MENU
  • top
  • About Us
  • Basics
  • Paddles
  • Practice
  • Brands
  • VietnamA category covering the pickleball scene in Vietnam. It looks at how the sport is spreading locally, the reasons behind its popularity, venue and brand information, and its growth potential going forward.
  • Trends
  • CourtsA category that brings together information on pickleball courts. It covers court sizes and regulation dimensions, how to set up a court, and venue information at home and abroad—practical knowledge to help you get your playing environment in order.
  • OverseasA category introducing the pickleball scene overseas. It offers an easy-to-follow overview of how the sport is spreading, market trends and country-by-country characteristics across regions such as the United States, Asia and Europe.
  • All Venues
  • All Tournaments
  • All Events
  • All Player Directory
  • All Brands
  • All PaddlesA pickleball paddle directory. Reviews of popular models by spec and price.
  • Contact Form
  • Privacy Policy
ピックルタイムス
The Pickleball Specialist Guide
  • Find a Court
  • Vietnam
  • Articles
  • Tournaments
  • Directory
    • Player Directory
    • Paddle Directory
    • Brands
  • Search
  • Request a Listing
  • Find a Court
  • Vietnam
  • Articles
  • Tournaments
  • Directory
  • Search
  • Request a Listing
ピックルタイムス
  • Find a Court
  • Vietnam
  • Articles
  • Tournaments
  • Directory
    • Player Directory
    • Paddle Directory
    • Brands
  • Search
  • Request a Listing
  1. Home
  2. How-To
  3. The Complete Guide to Effective Pickleball Practice Methods | Tips to Improve, From Beginner to Advanced

The Complete Guide to Effective Pickleball Practice Methods | Tips to Improve, From Beginner to Advanced

2026 6/17
How-To Paddles Basics Technique & Improvement Practice
February 1, 2026June 17, 2026
Links on this page may include advertisements.
Article Summary
Improving at pickleball is about "technique over power, quality over quantity." You progressively refine repetition of basic strokes, dinks, the third shot drop, serve and return precision, and footwork. With level-specific practice routines for beginners, intermediates, and advanced players, plus tips for building the habit of short, frequent practice, you can reliably level up.

ピックルボールの効果的な練習方法|初心者から上級者まで上達のコツ

TOC

What you need in order to improve at pickleball

When you've just started pickleball, everyone hits the same wall.

"The ball catches on the net," "I tense up and hit it out," "my opponent picks me apart" — have you had experiences like these?

The truth is, improving at pickleball is above all about "technique over power" and "quality over quantity." This sport combines elements of tennis, badminton, and table tennis, and technique and strategy, more than power, decide the outcome. The appeal of pickleball is that even beginners, once they grasp the knack, can grow surprisingly quickly.

In this article, from mastering the basic strokes todinkpracticing the dink, improving serve precision, and strengthening footwork, we'll practically introduce level-specific practice routines and tips for improvement. With concrete practice methods you can adopt starting today, your play will change dramatically.

Let's master the basic strokes

For improving at pickleball, mastering the basic strokes is essential first. It's easy to think you'll win if you hit hard, but in fact the control to reliably hit your target spot is overwhelmingly more of a point-winner.

Basics of the forehand and backhand

The forehand is a shot hit on the same side as the hand holding the paddle.

The way to set up is simple. Hold the paddle near your navel, bend your elbow slightly, and wait in a relaxed position. Many people hold the paddle too far out in front, but waiting loosely in front of your stomach lets you react quickly wherever the ball comes. When hitting, shift your weight to your front foot and hit with a stable paddle face.

The backhand is a shot hit on the opposite side from the hand holding the paddle. When in doubt, the golden rule is to choose the backhand. Trying to force a forehand raises the chance the ball floats up and gets smacked. Whether two-handed or one-handed, hitting with the image of blocking in front of your body keeps things stable.

ピックルボール 基本ストローク フォアハンド バックハンド 練習

Repetitive training with wall drills

An effective practice you can do at home or alone is wall drills.

By continuously hitting the ball against the wall, you naturally build a feel for how to use the paddle face and for timing. Filming your form on a phone stand to check it reveals your quirks. Sticking up a target to strengthen your "aiming awareness" is also recommended. More than a strong shot, being conscious of a course that's hard to return is the key to improvement.

