Nothing beats walking out your back door to your own court. This is what to plan for before you build.
How much space you need
Aim for a flat area of at least 30 × 60 ft for a full court with safe margins (the lined area is 20 × 44 ft). Tighter yards can sometimes work with reduced run-off — a builder will tell you what fits. See the full dimensions guide.
What it costs
A backyard court typically runs $20,000–$50,000 installed depending on surface and site. If you have an existing slab or want to convert a tennis court, you can spend far less. Get your number on the calculator.

The details that make a backyard court great
- Lighting ($5K–$10K): glare-controlled LED on 20-ft poles extends play into the evening.
- Fencing ($2K–$6K): keeps balls in and defines the space; 8 ft is typical.
- Color: a darker play area inside a contrasting surround looks sharp and improves ball visibility.
- Noise: pickleball is louder than you'd expect. If neighbors are close, ask about acoustic fencing or placement — it keeps the peace.
Frequently asked
The painted court is 20 × 44 ft. With reduced margins some builders fit a playable court in roughly 24 × 50 ft, though 30 × 60 ft is recommended for comfortable, safe play.
The paddle-ball "pop" carries. In close-neighbor situations, acoustic fencing, landscaping buffers, and thoughtful court placement make a big difference — raise it with your builder up front.