A padel scorekeeper that calls the score out loud. Tap between points and let the scoreboard handle the rest.
Padel uses the same point names as tennis — 15, 30, 40 — and the same deuce-and-advantage structure when both pairs reach 40. Win six games (with a margin of two) to take the set, and win the best of three sets to take the match. What makes padel different is everything that happens during the rally: the glass walls behind and beside each pair are in play, you have to serve underhand after bouncing the ball, and the court is smaller and always played as doubles in almost every context.
For the full breakdown — including serve specifics, wall play, golden point, and how to call the score — read the complete padel scoring rules guide.
Most padel score apps want you to create an account, log every match of your season, follow your clubmates, and pay for a premium tier you'll never use. RALLY assumes exactly one thing: you are about to play a game and you want a scoreboard that works the second you open the page. No signup. No wizard. No notifications.
The whole screen is two enormous tap targets in teal and orange, big enough for sweaty thumbs from three metres away. Voice calls mean you do not have to squint between points to confirm the score. Rename players in two seconds. Undo is one tap. Reset is one tap. The page caches itself for offline use after the first load — padel clubs are not famous for their courtside Wi-Fi.
Full disclosure: the version of padel that ships in RALLY today is a simplified scoreboard. Instead of 15/30/40/deuce/ad inside every game, it uses first to 4 points wins a game with win-by-2. First to 6 games wins the match. This keeps the two-tap UI honest and avoids faking deuce logic it doesn't actually implement.
Full padel scoring with proper tennis-style point names, best-of-three sets, and a tiebreak at 6-6 is on the immediate roadmap — as well as the optional "golden point" sudden-death rule used by World Padel Tour. If you want the full version now, the rules page explains exactly how it works so you can keep track on paper alongside the app until then.
Club players who book a court for an hour after work and want an honest count without writing on a damp piece of paper. Padel newcomers from tennis or squash who still trip over the wall rules. Coaches running drills who need a visible scoreboard everyone can see from across the glass. Anyone who has ever lost the score at 3-3 in padel and felt a small amount of shame.
If you play sanctioned World Padel Tour-style matches with strict golden-point rules, RALLY's MVP isn't quite for you yet — wait for the full scoring update. For everyone else, the answer is: open the page, tap left or right, and stop arguing about the score.
Yes. RALLY is a free padel scorekeeper that runs in your phone browser. No account, no ads, no app store download. Two huge tap targets and the score called out loud after every point so you never lose it between rallies.
Not in the MVP. The current RALLY padel scoreboard simplifies scoring to first to 4 points wins a game (win by 2), first to 6 games wins the match. The full tennis-style 15/30/40/deuce/ad system is on the roadmap — the /rules/padel-scoring page explains the complete rules in detail.
Not yet. AI Ref is currently optimised for squash and pickleball singles. Padel has glass walls and a unique camera angle, so it needs its own model work. For now, padel uses the manual two-tap scoreboard.
Absolutely. Prop your phone against a post on the glass, tap left or right after each point, and let the scoreboard handle the count. It works offline after first load and never needs a sign-in.