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Adidas Padel Rackets: Which Model Should You Buy in 2026

By SportsMonkie Sports Desk Updated July 12, 2026
Adidas padel racket lineup showing Match, Cross It, Arrow Hit, and Metalbone models on a padel court
On this page8
  1. 01Which Adidas padel racket should you buy?
  2. 02What happened to the Adidas Adipower padel racket?
  3. 03Is Adidas Metalbone worth the power price tag?
  4. 04Adidas Arrow Hit vs Cross It: which control racket fits?
  5. 05What is the best Adidas padel racket for beginners?
  6. 06How much does an Adidas padel racket cost in the US, UK, Australia, and Canada?
  7. 07How does Adidas compare to Babolat, Bullpadel, or other padel brands?
  8. 08The bottom line on Adidas padel rackets

Buy Adidas Match if you are new to padel, Cross It or Arrow Hit if you want control with real pace, and Metalbone if you already swing hard and hit the ball clean. Those three lines cover almost every player, and picking between them comes down to shape, balance, and how forgiving you need the sweet spot to be. One thing worth knowing before you shop: Adipower, the control racket Adidas sold for years, was not renewed for the 2026 lineup. Below is what actually changed, what each current line costs, and which one fits your game.

Which Adidas padel racket should you buy?

Match your level and playstyle to the racket, not the other way around. Here is the current 2026 lineup side by side, built from Adidas’s own product pages and US retail pricing.

LineShapeBalanceWeightUS Price (2026)Best for
MatchRound / all-round hybridLow, even360-375g$85-130First racket, Discovery-level beginners
Cross ItTeardrop / hybridEven, aerodynamic355-370g$210-415Intermediates who want racket speed
Arrow HitRound-to-diamond, adjustableEven to head-heavy360-375g$465-520Advanced control players, tunable feel
MetalboneDiamondHead-heavy350-375g$305-490Power hitters, smashers, advanced/pro
Adipower (2025, clearance)RoundEven, customizable350-370g~$334 (was $445)Control fans buying remaining stock

Read it as a ladder. Match gets you playing without punishing your arm. Cross It and Arrow Hit are where most improving and advanced club players actually live, split by how much you want to spend and how much you want to fine-tune balance. Metalbone is the outlier at the top, built for players who want to end points, not build them.

What happened to the Adidas Adipower padel racket?

This is the part most buying guides still get wrong. Adipower was Adidas’s flagship control racket for years, worn by pros like Álex Ruiz, and plenty of sites still list it as the brand’s current control option. It is not. Racket Central’s breakdown of the 2026 collection names Metalbone, Cross It, Arrow Hit, and the Discovery/Junior range as the sharpened 2026 families, and Adipower is absent. Retailers confirm it in the pricing: Padel USA still lists the Adipower Multiweight Ctrl as a “2025” model at a discounted $333.75, down from $445, the classic signature of a line being sold off rather than restocked.

Adidas replaced Adipower’s role with Arrow Hit, a new control-tuned racket built around adjustable balance rails rather than a single fixed shape. If control is what drew you to Adipower, Arrow Hit is where Adidas wants you now, though a discounted Adipower is still a legitimate buy while stock lasts.

Is Adidas Metalbone worth the power price tag?

If you already generate your own power and consistently strike the ball in the same spot, yes. Metalbone is a diamond-shaped, head-heavy racket that pushes the sweet spot toward the tip, and Adidas builds it around a stiff carbon face and an Octagonal Structure frame reinforcement for maximum bite on smashes. Ale Galán, one of the sport’s dominant players, is its signature athlete, and Adidas’s own 2026 collection page frames Metalbone explicitly as the power and finishing line.

The trade-off is the same one every diamond, head-heavy racket carries: a small, tip-loaded sweet spot punishes mishits, and the stiffness sends real vibration into the arm on off-center contact. Metalbone rewards a swing that is already grooved. It does not build one for you.

Adidas Arrow Hit vs Cross It: which control racket fits?

Both sit below Metalbone in aggression and above Match in price, but they solve different problems. Arrow Hit is the newer, more expensive line, built around what Adidas calls intelligent balance tuning, internal rails that shift weight by several grams to fine-tune feel between control and finishing power. Padelreference’s spec database lists it running from a lighter, more forgiving build up to a firmer Pro Edition, which is why its US price spans a wide $465-520.

Cross It is lighter and built around aerodynamics rather than adjustable weight, with Adidas’s Dynamic Air Flow channels cutting drag so the racket head moves faster through the swing. It costs meaningfully less, from roughly $210 for the Team Light build to around $415 for the top Pro Edition, and suits players who value quick hands over maximum tunability. If you are unsure, Cross It is the safer, cheaper first step into Adidas’s performance tier; move to Arrow Hit once you know exactly how you want the balance dialed in.

