Pickleball skill levels are typically measured on a scale from 1.0 to 5.5+ (often referred to as DUPR). Here's a quick guide:
Beginner (2.0–2.5)
You're still learning the basic rules, scoring, and court positioning. You can sustain a short rally but mishits are common. Most of your shots are forehands.
Intermediate (3.0–3.5)
You understand the fundamentals — dinking, the kitchen (non-volley zone), basic strategy. You can sustain longer rallies and are starting to hit with intention. You're working on your third shot drop and backhand.
Advanced Intermediate (3.5–4.0)
You have a consistent third shot drop or drive. You move to the kitchen line with purpose and can hold your own in dink rallies. You understand stacking, poaching, and shot selection. You rarely make unforced errors on easy balls.
Advanced (4.0–4.5)
You can speed up, reset, and counter with consistency. You place your serves and returns strategically. You can play at the kitchen line comfortably and use a mix of dinks, speed-ups, and lobs. You're a threat in competitive play.
Expert / Pro (4.5–5.5+)
You have exceptional shot-making ability and court awareness. You can execute advanced techniques like spin serves, erne shots, and ATP (around-the-post) shots consistently. You compete at a high level in tournaments.
Friday Paddle Recommendations by Level:
→ Beginners: Friday Original — huge sweet spot, great value
→ Intermediate: Fever 102 — perfect balance of control, spin, and power
→ Advanced: Aura or Aura Pro — Gen 4 foam technology for the serious competitor