You're not alone. Players across the country want the same thing — a chance to represent their club, compete against other facilities, and prove their home court has the best players in the city.
I Want This at My ClubOpen play is great when you're starting out. Club ladders and programs build community. But eventually, regular players want more — new opponents, real team identity, and a chance to show that their club competes with the best. It's not a problem with the club. It's the next chapter.
I play in our club's ladder program three times a week and I can predict who I'm going to be matched with before I walk in. I love my club — I just want to play new people too.
We have the best players in Charlotte and nobody knows it. Give us a team league and let us prove it on the road.
I played on a rec softball team for years — the team pride, the road games, the rivalries. I want that for pickleball. I want to wear my club's name and compete.
Takes 60 seconds. No payment, no commitment. Tell us where you play and help bring real team competition to your club.
Think of it like a recreational softball league. You're on a team. You represent your home club. Half your matches at home, half on the road at other facilities. New opponents every single week. A season that builds toward something.
Building city-wide leagues takes players and clubs working together. Your interest helps us connect the dots.
Takes 60 seconds. Tell us your club, your city, your skill level. No commitment, no cost — just letting us know you'd be excited about team leagues.
When players at a facility show interest, we reach out to that club about partnering together. Player enthusiasm and club participation go hand in hand.
Clubs and players come together to build teams. Eight-week seasons, two per year, with playoffs and a city championship.
No. This is purely an interest form. When leagues actually launch in your city, there will be season registration fees — comparable to what you'd pay for any organized league at your club. But adding your name right now is free.
Nothing. You're saying "I want this in my city" and telling us where you play. That's it. When there's enough interest to move forward, we'll reach out with details.
Launching a city-wide league takes both player enthusiasm and club participation. When we can show a facility that dozens of their players are excited about team competition, it makes the conversation easier for everyone. Your interest helps us bring clubs and players together.
The plan is divisions from 3.0 through 4.5+ across men's, women's, and mixed doubles. The exact divisions in each city will depend on how many players and teams come together.
Yes — tell us where you play. As this grows, we're exploring options for players at public facilities too. Your interest still matters.
We'd love to talk. This model is built around clubs as partners — participating facilities are a revenue center in the league, not just a venue. Home matches bring visiting players to your facility, and the league structure is designed to strengthen club membership and engagement. Email us at clubs@pickleballteamleague.com and we'll set up a conversation.
That starts with players who want to represent their facility. Takes 60 seconds. Tell us where you play and help bring team competition to your city.
Add My Voice →We're building interest for inter-club pickleball team leagues in cities where players want real team competition. Whether you play in Texas, the Southeast, or anywhere else — if your city has pickleball clubs and players who want to represent them, we want to hear from you.
With dozens of clubs and facilities across DFW, from Plano to Fort Worth, Dallas is one of the most active pickleball markets in the country. Players are ready to take inter-club competition to the next level.
Charlotte's pickleball community is growing fast, with strong roots in racquet sports culture. Clubs across the metro area are filled with competitive players looking for organized team play.
Austin's active, health-conscious community has embraced pickleball. With clubs and public facilities throughout the metro, there's no shortage of players ready to compete across the city.
Atlanta has decades of team-based racquet sports tradition. Pickleball players across the metro — from Buckhead to Alpharetta — are ready for the same kind of organized inter-club competition.
The Triangle's pickleball scene is booming, with new facilities opening regularly. Players across Raleigh, Durham, and Chapel Hill are looking for competitive team play beyond their home club.
Houston's size and sprawling club network make it an ideal market for inter-facility team leagues. Players across the city want organized competition that connects clubs from Katy to Clear Lake.