New to Pickleball
in Cambodia?
Everything you need to start playing pickleball in Phnom Penh — from understanding the rules to finding your first game and buying your first paddle.
Everything you need to start playing pickleball in Phnom Penh — from understanding the rules to finding your first game and buying your first paddle.
Pickleball is a paddle sport played on a badminton-sized court with a low net. You use a solid paddle (not strung like a racket) to hit a perforated plastic ball — similar to a wiffle ball.
It combines elements of tennis, badminton, and table tennis. Games are played to 11 points (win by 2). You can play singles or doubles — but doubles is by far the most popular format.
Not strung. Composite or carbon fiber face.
Perforated, slower than tennis. Different balls for indoor/outdoor.
20×44ft (6×13.4m). Much smaller than tennis. Easy to cover.
Win by 2. Only serving team scores. Games last 15–25 min.
The 7-foot zone on each side of the net. You cannot hit a volley (ball in the air) while standing in this zone. You can enter it to play a ball that bounces. This single rule creates the strategic dinking game that makes pickleball unique.
When the ball is served, both the receiving team and the serving team must let it bounce once before volleying. After those two bounces, either team can volley. This slows the early game and forces rallies.
Serve underhand, below your waist, diagonally to the opponent’s service box. The ball must clear the kitchen. Only one serve attempt (no second serve like tennis). Faults lose the serve — not the point.
In doubles, both players on a team serve before the serve changes sides. In singles, just the one player. You only score a point when your team is serving. Games go to 11, win by 2. Tournament games sometimes go to 15 or 21.
Ball is IN if it lands on any line except the kitchen line on serve (that’s a fault). Players call their own lines honestly. If unsure — play it as IN. Disputes are resolved by replaying the point at beginner level.
Search “Cambodia Pickleball” or “Pickle Play KH” on Facebook. Join, say hello, and ask about beginner sessions this week.
Bring comfortable shoes (court or running). Pay $1 to rent a paddle on site. Most PP venues have paddles available. Don’t buy before you try.
Read the 5 rules above before you go. Everyone was a beginner — the PP community is very welcoming. Ask questions on court freely.
After 2–3 sessions, you’ll know if you love it. Then read our paddle guide and invest in your own paddle. Start $40–80 range.
Our complete paddle buying guide — carbon, fiberglass, weight, grip.