You’ve just bought your first pair of padel shoes, stepped onto the court, and within ten minutes you’re sliding around like you’re on an ice rink. Or maybe the opposite — your feet are gripping so hard that pivoting feels like your ankles are about to snap. Either way, the problem isn’t the shoe. It’s the sole.
In This Article
- Why the Sole Matters More Than the Upper
- Herringbone Soles: The Outdoor Standard
- Omni Soles: Built for Indoor and Artificial Grass
- Mixed Soles: The Best of Both
- Court Surface and Sole Type Matching Guide
- How Sole Type Affects Your Movement
- Durability: Which Soles Last Longest
- When to Replace Your Padel Shoes
- UK Brands and Where to Buy
- Common Mistakes When Choosing Padel Shoe Soles
- Frequently Asked Questions
Why the Sole Matters More Than the Upper
Most people shopping for padel shoes focus on colour, brand, and how the shoe looks on their foot. Fair enough — nobody wants to look terrible on court. But the sole is doing about 80% of the actual work. It’s what determines whether you can slide into a low ball, pivot for a bandeja, or stop dead from a sprint without your knee objecting. If you’re still narrowing down your options, our guide on how to choose padel shoes covers the full picture — but sole type deserves its own deep look.
Grip vs Slide: The Core Trade-Off
Every padel shoe sole sits somewhere on a spectrum between maximum grip and controlled slide. Too much grip and you can’t move fluidly — your foot plants and your body keeps going, which is how ankle injuries happen. Too little grip and you’re scrambling for traction, especially on wet artificial grass.
Surface Compatibility
The court surface you play on dictates which sole type works best. UK padel courts vary enormously — some clubs have indoor carpet-style surfaces, others have outdoor artificial grass with sand infill, and a few newer venues have panoramic courts with synthetic turf. Each surface interacts differently with different sole patterns, and getting the match wrong means you’re fighting your shoes instead of focusing on the ball.
The Lawn Tennis Association has been pushing padel growth across the UK, and as more courts open, the variety of surfaces players encounter is only increasing.
Herringbone Soles: The Outdoor Standard
The herringbone pattern looks exactly like it sounds — a zigzag arrangement of rubber grooves running across the outsole in a V-shaped pattern. If you’ve ever looked at the bottom of a clay court tennis shoe, you’ve seen herringbone.
How They Work
The V-shaped grooves bite into the court surface and then release in a controlled way. On outdoor artificial grass courts with sand infill — which is what most UK outdoor padel courts use — herringbone soles let you slide into shots while still maintaining enough grip to push off again. The grooves channel sand and debris away from the contact surface, which means they don’t clog up and lose traction mid-match.
Best Surfaces for Herringbone
- Outdoor artificial grass with sand infill — this is where herringbone excels, giving controlled slide without losing grip
- Concrete or hard court surfaces — herringbone provides reliable traction, though the rubber wears faster
- Damp outdoor courts — the grooves channel moisture and maintain contact better than flat patterns
When Herringbone Falls Short
On smooth indoor surfaces, herringbone can grip too aggressively. After six months playing indoor padel in herringbone shoes, the difference is stark — you feel anchored to the floor, which makes lateral movement feel clunky. Indoor carpet-style surfaces need something that allows more glide, and herringbone simply digs in too hard.
Popular UK Options
The Asics Gel-Padel Pro 5 is probably the most widely available herringbone padel shoe in the UK, running about £65-85 from most retailers. Head’s Sprint Pro range also uses a herringbone pattern and sits around £80-100. Both are solid choices for anyone playing primarily outdoors.
Omni Soles: Built for Indoor and Artificial Grass
Omni soles use a pattern of small, raised rubber dots or nubs across the outsole instead of directional grooves. The name comes from the idea that they work on multiple surfaces, though in practice they shine most on indoor courts and short-pile artificial surfaces.
How They Work
The small nubs create uniform contact points across the sole. Instead of channelling grip in specific directions like herringbone, omni soles distribute traction evenly. This makes lateral movement smoother — you can shuffle side to side without the sole catching and jerking your foot.
The Smooth Court Advantage
On polished indoor courts or short-pile carpet surfaces — like the ones featured in our best indoor padel shoes round-up — omni soles are noticeably better than herringbone. They allow a subtle controlled slide on each step, which is exactly what padel footwork demands. Players who switch from herringbone to omni on indoor courts consistently say it feels like someone loosened the handbrake.
Where Omni Struggles
- Wet outdoor courts — the nubs don’t channel water, so they lose grip quickly when surfaces get damp
- Sandy artificial grass — sand fills the gaps between nubs and reduces traction over the course of a match
- Hard concrete — the small nubs wear down faster than herringbone grooves, reducing the shoe’s lifespan
Popular UK Options
The Babolat Jet Premura is one of the most popular omni-sole padel shoes available in the UK, typically around £90-120 from Padel Nuestro UK or Decathlon. Wilson’s Rush Pro range also offers omni options at £75-100.
