Padel Nutrition and Hydration: Fuelling for Play

Padel nutrition and hydration made simple: what to eat before, during and after play, fuelling for long tournament days, and staying hydrated on court.

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By Rob Griffiths30 June 2026 · 5 min read

Padel is more demanding than it looks - a competitive session or a multi-match tournament day burns through energy and fluid fast. You don't need a complicated regime, but getting the basics of fuelling and hydration right makes you sharper, steadier and less prone to that late-session drop-off. Here's the simple version.

What should you eat before playing padel?

Aim for a balanced meal with carbohydrates for energy and some protein, eaten 2-3 hours before you play so it has time to digest. Think a chicken-and-rice bowl, pasta with a lean sauce, or porridge with fruit. If you're playing sooner and need a top-up, a small, easy-to-digest snack 30-60 minutes before - a banana, a slice of toast, or an energy bar - tops up your tank without sitting heavy. Avoid anything very fatty, very heavy or unfamiliar right before a match; the court is no place to test a new pre-game meal.

How should you hydrate on court?

Hydration is the single biggest performance lever, and the easiest to get wrong. The principles:

  • Start hydrated. Drink water steadily in the hours before you play - turning up already topped-up beats trying to catch up mid-match.
  • Sip little and often. Take small drinks at every change of ends or between games rather than gulping a lot occasionally. Don't wait until you feel thirsty - thirst lags behind actual need.
  • Add electrolytes for long or hot sessions. If you're sweating heavily or playing for more than an hour or two, plain water alone may not be enough; an electrolyte drink or tablet helps replace what you lose in sweat.

Indoor UK courts can get warm and humid, so don't assume you sweat less indoors - keep the bottle handy either way.

Fuelling for a long tournament day

An entry-level tournament can run several hours with multiple matches (a Grade 5 day can last up to six - see our first tournament guide). That changes the game:

  • Pack portable fuel. Bananas, energy bars, trail mix, a sandwich - easy carbs and a little protein you can eat between matches without feeling stuffed.
  • Eat little and often. Top up steadily through the day rather than one big meal that leaves you sluggish on court.
  • Stay ahead on fluids and electrolytes. Over a long day the fluid and salt losses add up, so keep sipping and use electrolytes.
  • Have a proper recovery meal afterwards with carbs and protein to refill energy stores and support muscle repair.

What about recovery?

After a hard session, the basics do most of the work: rehydrate to replace fluid lost in sweat, and eat a meal combining carbohydrates (to refill energy) and protein (to support muscle repair) within a couple of hours. Good sleep and a sensible warm-up next time do more for your padel than any supplement. Pair good fuelling with our fitness training and warm-up guides and you'll feel the difference in your stamina across a session.

Frequently asked questions

Q01What should I eat before playing padel?
A balanced meal with carbohydrates and some protein, eaten 2-3 hours before so it digests - something like chicken and rice, pasta, or porridge with fruit. If you're playing sooner, a small easy snack 30-60 minutes before (a banana, toast or an energy bar) tops you up. Avoid heavy, fatty or unfamiliar foods right before a match.
Q02How much water should I drink during padel?
Sip small amounts little and often - at every change of ends or between games - rather than gulping a lot occasionally, and don't wait until you're thirsty. The bigger factor is starting hydrated: drink water steadily in the hours before you play. For long or hot sessions, add electrolytes, as plain water alone may not replace what you lose in sweat.
Q03Do I need electrolytes for padel?
Not for a short, easy game, but they help for long or sweaty sessions. If you're playing more than an hour or two, sweating heavily, or getting through a multi-match tournament day, an electrolyte drink or tablet replaces the salts you lose in sweat better than plain water. For a quick casual hit, water is usually fine.
Q04What should I eat during a padel tournament?
Portable, easy-to-digest fuel you can eat between matches: bananas, energy bars, trail mix or a sandwich - easy carbs with a little protein. Eat little and often through the day rather than one big meal, keep sipping fluids with electrolytes, and have a proper carb-and-protein recovery meal afterwards. A Grade 5 day can last hours, so plan your food.
Q05What's the best recovery after padel?
Rehydrate to replace sweat losses and eat a meal combining carbohydrates and protein within a couple of hours to refill energy and support muscle repair. Beyond that, good sleep and a sensible warm-up before your next session do more for recovery and performance than any supplement. Keep it simple and consistent rather than chasing quick fixes.