Racket-handling practice is also effective. Repeating the motion of holding the paddle and swinging it alternately left and right improves fine movement and wrist flexibility. Keeping it up even 5–10 minutes a day makes a real difference in your consistency during matches.

Dominate matches with the dink shot

The dink shot is the most fundamental of fundamentals for taking control of the flow of a match in pickleball. By dropping the ball softly just above the net, you put pressure on your opponent, forcing them to hit from a low angle.

The basic technique of the dink

Hold the paddle lightly. Relax and picture touching the ball as if wrapping it with the paddle face. Bending your knees slightly and staying low lets you send the ball naturally to skim just over the net. Keep the swing minimal. Not giving the ball power is the key to success.

Face a friend or partner and lightly rally the ball from near the net. What matters is practicing dropping it just barely over the net. Once you get used to it, try speeding up the tempo a little.

Cross-court dink drill

Stand at the kitchen line in front of the net and rally dinks in the cross-court direction with your partner.

The goal is to keep the rally going for 50 in a row. If you miss, start over from the first. Keeping up this practice noticeably raises your consistency during games. As a variation, place cones or targets near your opponent's kitchen line and add practice dropping the ball on your target spot.

The point is to use the dink not just for defense but as preparation for an attack that unsettles your opponent. Aim at the outside or inside of your opponent's feet to restrict their movement. The moment your opponent makes a mistake or returns a high ball, switch to attack without hesitation.

ピックルボール ディンク練習 キッチンライン テクニック

Take the initiative with serve and return

The serve and return are supremely important skills that create the start of every point in pickleball.

By practicing this opener thoroughly, you can steer the flow of the match strongly in your favor.

How to hit a consistent serve

The serve is the start of the match and an important first move to seize the initiative. Open your stance to shoulder width, stay relaxed and balanced. The rule is to catch the ball below your waist with an underhand swing (or a drop serve where you drop it to the ground and hit). Swing your hand slowly and large.

Set a target deep in your opponent's court and serve aiming there. Aiming deep pushes your opponent back. Aiming for a course is the point. Hitting to your opponent's backhand side often produces a weak return. In serve practice, prioritize "control over power." Making targets divided into left, right, and center of the court and repeatedly practicing hitting them increases your consistency.

Create the launch point of your attack with the return

The return isn't passive; it's the first step of the attack.

After receiving the serve, return it deep into your opponent's court as well. The target can be center or side, but choosing a spot that restricts your opponent's movement is effective. Once you've hit the ball, advance forward with that momentum. Quickly moving 2–3 meters to get into the non-volley zone (kitchen) puts you at a big advantage.

Conversely, if you stop there, you'll fumble in the transition and have more frustrating moments of "I almost got there!" The point is not to stop moving after your return.

The third shotControl the match with the third shot

The third shot is one of the most important shots in pickleball. The world's top players say it in unison. The quality of this shot, used on the third stroke after the serve, has a big influence on the outcome of the match.

The importance of the third shot drop

The third shot drop is a technique for suppressing your opponent's attack and taking an advantageous position for yourself. Master this and you'll be able to seize the initiative in the game.

Practice split between the kitchen line and the baseline. One person stands at the kitchen line, the other at the baseline. The person on the baseline side practices soft shots that drop the ball into the kitchen. Repeat drop shots with an emphasis on control. Trying it from various directions, such as cross-court and straight, lets you practice with real match play in mind.

By dropping the ball inside the kitchen, you prevent your opponent's hard hits. Focus on a soft touch and prioritize control of the ball.

STEP1
① Set up low from the baseline

Imagining the third stroke after the serve, bend your knees and set up low near the baseline. Removing tension is the first step.

STEP2
② "Place" it in an arc

Without swinging through, carry the ball from below and hit it on an arcing trajectory. What you aim for is inside your opponent's kitchen.

STEP3
③ Calmly close in forward

If the ball doesn't float and drops at your opponent's feet, don't rush — advance to the kitchen line and raise your position.

編集部メモ

Editor's Note

While your drops float and get smacked, don't force yourself to aim for the kitchen; setting your target as "over the net and short of your opponent's kitchen line" raises your success rate. Counting how many times you returned it low makes your improvement visible and keeps you going.

Using the third shot drive appropriately

When you hear "drive," you feel like putting it away in one shot, don't you?