Mixed Soles: The Best of Both
Mixed soles — sometimes called hybrid or combined soles — use herringbone on one part of the outsole and omni-style nubs on another. Usually the herringbone sits on the heel and outer edge (where you need braking grip) and the omni pattern covers the forefoot and inner edge (where you need smooth pivoting).
The Design Logic
Think about how your foot actually moves during a padel point. You sprint forward and brake — that’s heel-first contact, where herringbone grip prevents you overshooting. Then you pivot and shuffle laterally — that’s forefoot rotation, where omni smoothness lets you turn without catching. Mixed soles try to give each part of your foot the pattern it needs for that specific movement.
Real-World Performance
After playing with mixed soles for a full season across both indoor and outdoor UK courts, they deliver on the promise for most recreational players. The transition between grip zones feels natural — you don’t notice the switch mid-stride, which was the concern before trying them. On outdoor artificial grass they handle well, and moving to an indoor session doesn’t require a shoe change.
The Compromise Trade-Off
Mixed soles are the Jack of all trades, and they do carry that trade-off. On a pure outdoor sand court, herringbone-only soles grip better. On a pure indoor carpet court, omni-only soles slide more smoothly. The mixed sole is never quite as good as the specialist at either extreme. For players who use one court type exclusively, the specialist sole usually makes more sense.
Popular UK Options
The Joma Slam and the Bullpadel Vertex use mixed sole patterns and are widely available from UK padel retailers. The Joma typically runs £60-80, making it one of the better value mixed options. Bullpadel’s Vertex sits around £90-120.

Court Surface and Sole Type Matching Guide
Choosing the right sole type comes down to where you play most often. Here’s how each combination works:
Outdoor Artificial Grass (Sand Infill)
- Best: Herringbone
- Acceptable: Mixed
- Avoid: Omni (sand clogs the nubs)
Most UK outdoor padel courts use this surface. The sand provides some natural slide, so you want a sole that can grip through it when you need to stop. Herringbone handles this best because the grooves channel sand away from contact points.
Indoor Carpet or Short-Pile Artificial
- Best: Omni
- Acceptable: Mixed
- Avoid: Herringbone (too grippy, restricts lateral movement)
Indoor surfaces are smoother and provide less natural slide. Omni soles let your foot glide slightly on each movement, matching the footwork patterns padel demands. Playing indoors in herringbone feels like wearing hiking boots on a dance floor.
Mixed-Use (Indoor and Outdoor)
- Best: Mixed
- Acceptable: Herringbone (if outdoor-heavy) or Omni (if indoor-heavy)
If you split your playing time between indoor and outdoor courts — which plenty of UK players do depending on weather and availability — mixed soles save you from buying two pairs. The performance compromise on each surface is small enough that most club-level players won’t notice a difference.
How Sole Type Affects Your Movement
The sole pattern directly influences three key movements in padel: the split step, the lateral shuffle, and the recovery sprint. Getting the wrong sole for your surface doesn’t just feel wrong — it actively changes how you play.
Split Step Timing
The split step — that small hop you make as your opponent strikes the ball — relies on your feet landing with enough grip to push off in any direction instantly. On appropriate surfaces, all three sole types handle this fine. But put herringbone on a slick indoor court and the split step becomes hesitant because you know the grip is unpredictable. Your brain starts second-guessing, and that hesitation costs you half a second.
Lateral Shuffling
Padel is probably the most lateral sport there is. You’re shuffling across a 10-metre width for most of the point, rarely sprinting straight ahead. Omni soles allow a micro-slide with each lateral step, which keeps your momentum flowing. Herringbone on indoor surfaces makes each shuffle feel like you’re stopping and restarting, which is exhausting over a two-hour session.
Slide and Recovery
On outdoor courts, the controlled slide is part of the game — you slide into wide balls like a clay court tennis player. Herringbone soles give you confidence in this slide because the grip engages progressively rather than suddenly. Trying to slide in omni soles on sandy outdoor courts feels unpredictable because the grip comes and goes as sand fills and clears the nubs.
Durability: Which Soles Last Longest
Not all sole patterns wear at the same rate, and the surface you play on accelerates wear in different ways.
Herringbone Longevity
Herringbone grooves wear down from the outside in. On artificial grass they typically last 4-6 months of twice-weekly play before the pattern flattens enough to lose performance. On concrete or hard surfaces, expect 2-3 months — the abrasive surface eats through the rubber much faster.
Omni Wear Patterns
The small nubs on omni soles wear down more evenly across the whole sole, but they also have less material to lose before they’re flat. On indoor surfaces they last well — 5-8 months of regular play. But on outdoor or concrete courts, the nubs wear quickly and you’ll notice declining traction after 6-8 weeks.
