Padel rules

What Happens if the Ball Hits a Player?

The short version is simple: if the ball touches a player, their clothing, or what they are holding, the rally is usually over. The exact outcome depends on whether the contact happened before or after a legal bounce, but the safe rule is to protect your body and let the ball pass cleanly.

Common player-contact situations

These are the calls players ask about most often.

SituationUsual callWhat to remember
Ball hits body before bouncePoint lost.Do not try to catch or trap it.
Ball hits clothingPoint lost.Clothing counts as player contact.
Ball hits racket or handPoint lost.What you are holding is part of the contact.
Ball hits a partnerPoint lost for the side hit.Communication matters on middle balls.
Ball clips player after a legal point-ending bounceRally still ends.The point is already over.

How to think about the rule

The practical rule is easier than the legal wording: if the ball touches you before the rally ends, the point is usually gone. That includes accidental contact with clothes, body, or the racket in your hand.

This is why middle balls and fast body shots need simple footwork. The more balanced you are, the easier it is to avoid accidental contact.

How to reduce disputes

Call the contact immediately if you felt it. Waiting until the rally result is obvious is where most arguments begin.

For social matches, it also helps to agree that a clear body contact ends the point without debate. That keeps the pace of play and reduces unnecessary tension.

FAQ

You usually lose the point.

Yes. Clothing is treated as part of the player.

That also counts as contact, and the point is usually lost.

Your side usually loses the point if the ball contacts the partner before the rally ends.

Only if the contact is genuinely unclear; otherwise keep play moving.