On June 22, 2026, Pickleball One Inc. announced the launch of “PB1 CUP,” a nationwide qualifier-style pickleball championship it bills as Japan's first. Modeled on the national high-school soccer championship, it holds qualifiers in eight areas from Hokkaido to Kyushu, with the representatives who advance gathering at a single national final. Qualifiers run July to September, and the national final is held November 1 (planned) at the Sansan Pickleball Court in Ikebukuro, Tokyo. The entry fee is 7,000 yen (tax included) per person, competing in three divisions: Open, 35+, and 50+.
This is no small event for players in Japan. Until now, domestic pickleball has centered on one-off tournaments and exchange events, and a vertical line of flow of “aiming for the nationals as a representative of the region where you live” did not clearly exist. With one structure created going from regional qualifiers to the nationals, a concrete goal line of “advancing” is drawn even for players at the weekend-enjoyment level.
The gist of the announcement
The organizer is Pickleball One Inc., a pickleball specialist. Qualifiers are held in eight areas nationwide, and each area's capacity is assumed to be 50 people each in the Open, 35+, and 50+ divisions, for a scale of 150 in total. The area you can compete in is decided by your residence or workplace; it's not a form of choosing and entering a preferred area. From each division of each area, one man and one woman advance to the national final. Calculated by three divisions × men and women, six representatives are decided per area.
In the announcement, the organizer explains it as a stage for players nationwide to gather and connect toward one goal, drawing on the structure of national tournaments like high-school soccer and high-school baseball. It says the total number of qualifier participants is projected at 800-1,000.
How PB1 CUP works, and Japan's tournament situation
The mechanism is simple. Only players who win through their regional qualifier can stand on the court of the national final. In terms of the high-school soccer championship, it's close to that structure where teams that advance from each prefectural qualifier gather at the National Stadium. The differences are that divisions are split by age, and that the area of participation is fixed by address and workplace.
The arena you fight in is decided by “where you live”
The rule that your entry destination is decided by residence and workplace is the core for making the story of a regional representative work. It can be read as aiming to avoid the bias of strong players gathering in one area and fighting over seats. As a result, which area you place yourself in will sway the difficulty of advancing to the nationals.
The difference from domestic tournaments so far
Domestic pickleball has grown in both facilities and players over the past few years, but tournaments have largely been independent one-off events by each organizer. Even winning doesn't automatically connect to the next big stage, and it's hard for results to accumulate along a single line. PB1 CUP differs in design philosophy from previous one-off tournaments in that it prepared a single pathway of “qualifiers → national final.”
Tournament overview (verified data)
| Item | Details |
|---|---|
| Tournament Name | PB1 CUP |
| Host | Pickleball One Inc. |
| Qualifier areas | 8 areas nationwide, Hokkaido to Kyushu |
| Capacity per area | 50 per division, 150 in total (Open/35+/50+) |
| Division | Three divisions: Open, 35+, 50+ |
| Entry Fee | 7,000 yen per person (tax included) |
| How the participation area is decided | Residence or workplace |
| Advancement to the national final | One man and one woman from each division of each area |
| Qualifier period | July-September 2026 |
| National final | November 1, 2026 (planned) |
| Final venue | Sansan Pickleball Court (Ikebukuro, Tokyo) |
*The national final date and the number of qualifier participants are rough estimates and plans based on the announcement materials; we'll want to check the details of the date and venue in the organizer's latest guidance.
Reception (paraphrased, anonymized)
Here we summarize players' reactions to the announcement, blending multiple voices, in paraphrase.
- A player with about two years of experience who practices on weekday nights in Kanto took it positively: “With one-off tournaments, even if you win there's no next. If you can aim for the nationals as a regional representative, the meaning of practicing changes.”
- A person who said they started the sport in their 50s said, “It's good that there's a 50+ division. In a tournament of only my generation, I can seriously go for the win.”
- From a position involved in regional facility operation, there was also a calm view: “Our area still has a small playing population. Conversely, a voice is coming up in the community that maybe it's easier to grab a representative slot.”
