September is a strange moment for padel clubs. The summer tournaments are over, the weather is turning, and your most motivated players go looking for a steady structure to carry them through the dark months. If you have nothing to offer, they will find that structure at another club.
An autumn league is the most concrete way to hold on to those players. It is not a one-night tournament but a running structure that spans six to twelve weeks. That is exactly what many padel players want at this time of year: regularity, something to train towards and a ranking to follow.
Below are the seven steps to put one together, ordered by what you need to decide first.
1. Pick the right format
The biggest mistake clubs make is setting up their autumn league too complex. A full-blown group system with promotions and relegations looks great, but it takes a lot of admin and players drop out the moment they miss a single week.
For autumn, three formats usually work best:
- Ladder league: players challenge each other and climb the ranking. No fixed playing time, ideal for irregular schedules. Read more about ladders.
- Americano series: an Americano evening every two weeks, with participants collecting points across the whole series. Social and predictable.
- Box system (Beat the Box): players sorted into groups of four by skill level, with promotion or relegation after a few weeks. It has the tension of competition without the chaos of drawing groups.
My recommendation for 80 percent of clubs: a ladder league. Lowest organisational burden, highest long-term engagement.
2. Plan your court times
Court times are almost always the bottleneck. Reserve two to four fixed courts on one evening per week. Ideally the same evening every week (for example Thursday from 19:00 to 22:00). Predictability beats flexibility once the league is running.
For a ladder you do not need a fixed slot: players play whenever it suits them and use the regular club booking. But do make sure your courts are available during peak times (Wednesday and Thursday evenings).
3. Set a registration fee
A registration fee does three things: it covers any court rental, it commits participants (people who pay show up more often) and it funds prizes or the closing event. A reasonable amount for a six to eight week padel autumn league is between 15 and 30 euros per person.
Free works too, but expect more no-shows. The threshold to skip a session is psychologically lower when you have paid nothing.
4. Open registrations through your club page
Registration should be as frictionless as possible. One link, one form, payment via iDEAL. No separate payment request, no WhatsApp negotiation, no list in a spreadsheet.
A public club page with the competition visible works best. Players can see for themselves who is taking part, forward the link to their mates, and register in under a minute.
5. Communicate in three waves
Most clubs communicate once ("The autumn league is open!") and then think they are done. That is not enough. Plan three waves:
- Announcement (four to six weeks before the start): mailing, social, notice board. Make it concrete: what is the duration, format and registration fee.
- Reminder with urgency (two weeks before the start): "X spots left", "Registration closes on this date".
- Welcome email to participants (the week before the start): rules, schedule, first playing schedule or challenge instructions.
6. Organise schedules and standings
With a ladder the club has little to do here: players sort it out themselves through the app or the club system. With an Americano series or box system you need to make a schedule for each evening. Do not do that by hand.
With software like Slams the draw happens automatically: groups and match order are calculated based on skill level and the number of courts. With a ladder it works through challenges: a player invites another, they play, the score is entered, and the ranking updates.
7. Wrap up with a ranking and an awards moment
A competition without a closing event feels unfinished. Plan a closing night in the final week: present the final standings, thank the winners, have a drink. Even without big prizes, the recognition on the ranking works just fine for most players.
Tip: announce right at the start that the top three will be honoured at the end of December. That gives people something to work towards.
Three pitfalls clubs often run into
Pitfall 1: Starting to communicate too late. August is already late. The most serious players make their autumn plans in July. Make sure your registration is open before 15 August.
Pitfall 2: Choosing a format that is too complex. A layered group structure with play-offs works on paper, but falls apart in practice the moment players stop showing up. Keep it simple.
Pitfall 3: No agreed scoring flow. Who enters scores? When is a match "final"? Agree on that in advance, otherwise you get arguments and the ranking stays empty.
Slams makes this easier
Setting up a padel autumn league with Slams takes less than ten minutes. You pick a format, add players through an invite link, open registrations with iDEAL payment, and the ranking runs automatically from the very first match. Start for free and publish your first competition this week.
More on seasonal planning: read the general approach in planning a padel season, or look ahead to the padel spring league 2027.
