Selkirk LUXX Control Air Epic premium pickleball paddle

The Best Pickleball Paddles in 2026

Why this guide

There are more good paddles on the market than ever, which makes picking one harder, not easier. This guide cuts it down to the best pickleball paddles actually worth your money in 2026, grouped by how you play and what you're ready to spend, so you can find your match in a couple of minutes instead of reading forty reviews.

Every paddle here ships free next-day air, with no minimum order. And if you pick one and it doesn't feel right in your hand, you have 30 days to send it back. So there's no real risk in trying the one that fits you best.


How to choose a pickleball paddle

Three things decide how a paddle feels:

Weight. Lighter paddles are easier on the arm and quicker at the net. Heavier paddles hit harder but ask more of your shoulder. Most players land happiest in the middle.

Core thickness. A 16mm core is softer and more forgiving, which is why most control paddles use it. A 14mm core gives you more pop and a lower launch, which is why power players reach for it. If you're not sure, start at 16mm.

Shape. Standard shape is the most forgiving and the easiest to recommend. Elongated shapes add reach and power but shrink the sweet spot, so they suit players with cleaner contact.

If you read nothing else: a midweight, 16mm, standard-shape paddle is the safest first buy for almost anyone. The picks below build out from there.


Best pickleball paddles for beginners

If you're new, you want forgiveness: a big sweet spot, a comfortable weight, and a price that doesn't sting while you're still figuring the sport out. You do not need a $250 pro paddle yet.

For the full breakdown, see our dedicated guide: Best Pickleball Paddles for Beginners.

JOOLA Essentials

JOOLA Essentials fiberglass beginner pickleball paddle

Price: $59.95

A fiberglass paddle with a 12mm core, built as JOOLA's go-to for rec players. The cheapest way into a real name-brand paddle, and forgiving enough to learn on.

Franklin Signature Series MaxGrit

Franklin Signature Series MaxGrit 16mm fiberglass pickleball paddle

Price: $79.99

A forgiving 16mm fiberglass face with extra grit for spin. Easy to learn on and easy on the wallet.

Buying for two? A set is the cheapest way in. Browse our paddle sets and bundles, or everything under $100.


Best pickleball paddles for intermediate players

Once you've got consistent contact and you're playing a few times a week, you'll feel the limits of a starter paddle. This tier is where most players spend the most, because it's where a paddle upgrade actually changes your game.

Diadem Edge 18K Standard

Diadem Edge 18K Standard 16mm carbon pickleball paddle

Price: $149.95

A 16mm 18K-carbon paddle that does everything well: control with enough pop to finish points, and plenty of spin off the face. The do-everything pick at this level.

CRBN 1 Control Series, 16mm

CRBN 1 Control Series elongated carbon pickleball paddle

Price: $179.95

An elongated raw T700 carbon paddle for players leaning into spin and reach without giving up control.

Browse the full lineup: all paddles and best sellers.


Best pickleball paddles for advanced players

Advanced players already know their style. At this level it's less about forgiveness and more about matching the paddle to how you win points: soft hands at the kitchen, or pace off the bounce.

Selkirk LUXX Control Air Epic

Selkirk LUXX Control Air Epic 19mm control pickleball paddle

Price: $280.00

A 19mm paddle built for precision over raw power, made for the dink-and-reset game.

Selkirk LABS Project Boomstik, Elongated

Selkirk LABS Project Boomstik elongated power pickleball paddle

Price: $332.99

A 16mm elongated power paddle built to put balls away. Ships next-day air free, like everything else here.

Top brands players ask for by name: Selkirk and JOOLA.


Best control paddles

Control paddles trade a little raw power for a softer, more predictable feel. They make resets, dinks, and third-shot drops easier to land. If your game is built at the kitchen line, this is your category. Look for a 16mm core and a standard shape. The CRBN 1 Control Series, 16mm ($179.95) is our most-recommended control pick right now, with the Selkirk LUXX Control Air Epic ($280) as the premium step up.

Best power paddles

Power paddles give you more pop for serves, drives, and put-aways, usually through an elongated head and a stiffer build. They reward clean contact, so they suit players past the beginner stage. The Selkirk SLK Era Power widebody ($200) leads this category for us, with the JOOLA Tyson McGuffin Magnus Pro 3S Dual ($199.95) close behind for spin-and-power players.

Best spin paddles

Spin paddles prioritize surface texture — raw carbon or double-grit faces that grab the ball and let you shape topspin drives, roll dinks, and slice returns. For a full breakdown of what to look for and our top picks, see our dedicated best pickleball paddle for spin guide.


Quick comparison table

Paddle Best for Core Shape Price
JOOLA Essentials Beginners / value 12mm Standard $59.95
Diadem Edge 18K Standard Intermediate all-court & spin 16mm Standard $149.95
CRBN 1 Control Series Control & spin 16mm Elongated $179.95
Selkirk SLK Era Power Power & reach Widebody Elongated / Widebody $200.00
Selkirk LABS Boomstik Advanced power 16mm Elongated $332.99

Why buy from Pickleball NVZ

Most paddles cost the same wherever you buy them, so the real question is what you get around the paddle. Here's ours:

  • Not sure it's the right paddle? You get 30 days to actually play with it and send it back if it's not for you.
  • Need it for league night? Free next-day air on every paddle, no minimum, no shipping upgrade to click. In Florida that includes free Saturday delivery to your door.
  • Already have a paddle you've outgrown? Trade it in toward the new one.
  • Every order comes with a free accessory you choose, plus rewards points on what you spend.

Find your paddle: shop all paddles.


FAQ

What is the best pickleball paddle right now?
For most players, a 14–16 mm raw carbon fiber paddle in the $150–$200 range is the best choice. The JOOLA Perseus 3S 16mm and Diadem Edge 18K are strong all-around picks at that price. If budget is a concern, the Franklin Signature Pro ($49.99) delivers fiberglass performance without the carbon fiber price tag. The right paddle depends on your play style — power-focused players should lean toward 14 mm cores, touch and control players toward 16 mm.
How much should I spend on a pickleball paddle?
Entry-level paddles ($30–$60) are fine for learning the game. Once you're playing regularly, a mid-range paddle ($100–$150) improves feel and consistency noticeably. Serious club and tournament players typically spend $150–$200 for raw carbon fiber construction with precise core thickness options. Beyond $200, you're mostly paying for brand prestige. The sweet spot for most committed recreational players is $150–$175.
What's the difference between a 14 mm and 16 mm paddle?
Core thickness is one of the most important specs. A 14 mm core is stiffer — it produces more pop and power on drives, with a snappier feel. A 16 mm core is softer — it absorbs more energy, giving you better dwell time, more control on dinks, and a quieter sound. Power players and singles players tend to prefer 14 mm; doubles and kitchen-dominant players often prefer 16 mm. When unsure, try 14 mm first — it's more versatile.
Is carbon fiber or fiberglass better for pickleball?
Carbon fiber is generally better for intermediate to advanced players — it's stiffer, generates more spin from its textured surface, and has a more precise feel. Fiberglass is softer and more forgiving, which makes it better for beginners or players who prioritize touch over spin. At the recreational level, the difference matters less than core thickness. As your game develops, most players migrate to carbon fiber.
Can I try a paddle before committing to it?
Yes — every paddle at Pickleball NVZ comes with a 30-day trial. Play with it, take it on the court, and if it's not the right fit, return it within 30 days. Free next-day air shipping means you can have a new paddle in hand quickly and test it before your next session.
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