Padel Statistics Kenya 2026

Total Venues
34
Total Courts
97
Courts/100K
1.7
padelnomics Score
50/100
Key takeaway: Kenya is an emerging padel market: 1.7 courts per 100,000 residents points to significant supply gaps — first-mover advantages here are real. The average padelnomics Score of 50/100 reflects solid but selective potential.

This page summarises padel statistics for Kenya in 2026: venue and court counts, density per 100,000 residents, the largest and most padel-dense cities, pricing benchmarks, and investment potential by padelnomics Score. Figures are based on 34 tracked venues across 6 cities.

Market Size

Kenya currently has 34 padel venues with 97 courts, spread across 6 cities. With a population of 5.9M, this works out to roughly 2.9 courts per venue on average — a typical figure for European padel markets.

Metric Value
Total venues 34
Total courts 97
Cities with padel 6
Total population 5.9M
Avg courts per venue 2.9

Padel Density

Density per resident is the most informative metric for market maturity. Kenya reaches 1.7 courts and 0.6 venues per 100,000 residents.

For context: very mature markets such as Spain and Sweden sit above 10 courts per 100K residents. Growth markets typically fall between 3 and 10. Anything below 3 signals an emerging or underserved market.

Kenya is well below the level of mature padel markets. That is also the opportunity: supply gaps are wide, and demand is increasingly proven in regional pockets.

Where Padel Is Biggest

The following cities lead Kenya by absolute court count. Each accounts for a meaningful share of the national market.

City Courts Market Analysis
Nairobi 84 View investment analysis →
Mombasa 4 View investment analysis →
Watamu 3 View investment analysis →
Nanyuki 2 View investment analysis →
Kilifi 2 View investment analysis →
Diani Beach 2 View investment analysis →

These cities mirror the country's economic geography — where purchasing power, sports culture, and available real estate intersect, padel infrastructure has followed.

Most Padel-Dense Cities

Absolute size only tells half the story. Density per resident reveals where padel has penetrated deepest into daily life — and where gaps remain.

City Courts/100K Market Analysis
Nanyuki 2.8 View investment analysis →
Kilifi 2.7 View investment analysis →
Diani Beach 2.6 View investment analysis →
Nairobi 1.9 View investment analysis →
Mombasa 0.3 View investment analysis →
Watamu 10.8 View investment analysis →

Highly saturated cities can remain attractive when demand keeps pace. Conversely, many large cities with low density turn out to be the most interesting investment targets — where catchment is strong but competitive intensity stays moderate.

Investment Outlook

The average padelnomics Score across tracked cities in Kenya is 50/100. The score evaluates investment potential based on supply gaps, catchment reach, market maturity, and sports culture.

The cities with the strongest current balance of demand and undersupply are: Nairobi, Mombasa, Diani Beach, Kilifi, Nanyuki. These locations show either clear supply gaps with existing demand, or unusually strong catchment fundamentals.

Planning a padel center in Kenya? Pick your location and model it with real market data → Market Overview · Financial Planner

Methodology

Figures on this page come from tracked venues, verified court counts, and current market data for Kenya as of 2026. Our analytics pipeline consolidates inputs from multiple sources, deduplicates venues, and assigns each one unambiguously to a city. The actual market may be slightly larger, as smaller clubs and private facilities without public visibility are not always captured. Prices and occupancy are derived from current market data and represent median observations across venues with sufficient data coverage.

FAQ

How many padel courts are there in Kenya?

We currently track 97 padel courts across 34 venues in 6 cities in Kenya. The true figure is likely a little higher, as independent clubs without public availability are not always captured.

How does Kenya compare to other padel markets?

At 1.7 courts per 100,000 residents, Kenya ranks among the younger markets with substantial catch-up potential. Density also varies sharply between urban and rural areas and between major cities and mid-sized hubs.

What does it cost to play padel in Kenya?

Pricing varies significantly between large cities and rural areas, indoor vs outdoor facilities, and peak vs off-peak hours. City- and venue-level pricing benchmarks — including median peak and off-peak rates, P25–P75 spreads, and occupancy data — are part of Padelnomics Research.

Where is padel most popular in Kenya?

By absolute court count, the leading cities are Nairobi, Mombasa, Watamu. By density per resident — how deeply padel has entered daily life — the ranking often looks different: Nanyuki and Kilifi lead on this measure.

Is Kenya a saturated market for new padel facilities?

With 1.7 courts per 100K, Kenya is far from saturated — operators who secure the right site early benefit from genuine first-mover advantages.

How are these statistics updated?

The figures on this page are refreshed regularly from our analytics pipeline. The values shown here reflect 2026 — new venues, price changes, and updated population figures flow into subsequent snapshots as they become available.

Full market analysis for Kenya with every city, pricing benchmarks, and investment scoring → Market Overview · Financial Planner

See also: Kenya market overview · Padel in Nairobi · Financial planner