt’s Pickleball, it’s not because it’s watered down, cheap, or stripped of performance. It’s because it meets the real needs of a developing player.

Here’s the standard we apply to every beginner paddle we recommend:

✅ Prioritizes Control, Not Just Power

The paddle should help you keep the ball in play—especially on resets, dinks, drops, and blocks. If it’s too poppy, too stiff, or overly reactive, it’s off the list. We’re looking for paddles that absorb pace when needed and give you time to feel the ball.

✅ Moderate Swing Weight (105–117)

You need quick hands at the kitchen, and that’s not possible with a sluggish paddle. Our picks fall within a swing weight range that balances power and maneuverability, keeping your shoulder happy and your reactions fast.

✅ Twist Weight of 6.5 or Higher

We prioritize forgiveness and sweet spot stability. You’re going to mishit. The paddle shouldn’t punish you for it. Higher twist weight means fewer wild misses and more consistent contact—even on off-center shots.

✅ Static Weight Around 7.8–8.1 oz

Too light feels unstable. Too heavy wears you out. We look for paddles that feel balanced in hand and don’t strain your wrist or elbow. You can always add weight later if you grow into it.

✅ 16mm Core or Equivalent Feel

Whether it’s honeycomb or full-foam, we focus on paddles that offer soft feel and longer dwell time. This gives you better touch, more control, and a larger margin for error on soft shots.

✅ Standard or Hybrid Shape

Elongated paddles can be great—but they’re usually less forgiving. For beginners, we stick to standard or hybrid shapes that maximize sweet spot size and minimize swing weight issues.

✅ Built by a Real Paddle Brand

Every paddle we recommend comes from a company that actually designs, tests, and tunes their paddles—not some white-label Amazon listing. These brands understand performance. Their paddles hold up to real play. And their customer support doesn’t vanish after checkout.

✅ Reasonable Price for Real Performance

You don’t need to spend $250. But you also shouldn’t settle for a $40 toy. Our picks typically land between $90 and $150, with pro-level materials and beginner-level playability—especially when using discount code MPB to save at checkout.

Bottom Line:

If a paddle doesn’t help you reset better, place the ball more cleanly, and feel more in control—it doesn’t belong on our beginner list. Our goal is to recommend paddles that support your development, not just impress in a one-shot demo.

Final Thoughts – Buy Smart, Build Your Game

Your first paddle sets the tone for how you learn, how you improve, and—honestly—how much fun you have. A paddle that’s too stiff, too powerful, or too demanding doesn’t just make you miss shots. It builds bad habits, chips away at your confidence, and makes the game feel harder than it needs to be.

That’s why the best beginner paddle isn’t the one with the flashiest tech or the most pro endorsements. It’s the one that helps you control the ball, stay consistent, and feel connected on every shot.

Start with a control-first frame. Stick to a moderate swing weight. Prioritize forgiveness over hype. And don’t let Amazon listings or fancy jargon convince you otherwise.

Every paddle in the list below meets that standard. They’re built with quality materials, backed by real brands, and most importantly—they play the way beginners actually need.

Pick one that matches your goals, your grip, and your feel. Then give it time. Improve your game with it. And once your skill catches up, you’ll know exactly what you need next.

Mission Statement

Just like my love for pickleball, my DUPR is constantly evolving. It's a global measure of my skills, and I'm sharing it with you because I believe in being open and authentic (plus, it's a great conversation starter at pickleball mixers).

100% Responsive Template

A successful marketing plan relies heavily on the pulling-power of advertising copy. Writing result-oriented ad copy is difficult, as it must appeal to, entice, and convince consumers to take action. There is no magic formula to write perfect ad copy; it is based on a number of factors, including ad placement, demographic, even the consumer’s mood when they see your ad. So how is any writer supposed to pen a stunning piece of advertising copy — copy that sizzles and sells? The following tips will jumpstart your creative thinking and help you write a better ad.

Grabbing the consumer’s attention isn’t enough; you have to keep that attention for at least a few seconds. This is where your benefits come into play or a product description that sets your offer apart from the others.

Writing result-oriented ad copy is difficult, as it must appeal to, entice, and convince consumers to take action. There is no magic formula to write perfect ad copy.

Businesses often become known today through effective marketing. The marketing may be in the form of a regular news item or half column society news in the Sunday newspaper.

Carefully Crafted by Elastic Themes

The marketing may be in the form of a heart to heart talk with Mr. Brown on his prominent local television show. These are all advertising. Businesses cannot get away from the force of advertising. If they want to make their products known in the marketplace they have to use some form of advertisement.

@mattspickleball on Instagram

View Profile