Pickleball Court Construction Costs and Planning Checklist for 2026

Pickleball Court Construction Cost Overview

Building a pickleball court involves site preparation, base construction, surfacing, fencing, lighting, and net hardware. Total cost depends on whether the project is a single backyard court or a multi-court municipal complex, the climate zone, and the chosen surface material. This guide provides current 2026 pricing benchmarks from completed projects across the United States.

Cost Per Court by Surface Type

Surface Type Single Court Per Court (4+ Complex) Lifespan
Post-tensioned concrete + acrylic $30,000–$45,000 $18,000–$28,000 20–30 years
Asphalt + acrylic coating $20,000–$30,000 $14,000–$20,000 8–15 years
Modular interlocking tile over slab $25,000–$35,000 $16,000–$24,000 15–20 years (tile replaceable)
Indoor gym conversion (striping + nets) $3,000–$8,000 $2,500–$5,000 Depends on gym floor

Cost Breakdown by Component

Site Preparation ($3,000–$12,000)

Includes geotechnical soil testing ($2,000–$5,000), grading to achieve a 1% drainage slope, tree removal if needed, and sub-base compaction. Sites with expansive clay soils require deeper aggregate sub-base (6–8 inches) and may push costs to the higher end.

Base Slab ($8–$15 per square foot)

A regulation pickleball court is 20 × 44 feet (880 square feet), but the recommended playing area with overruns is 30 × 60 feet (1,800 square feet). Post-tensioned concrete uses steel cables tensioned within the slab to resist cracking — the gold standard for permanent outdoor courts in any climate. Standard reinforced concrete costs less but develops cracks in freeze-thaw zones within 5–10 years.

Acrylic Color Coating ($3–$5 per square foot)

Two coats of cushioned acrylic over the base slab provide the playing texture and line contrast. Budget $5,400–$9,000 per court including line striping. Resurfacing is needed every 5–8 years at roughly $3,000–$5,000 per court.

Fencing ($15–$30 per linear foot)

Standard 10-foot vinyl-coated chain link fencing encloses the court perimeter. A single court requires approximately 180 linear feet of fencing ($2,700–$5,400). Wind screens at 4–6 feet high add $800–$1,500. Premium powder-coated steel panels run $40–$60 per linear foot.

Lighting ($12,000–$25,000 per court)

LED pole-mounted fixtures on 20-foot poles provide 30+ foot-candles for recreational play and 50+ foot-candles for tournament play per USA Pickleball standards. A single court typically needs 4 fixtures on 2 poles. LED systems save 50–70% on energy costs versus metal halide and eliminate warm-up time.

Net System ($200–$2,500)

Portable net systems cost $200–$500. Permanent in-ground post-and-sleeve systems run $1,500–$2,500 installed. Net height is 36 inches at the sidelines and 34 inches at the center.

Planning Checklist

  1. Site survey and soil testing — confirm drainage, soil type, and slope before design
  2. Court orientation — align the long axis north-south to minimize sun glare during peak play hours
  3. Setback and noise review — check local zoning for setback requirements and noise ordinances near residential areas
  4. ADA compliance — accessible path of travel to at least one court, 32-inch minimum gate opening, firm surface from parking
  5. Drainage design — 1% slope in one direction; avoid ponding areas
  6. Surfacing selection — match surface type to climate, budget, and expected play volume
  7. Lighting design — specify foot-candle levels, pole placement, and shielding to minimize light trespass
  8. Fencing and wind screen specification — height, material, gate locations
  9. Contractor selection — verify experience with sport court construction; request references from completed pickleball projects
  10. Permitting — obtain building permits, electrical permits for lighting, and any HOA or municipal approvals

Multi-Court Complex Considerations

Complexes of 4–8 courts benefit from shared infrastructure: perimeter fencing, common grading, centralized electrical panels, and shared parking. Per-court costs typically drop 25–40% compared to a standalone court. Facilities planning to host sanctioned tournaments need a minimum of 8 courts, a dedicated tournament desk area, spectator seating, and restroom facilities within 200 feet of the courts.

Tennis-to-Pickleball Conversion

A standard tennis court (60 × 120 feet) accommodates up to four pickleball courts laid out perpendicular to the original baselines. Conversion requires new line striping ($800–$2,000), lowering the net system to 34 inches at center, and optionally installing portable or permanent pickleball nets. Many facilities maintain dual-use striping so the tennis court can serve both sports.

Ongoing Maintenance Costs

Annual maintenance for an outdoor acrylic court runs $500–$1,500 and includes pressure washing, crack repair, and debris removal. Resurface the acrylic coating every 5–8 years ($3,000–$5,000 per court). LED lighting fixtures last 50,000+ hours, typically 10–15 years of evening play before replacement. Net systems require periodic cable tensioning and post inspection.