Pickleball’s rapid expansion across Spain will continue next month when the Pickleball Indoor Cuarte Club hosts the second event of the inaugural Aragon Federated Pickleball Circuit from June 5 to 7.
The tournament, organized under the Aragonese Tennis Federation structure, is expected to bring together federated players from across the region as Aragon continues to strengthen its presence within Spain’s growing pickleball ecosystem.
The competition forms part of a broader push to expand organized pickleball in the region, where participation numbers and official tournaments have steadily increased over recent seasons.
The event will be open exclusively to players holding a valid federation license through the Aragonese Tennis Federation.
Several categories will be contested during the three-day tournament, including men’s singles, women’s singles, men’s doubles, women’s doubles and mixed doubles.
Organizers have opted for a format combining an initial group phase followed by knockout rounds, a structure designed to maximize match opportunities for participants while maintaining competitive balance across divisions.
Matches will also follow the “rally score” system, where every point counts regardless of serve, reflecting formats increasingly used in modern pickleball competitions to maintain tempo and intensity.
The tournament will take place at the indoor facilities of Pickleball Indoor Cuarte Club, one of the venues helping drive the sport’s development within the region.
The continued expansion of federated circuits highlights how pickleball is gradually moving beyond recreational participation in Spain and evolving into a more structured competitive system supported by regional federations and organized tournament calendars.
Aragon has become one of several Spanish regions investing more heavily in pickleball infrastructure and competition pathways as the sport’s popularity rises across Europe.
Spain’s pickleball growth has accelerated significantly over the past two years, with new indoor venues, regional circuits and federation-backed events emerging alongside increasing international interest in the European market.
The development mirrors a wider continental trend, where countries across Europe are building formal competition structures to accommodate growing participation numbers and attract younger players into the sport.
As regional circuits continue to expand, events such as the Aragon Federated Pickleball Circuit are increasingly becoming important foundations for Spain’s long-term competitive pickleball structure.