But in fact, the purpose of the third shot drive isn't to go for a winner; it's to pass it just over the net and force your opponent back. There you buy time and calmly hit a drop on the next fifth shot. That's how you gradually build your own shape.

After the serve, set up at the baseline, watch the bounce carefully, and drive it in. Aiming at your opponent's backhand side, exploiting your opponent's weakness, makes your attack land smoothly. Don't over-tension. Taking a large follow-through makes it easier to control.

ピックルボール サードショット ドロップ ドライブ 戦略

Master footwork and positioning

It's no exaggeration to say pickleball is "positioning = win rate." No matter how good a shot you can hit, if your positioning is poor you'll lose the point.

Move beautifully with the shuffle step

When catching up to the ball, moving "from the inside foot" is the basic. Scrambling with only the outside foot lets your body drift and becomes a source of mistakes. At first your feet may fumble and it might look like dancing, but with repeated practice it becomes a natural movement.

The split step is also key. Lightly jumping and landing at the moment your opponent hits lets you move quickly in either direction. Doing it as a set with 5–10 minutes of return practice a day means you stop giving your opponent openings.

Standing position at the kitchen line

The ideal position is near the "kitchen line," that is, just behind the non-volley zone. From this position you can react quickly to your opponent's shots and use dinks and volleys effectively.

In doubles, the basic is to line up side by side with your partner rather than front and back. Try not to create space to your left and right. After you hit, immediately closing in to the kitchen line lets you apply pressure. It's also important to talk in advance about the "zone the two of you defend."

In doubles, after hitting a big dink cross-court, dash to the center right after. That's because there's a high chance your opponent will aim for the middle. Your partner covers the side, so filling the middle is your job.

Applied techniques you can use in real matches

Once you've mastered the basics, next take on the applied techniques that make the difference in real matches.

Command the net with the volley

The volley is a shot hit before the ball bounces near the net. If it lands, it gives your opponent no room to counter. Hold the paddle in front of your chest and keep it aimed toward the direction the ball is coming from so you can react instantly.

When you take a fast ball at the net, I understand the urge to smash it down. But the success rate is low. The trick is the image of "pushing forward." Just opening the paddle a touch and carrying it horizontally lets you hit a volley that stabs deep into your opponent's court. When this lands, it feels great.

Aim at your opponent's feet. Hitting to a low position makes it hard for your opponent to hit hard on their next shot. Having your partner hit you fast balls and practicing returning them reflexively is effective.

Judging the timing of your attack

For a ball that comes at chest height or above, don't reset — attack while saying "thank you."

Letting this go to waste is a shame. When a high ball comes, aiming at your opponent's dominant-hand side is effective. Many people are weak against the motion of tucking in their arm, and aiming there triggers what's called the "chicken wing." When this lands, it feels amazing.

It's precisely in a pinch that you stay calm. Open the paddle face a little and hit a reset shot with the feeling of lifting it from the shoulder. Punching it hard just feeds your opponent. Hitting it to drop softly buys time and lets you recover your posture.

ピックルボール 応用テクニック ボレー 攻撃 上級者

Level-specific practice routines

Choosing a practice routine that matches your level lets you improve efficiently. First, use the quick-reference table below to grasp where you should focus right now.

Level Focus theme Recommended drills
Beginner Repetition of basic form Wall drills 5–10 min / serve 10 min / dink 15 min
Intermediate Precision and variation Target serve / deep return drill
Advanced Judgment with real match play in mind 2-on-1 positioning / pressure points

Practice routine for beginners

For beginners, repeating the basics is what matters first. Wall drills 5–10 minutes a day, serve practice 10 minutes, dink practice 15 minutes. Just keeping up these three will have you improving remarkably a month later.

Incorporating mini-games is also recommended. In a dink battle, you rally only inside the kitchen, and if you float the ball you lose. In a rally challenge, you win if you keep it going 10 times. Approaching it like a game naturally speeds up your reactions and steadies your form.

Practice routine for intermediates

Intermediates should raise their precision and variation. In a target serve drill, place cones on the left, right, and center of the service box and serve aiming at them. Incorporate topspin and slice too, increasing your serve variety.

The deep return drill is also effective. Have your partner serve and practice returning it near your opponent's baseline. Aim to return 10 in a row deep.

Practice routine for advanced players

Advanced players take on high-level practice with real match play in mind.