- On the other hand, there was also a point that “if the area is fixed by residence and workplace, a gap arises between urban areas and the regions in the difficulty of reaching the nationals,” and there are voices watching the rule design closely.
Implications for players
From here on is the editorial team's read. The meaning PB1 CUP holds for players can be organized broadly into three.
A “national stage” becomes real even for amateurs
The biggest change is that an entry point was created where even non-top players can aim for the national final court. The Open division will likely gather strong players, but with the age divisions of 35+ and 50+, a realistic route to advance among one's own generation is prepared. For people who have played on weekends while balancing work and family, the goal of “aiming for the nationals in an arena divided by age” is more within reach than before.
The sweet spots are “division choice” and “an area's playing population”
Because the participation area is decided by address and workplace, you can't choose it yourself, but you can choose the division if you meet the age conditions. People near the 35 or 50 boundary are worth thinking about which division is realistic to fight in, based on their competitive history and fitness. The thinner the layer of one's own generation in a division, the more relatively likely one can approach a representative slot.
Furthermore, by the design that only one man and one woman from each area advance to the nationals, an area's playing population and skill layer directly become the difficulty of advancing. In regional areas where the playing population is not mature, there could be scenes where the number of entrants doesn't reach capacity and, as a result, the distance to the nationals is closer. Gauging the depth of one's area's layer becomes a realistic strategy.
Be conscious of how to fight by region
Urban areas tend to have entry demand reaching capacity, and the density of winning through the qualifier tends to be high. Conversely, in areas with a small playing population, first grasping the capacity and the lineup of participants and entering early to secure a slot pays off. Since you can't change where you live, you change how you prepare to match your area's circumstances. This is the realistic way to play it at PB1 CUP.
Ripple effects on spreading the sport
The meaning of one nationwide qualifier-style tournament being launched goes beyond individual players' goal-setting. When the vessel of regional qualifiers is created, a centripetal force of “sending out a representative” arises in each area, and local facilities and communities become able to move around the tournament as an axis. Just as high-school soccer has connected regional club activities to the nationals, the existence of qualifiers boosts region-level excitement.
The point that three age divisions are set up is also not to be overlooked from the perspective of the sport's base. The 35+ and 50+ slots show middle-aged and senior players a “stage where they can be the star.” It can function not just for short-term participant numbers but as a design that increases players who continue for a long time. At the fork of whether Japan's pickleball ends as a passing boom or takes root, the presence or absence of such a continuing tournament structure will matter.
Practical information (entry, schedule, venue)
| Item | Details |
|---|---|
| How to Enter | Apply via the application form the organizer guides you to |
| Entry Fee | 7,000 yen per person (tax included) |
| Participation area | Decided based on residence or workplace |
| Division | Select the applicable division from Open, 35+, and 50+ |
| Qualifier period | July-September 2026 (held by area) |
| National final | November 1, 2026 (planned) |
| Final venue | Sansan Pickleball Court (Ikebukuro, Tokyo) |
Because each area's dates, venues, and how the capacity fills can change, if you're considering participating, we'll want to apply after checking the organizer's latest guidance. Since capacity is set per division, an early decision is safe in areas with many applicants.
Summary
PB1 CUP is an attempt to run a single vertical line of flow—“from qualifiers to the nationals”—that domestic pickleball has lacked until now. It holds qualifiers in eight areas from Hokkaido to Kyushu, with one man and one woman from each division of each area advancing to the national final on November 1 (planned). The three-division structure of Open, 35+, and 50+ prepared a realistic goal not just for the top layer but also for players who started later in life.
The rule that the area is decided by where you live makes the story of a regional representative work while creating a gap in the difficulty of reaching the nationals depending on each area's playing population. That's exactly why gauging the circumstances of your area and division becomes the substantial preparation for aiming to compete. Whether this tournament—where a “national stage” is no longer a distant dream for weekend players—becomes a milestone in Japan's pickleball taking root, we'll want to watch the first year's movements.
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[Sources]Launch of “PB1 CUP,” Japan's first nationwide qualifier-style pickleball championship (PR TIMES)