Mixed Sole Durability
Mixed soles tend to last somewhere between the two. The herringbone sections on the heel wear faster (because that’s where braking force concentrates), but the omni forefoot sections last longer. The mismatch can eventually create an imbalanced feel — one area gripping well while another has gone smooth.
When to Replace Your Padel Shoes
Knowing when your soles are done saves you from that embarrassing full-split slide when you expected grip.
The Visual Check
- Herringbone: if the V-grooves are less than 1mm deep anywhere on the sole, it’s time
- Omni: if the nubs have worn flush with the base sole, replace them
- Mixed: check both zones — the herringbone heel usually goes first
The Performance Check
- You’re sliding when you didn’t intend to
- Lateral shuffling feels less stable than when the shoes were new
- Your feet feel closer to the court surface than usual (the rubber layer has thinned)
Extending Sole Life
- Rotate shoes if you play more than three times a week — alternating pairs lets the rubber recover
- Clean the soles after outdoor play — embedded sand and grit act like sandpaper on the next session
- Don’t walk on hard surfaces in your padel shoes — save them for the court only

UK Brands and Where to Buy
The UK padel shoe market has expanded rapidly. Finding the right sole type used to mean importing from Spain, but now several retailers stock all three types.
Where to Shop
- Padel Nuestro UK — the biggest selection of padel-specific shoes, all sole types
- Decathlon — solid budget options, mainly Kuikma brand with mixed soles, around £35-60
- Amazon UK — wide range but check sole descriptions carefully, some listings don’t specify type
- Direct Sports — good stock of Asics and Head padel shoes with herringbone soles
- Pro:Direct Sport — growing padel section with premium brands
Price Expectations
- Budget (£30-60): Kuikma, Joma — typically mixed soles, suitable for beginners
- Mid-range (£60-100): Asics, Head, Wilson — herringbone or omni options, better cushioning and durability
- Premium (£100-150+): Babolat, Bullpadel, Nox — advanced sole compounds, lighter weight, better court feel
Sizing Note
Padel shoes from Spanish brands (Bullpadel, Nox, Joma) often run small compared to UK sizing. Going half a size up from your normal UK shoe size is the standard advice, and based on experience with three different Spanish brands, that advice is spot on every time.
Common Mistakes When Choosing Padel Shoe Soles
Using Tennis Shoes for Padel
Tennis shoes often use herringbone soles, but they’re designed for a different sport. Tennis shoes are built for hard courts and clay — surfaces that behave differently from padel’s artificial grass. The rubber compound, cushioning distribution, and sole flexibility are all optimised for different movement patterns. You’ll manage in tennis shoes, but you’re leaving performance on the table.
Ignoring Your Primary Court Surface
Buying the highest-rated shoe on Amazon without checking what sole type it uses — and matching that to where you actually play — is the single most common mistake. A five-star omni shoe is useless if you play exclusively on outdoor sand courts. Always check the sole type before the reviews.
Choosing Based on Appearance
The sole is underneath the shoe. Nobody on court sees it (though the right shoes should feature on your padel accessories checklist). But it’s the part that determines whether you play well or spend the match worrying about your footing. Buy the ugly shoe with the right sole over the gorgeous shoe with the wrong one.
Not Trying Before You Buy
If you can, test shoes on your actual court surface before committing. Some UK padel clubs have demo days or relationships with shoe brands. Decathlon’s return policy is also generous — you can test shoes and return them within 365 days if they don’t suit your game.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I use the same padel shoes on indoor and outdoor courts? You can, but performance will suffer on one surface. Mixed soles are the best compromise if you play both regularly. Dedicated indoor (omni) and outdoor (herringbone) shoes will always perform better on their intended surface.
How often should I replace my padel shoes? For twice-weekly players, expect to replace shoes every 4-6 months. Check the sole pattern depth regularly — once grooves or nubs flatten to less than 1mm, traction drops noticeably. If you’re sliding unintentionally, it’s past time.
Are padel shoe soles different from tennis shoe soles? Yes. While some patterns look similar (both sports use herringbone), padel shoe soles use softer rubber compounds designed for artificial grass. Tennis shoes use harder rubber for hard courts and clay, which wears differently and doesn’t provide the right grip on padel surfaces.
Do professional padel players use herringbone or omni soles? Most World Padel Tour professionals use herringbone or mixed soles because the majority of WPT events are played on outdoor artificial grass. For indoor tournaments, some players switch to omni soles, though many stick with mixed for consistency.
Is it worth buying two pairs of padel shoes for different surfaces? If you play three or more times a week across both surface types, two pairs is worth the investment. Each pair lasts longer because it’s only used on its optimal surface, and your on-court performance improves. For once-a-week players, a good mixed sole pair covers both adequately.