In the 2-on-1 positioning drill, one person defends the court while two hit shots freely. The defending side reacts to the ball while reading the opponents' movements. You refine the skill of covering the court with efficient movement and preparing for the opponents' shots.

Pressure-point play is also important. Start the game from a tight situation like "9-9" and train the ability to judge calmly and reduce mistakes even in tense moments. Before a match, take deep breaths and picture yourself putting shots away well; this eases tension and lets you face the match with confidence.

Tips for building the practice habit and growing

No matter the practice, if you don't keep it up it won't stick. The faster people improve, the more they practice frequently, even if briefly, with a set purpose. Finally, let's lay out the points for making practice a habit and growing.

"Short and frequent" is the shortcut to improvement

Rather than two hours once a week, 15 minutes a day four times a week keeps your feel from fading and helps it stick. Wall drills and racket handling can be done at home, so you can keep from losing your skills even on days you can't get a court. Narrowing each session to one theme, like "today only dinks" or "today only serve courses," keeps practice from becoming aimless.

Make your quirks visible with video and logs

Filming your form on your phone and reviewing it later reveals quirks you can't notice on your own, like tension or the size of your swing. Recording how many drills you succeed at in a row makes your improvement visible in numbers and keeps your motivation going. If you feel the limits of self-study,making use of online lessonsto bring in objective feedback is also effective.

Reconsider whether your equipment fits

When you practice but still can't be consistent, the cause can lie in the paddle's weight or grip. A paddle that's too heavy causes late swings, and a grip that doesn't fit creates unnecessary tension. When you hit a plateau, reconsideringHow to choose a paddlethese makes it easier for your practice to pay off.

Summary: You'll reliably improve with continuous practice

For improving at pickleball, mastering the basic strokes, practicing the dink, improving serve and return precision, and strengthening footwork are all essential.

They're all unglamorous practices, but by keeping them up a little each day you can reliably level up. More than hitting hard, the control to reliably hit your target spot is above all important. A dink that unsettles your opponent, a deep return, efficient positioning — just being conscious of these dramatically changes the quality of your play.

Beginners start from repeating the basics, intermediates move to precision and variation, and advanced players to high-level practice with real match play in mind. Choosing a practice routine that matches your level and keeping it up while having fun is the secret to improvement.

Adopt a new practice starting today, and aim to become a player one rank higher. The appeal of pickleball is that anyone can enjoy it regardless of age or fitness. May continuous practice make your pickleball life even more fulfilling.

FAQ

What's the number one tip for getting good at pickleball?

It's "technique over power, quality over quantity." Prioritize the control to reliably carry it to your target spot over hitting hard, and you'll grow by practicing frequently, even briefly, narrowed to one theme.

What should beginners practice first?

Start from repeating the basic strokes and wall drills, serve, and dink. Keeping up wall drills 5–10 minutes, serve 10 minutes, and dink 15 minutes every day will make you remarkably more consistent in a month.

Why is the third shot drop important?

Because it's the shot on the third stroke after the serve that suppresses your opponent's hard hits and buys you time to close in forward. Without swinging through, "place" it in an arc and drop it softly into your opponent's kitchen.

Is there practice I can do alone?

Yes. Wall drills, racket handling, and checking your form by filming on your phone are possible alone. You can keep it up without losing your skills even on days you can't get a court.

My dinks float and get smacked.

Relax, bend your knees to set up low, and keep your swing minimal. At first, set your target short of your opponent's kitchen line and practice while counting how many times you returned it low; it'll become more consistent.

Related Articles Worth Reading

  • Mastering the pickleball smash | How to hit the put-away and practice drills
  • Practice methods to stabilize your pickleball serve | Tips for getting it in and repetition training
  • Making the Most of Online Pickleball Lessons You Can Improve With at Home
  • Mental Toughness in Pickleball | Handling Pressure in Matches and Recovering From Mistakes
  • Mastering the Pickleball Lob | When to Use It, How to Hit It, and How to Defend

