Sports activities membership Suzhou Shishan opened the Chinese language metropolis’s first pickleball courtroom in January 2024, in accordance with the corporate.
Suzhou Shishan
BEIJING — Whereas the U.S. pickleball craze continues to be going robust, China’s is just simply getting began.
On-line gross sales of pickleball paddles and associated tools in China have skyrocketed this yr to a mean of $1.2 million in month-to-month gross sales as of July — a rise of greater than six-fold versus the year-ago interval.
That is in accordance with information from WPIC Advertising and marketing + Applied sciences. The corporate helps international manufacturers — similar to Ohio-based meals blender vendor Vitamix and skincare model iS Medical from California — promote on-line in China and different elements of Asia.
“Pickleball’s rise in China displays a broader shift towards energetic existence and leisure sports activities participation,” stated Jacob Cooke, co-founder and CEO of WPIC.
The racquet sport has been getting a raise from social media influencers and the resurgence of tennis in China, thanks partly to Chinese language tennis participant Zheng Qinwen successful the nation’s first Olympic gold medal in tennis singles final summer time, Cooke stated.

Curiosity in tennis and pickleball in China began in 2023, accelerated in 2024 and is “nonetheless doing very nicely” this yr, stated Daniel Zipser, senior associate at McKinsey and chief of its Asia shopper and retail division. “We’re nonetheless now within the very robust acceleration development momentum [period] for racquet sports activities extra broadly.”
He identified that locals usually are not simply more and more choosing up the game, but additionally watching skilled video games extra.
In the course of the U.S.-based Skilled Pickleball Affiliation’s (PPA) first “Hong Kong Open” competitors from Aug. 21 to Aug. 24, “there was truly a fairly large crowd that got here out [to watch the] remaining gold medal matches,” stated Patrick Yan, founding father of The Brine Company, which represents Asian pickleball gamers. “The complete event was maxed out and with a waitlist.”
Yan additionally famous that the Hong Kong area now has many extra pickleball courts in comparison with solely two when he visited in December and January.
The Hong Kong Open was a part of the inaugural PPA Tour Asia that features matches in Japan, Malaysia and Vietnam.
Jack Wong of Hong Kong won the men’s singles championship, whereas Roos van Reek of the Netherlands gained in ladies’s singles. The PPA didn’t instantly reply to a request for touch upon whether or not a “China Slam” initially set for early October was transferring forward as deliberate.
The PPA held its first U.S. pickleball event in Arizona in early 2020. The game surged in reputation throughout the pandemic as communities rapidly repurposed public areas into free pickleball courts. Since then, pickleball has been the fastest-growing sport in the US for 4 straight years, in accordance with the most recent Sports and Fitness Industry Association report in Might.
Enterprise angle
Pickleball’s latest development in China has totally different enterprise implications.
In distinction to U.S. suburbs, huge Asian cities do not are inclined to have massive neighborhood areas, Yan identified. “All these courts must be constructed by individuals working companies. They’re working for revenue…. Individuals began seeing it could possibly be an enormous revenue, all these competing companies and startups.”
He added that the native pickleball event system is run by the nationwide Chinese language Tennis Affiliation, making the game’s improvement “fairly systemized compared to different international locations the place it is native organizations which have to arrange and fund every thing.”
Lu Bing, deputy head of the Suzhou Pickleball Affiliation, stated he realized about pickleball from an American pal in 2023. Subsequently, the native Shishan sports activities membership that he’s basic supervisor of opened a number of pickleball courts, the place hourly charges begin at 60 yuan ($8.39). He added that many native faculties are additionally encouraging college students to play the game by repurposing basketball courts and different services, he stated.
A part of pickleball’s attraction in China is how straightforward it’s for locals to study the game — some individuals nonetheless discovered tennis too arduous after a couple of classes on the sports activities membership, he added.
Challenges and alternatives
Whereas Lu stated the membership is a certified gross sales associate for Joola, a U.S. pickleball model, it is much less clear how simply different international manufacturers and organizations can instantly faucet into the development.
Regardless of China’s massive potential in comparison with Vietnam and Malaysia, that are Asia’s largest pickleball markets, it may be troublesome for international companies to navigate the Asian big’s market attributable to language obstacles and the distinctive WeChat messaging app-based ecosystem, Yan stated.
“I do know ultimately in all probability some courts will exit of enterprise and a few will survive and take over the market in sure areas,” he stated. “As a result of it is so early into the market, lots of people are attempting to be the primary mover mainly.”
The surge of shopper spending on pickleball and different sports activities in China comes as total retail gross sales have been subdued because the pandemic.
McKinsey’s Zipser stated he is “very assured” a couple of pickup in consumption within the second half of this yr into 2026, as he thinks shopper spending is now extra indifferent from depressed sentiment.
“The final two years the patron was simply ready for the great previous days to be again,” he stated, pointing to hopes for a restoration within the property market and broad double-digit development.
“Individuals now have realized [that’s] not going to occur,” he stated. “They’ve moved on. They’re now not sitting there. … Life must go on.”