What is the best Adidas padel racket for beginners?

Match, without much debate. It ships in a round or all-round hybrid shape with a soft EVA core and a fiberglass face, which is the same forgiving formula every padel coach recommends for new players regardless of brand. Adidas prices it for the role too, typically $85-130 in the US, a fraction of the performance lines above it. If you want the reasoning behind that shape-and-core combination in more depth, our full padel racket buying guide walks through it, and our dedicated padel rackets for beginners guide covers what to look for across every brand, not just Adidas.

How much does an Adidas padel racket cost in the US, UK, Australia, and Canada?

Budget by tier, not by model name, since Adidas reuses shapes and technology across price points within a line. In the US, expect $85-130 for Match, $210-415 for Cross It, and $305-520 for Metalbone or Arrow Hit. Everything Padel Australia, the brand’s official regional licensee, prices the same tiers roughly AU$150-200 for entry rackets up to AU$450-650 for the premium lines. UK pricing runs proportionally lower in raw numbers, typically £65-90 for Match and £270-370 for Metalbone, and Canadian retailers price premium Adidas rackets around CA$500-650, with entry models nearer CA$170-220.

None of that is worth overspending on. A $400 racket in a beginner’s hands returns less than a $100 racket that actually matches their swing.

How does Adidas compare to Babolat, Bullpadel, or other padel brands?

Shape and core still matter more than the logo on the frame. A round, soft-EVA racket plays similarly whether it says Adidas, Babolat, or Bullpadel on the throat, because the physics of a wide, forgiving sweet spot do not change by brand. Where Adidas earns its reputation is at the top end: Adidas was the best-selling padel racket brand in 2023, and its Weight & Balance customization system on Metalbone and Arrow Hit lets you shift grams between the handle and head in a way few competitors match at the same price. If you already own a racket from another brand and are simply deciding whether to switch, judge it on shape and balance fit first and brand reputation second. Our full padel racket buying guide covers that shape-and-core decision across every manufacturer, not just Adidas.

Ready to shop the rest of your kit? Our racket sports hub rounds up buying guides across padel, tennis, and pickleball if Adidas is not the only brand on your shortlist.

The bottom line on Adidas padel rackets

Start with Match if padel is new to you, move to Cross It or Arrow Hit once your swing is consistent and you want more from your shots, and only reach for Metalbone once you can already finish points cleanly. Skip anything listing Adipower as Adidas’s current control racket; that ship sailed for 2026, and Arrow Hit does the job now. Buy for the tier that matches how you actually play today, not the racket your club’s best player carries.

Frequently asked questions

What is the best Adidas padel racket overall?+

There is no single best one, only a best fit. Adidas Match is the right pick for beginners, Cross It or Arrow Hit suits intermediates and advanced players who want control with pace, and Metalbone is for power hitters with a fast, repeatable swing. Match your level first, brand second.

Is the Adidas Metalbone good for beginners?+

No. Metalbone is a diamond-shaped, head-heavy power racket built for players who already strike the ball cleanly and consistently. Beginners get less forgiveness, more mishits, and more arm strain from its stiff carbon face. A round-shaped racket like Adidas Match or another beginner model is the better start.

What happened to the Adidas Adipower padel racket?+

Adipower has not been renewed for the 2026 collection. Retailers are still clearing 2025 Adipower stock, often discounted, but Adidas built its 2026 control racket around the new Arrow Hit line instead. If you see Adipower listed as Adidas's current control racket, that page is out of date.

What is the difference between Adidas Arrow Hit and Cross It?+

Arrow Hit is Adidas's 2026 control flagship, with adjustable balance rails so you can dial in feel, priced at the top of the lineup. Cross It is the lighter, more aerodynamic all-court option a tier below in price, built for players who want quick racket speed over maximum tunability.

How much does an Adidas padel racket cost?+

Roughly $85-130 for the beginner-focused Match line, $210-415 for the all-court Cross It line, and $305-520 for the advanced Metalbone and Arrow Hit lines, all in 2026 USD. UK, Australian, and Canadian prices scale proportionally, with premium models typically running £270-370, AU$450-650, or CA$500-650.

Which pros play with Adidas padel rackets?+

Ale Galán, the world number one for long stretches of his career, is Metalbone's signature player. Álex Ruiz and Ari Sánchez are tied to Adidas's control-focused rackets, and Marta Ortega (Martita Ortega) is the face of the Cross It line. Adidas was the best-selling padel racket brand in 2023.

Sources

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