Reference Links

  • USA Pickleball – Equipment guide

Related Articles

Gear ReviewsThe Complete Gamma Sports Paddle Guide | 5 Points for Choosing2026.03.30›BasicsA 3-Stage Drill to Steady Your Pickleball Serve2026.03.30›Gear ReviewsThe Head Radical Pro Explained in Depth | A Serious Paddle From a Tennis Heavyweight2026.03.30›Gear ReviewsThe Onix Graphite Paddle Explained | A Value Staple for Beginners2026.03.30›PaddlesComparing Pickleball Paddle Core Materials | Polymer, Nomex and Aluminum2026.03.30›How-ToHow to Replace Pickleball Grip Tape | Choosing the Material and the Wrap2026.03.30›
How-To Paddles Basics Technique & Improvement Practice
Serve Technique Paddles Footwork Ball Beginner Aichi Practice
Let's share this post !
  • Copied the URL !
  • Copied the URL !
  • The Best-Value Pickleball Paddle Selection Guide | Recommendations for Beginners
  • What's the difference between pickleball and tennis? Comparing rules, gear, and difficulty

Author of this article

小島 怜's avatar Rei Kojima

I'm a pickleball enthusiast in my third year living in Vietnam. In high school I was on the badminton team, spending every day chasing the shuttle. Now, amid the buzz of Ho Chi Minh City, I'm fully immersed in the speedy volleys my badminton background enables and the strategic mind games unique to pickleball. I'll casually share the real playing scene in Vietnam—local court info and improvement tips that only a former badminton player would know!

Related Articles

  • The Complete Gamma Sports Paddle Guide | 5 Points for Choosing
    March 30, 2026
  • A 3-Stage Drill to Steady Your Pickleball Serve
    March 30, 2026
  • The Head Radical Pro Explained in Depth | A Serious Paddle From a Tennis Heavyweight
    March 30, 2026
  • The Onix Graphite Paddle Explained | A Value Staple for Beginners
    March 30, 2026
  • Comparing Pickleball Paddle Core Materials | Polymer, Nomex and Aluminum
    March 30, 2026
  • How to Replace Pickleball Grip Tape | Choosing the Material and the Wrap
    March 30, 2026
  • Heavy Paddle vs. Light Paddle | How Weight Affects Your Hitting Style
    March 30, 2026
  • How to Choose a Pickleball | A Thorough Indoor vs. Outdoor Comparison
    March 30, 2026

Latest Articles

  • A 3-Stage Drill to Steady Your Pickleball Serve
  • The Complete Gamma Sports Paddle Guide | 5 Points for Choosing
  • The Head Radical Pro Explained in Depth | A Serious Paddle From a Tennis Heavyweight
  • The Onix Graphite Paddle Explained | A Value Staple for Beginners
  • Comparing Pickleball Paddle Core Materials | Polymer, Nomex and Aluminum

Categories

  • Gear Reviews
  • Courts
  • Columns
  • Trends
  • News
  • How-To
  • Paddles
  • Brands
  • Vietnam
  • Health & Fitness
  • Basics
  • Tournaments
  • Technique & Improvement
  • Overseas
  • Practice
Popular articles
  • The Complete Guide to Pickleball Facilities in Kanagawa | A List of Places to Play in the Prefecture
  • Where Can You Play Pickleball in Tokyo? A Look at Courts in the City
  • Where Can You Play Pickleball in Shizuoka? A Look at Courts and Sports Facilities in the Prefecture
  • Where Can You Play Pickleball in Chiba? A Look at Playable Locations in the Prefecture
  • A Beginner's Guide to Pickleball | The First Gear to Get and How to Choose It
ピックルタイムス

One of the largest pickleball specialist media readable in Japanese. We deliver firsthand information from two bases: Japan and Vietnam.

Find Pickleball

  • Find a Court
  • Tournament Info
  • Event Info

About Pickleball

  • Paddle Info
  • Brand Info
  • Player Info
  • Columns
  • Latest News

About Our Service

  • Pickleball in Vietnam
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • top
  • About Us
  • Basics
  • Paddles
  • Practice
  • Brands
  • Vietnam
  • Trends
  • Courts
  • Overseas
  • All Venues
  • All Tournaments
  • All Events
  • All Player Directory
  • All Brands
  • All Paddles
  • Contact Form
  • Privacy Policy

© 2026 PICKLE TIMES | Operated by our Ho Chi Minh City-based editorial team

  • Menu
  • Home
  • Courts
  • Vietnam
  • Articles
  • Search
TOC
Popular Searches Ho Chi Minh City Indoor Paddles Hanoi
Pickle Times
Find a Court Vietnam Pickle Articles Tournaments & Events

Directory

Player Directory Paddle Directory Brands
Find a Court ⚲
Home Courts Vietnam Articles Search
English
日本語