Pickleball skill levels explained.
Pickleball ratings run from 1.0 (brand new) through 2.0–2.5 (beginner), 3.0–3.5 (intermediate), and 4.0–4.5 (advanced), up to 5.0+ (expert). Here's what each level actually means in plain English — and why, at a friendly social, your number matters a lot less than you'd think.
The levels, simply
| Rating | Level | What it means |
|---|---|---|
| 1.0 – 1.5 | New | Brand new to pickleball — just getting a feel for the paddle, the serve, and how to keep score. No rating is needed to start; everyone begins here. |
| 2.0 – 2.5 | Beginner | New to the game. Learning the fundamental strokes, the serve, and how to keep score. Can sustain short rallies with players of similar ability. |
| 3.0 – 3.5 | Intermediate | More consistent on medium-paced shots, developing control and shot selection, moving up to the kitchen line with purpose, and starting to use soft shots like the dink and drop. |
| 4.0 – 4.5 | Advanced | A strong grasp of both the hard and soft game. Sees the whole court, anticipates play, controls pace, and makes smart decisions to win points rather than just keep the ball in. |
| 5.0+ | Expert / Pro | Skilled in every facet of the game, with mastery of strategy and technique and the ability to execute advanced shots consistently under pressure. |
These bands follow the USA Pickleball skill-rating framework. In Canada, Pickleball Canada has adopted DUPR (Dynamic Universal Pickleball Rating) — a 2.0–8.0 scale based on real match results — as its official rating system. New to the game? See the rules.
At our socials, levels are guidance — not walls
Ratings can help you describe your game, but they're never a barrier to joining. People come for good rallies, community, and social play first. Not sure where you sit? Just come play.
Skill levels, answered
What pickleball skill level is a beginner?
A complete beginner is usually rated 1.0–2.5. At this level you're learning the serve, the basic strokes, and how to keep score, and can rally with players of similar ability. Everyone starts here — no rating is needed to join a friendly social.
What is a good pickleball rating?
3.0–3.5 is a solid recreational 'intermediate' level that most regular players reach: consistent rallies, control over shot placement, and comfort at the kitchen line. 4.0+ is considered advanced, and 5.0+ is expert/pro.
Do I need to know my rating to join a social?
No. At our socials, skill levels are helpful context, not a barrier to entry. Brand-new players and seasoned regulars are both welcome, and the vibe stays social first.
Whatever your level, there's a game for you.
Weekly Saturday Sessions · 5–7 PM in central Toronto. Limited loaner paddles available, social games ready — grab a spot for the next session.