Dubai Premier Padel P1 returns in November 2026 at Hamdan Sports Complex
Dubai Premier Padel P1 will return to Hamdan Sports Complex from November 8 to 15, 2026, bringing one of the tour’s most valuable Middle East stops back onto the calendar. The official Premier Padel listing puts Dubai P1’s prize money at €474,500, and the event is again positioned as a major date in the sport’s international season.
The venue matters as much as the dates. Hamdan Sports Complex gives Dubai a 7,000-seat stage for a tournament that has already been used to showcase padel’s biggest names, and Premier Padel’s calendar also places Dubai on its official tour map alongside the Dubai Duty Free Tennis Stadium designation for the city. That dual listing underscores how central Dubai has become to the circuit’s touring logic: a stop that can anchor the Gulf while still fitting into a wider global schedule.

This is not a one-off exhibition dressed up as a flagship event. Gulf News said the 2025 edition was set for November 9 to 16 at Hamdan Sports Complex, then reported that the event would return in 2026 after that staging. Earlier Dubai coverage also framed the inaugural Dubai Premier Padel P1 as part of a 25-tournament season that stretched across 18 countries and five continents, a snapshot of how quickly the sport has moved beyond its traditional European base.
The 2026 tour only sharpens that picture. Premier Padel’s calendar announcement calls for 26 tournaments across 18 countries, with nearly 75 percent of them indoors. That is the kind of schedule that rewards cities with modern arenas, reliable event infrastructure and the ability to host elite sport in a controlled environment. Dubai checks all three boxes, which is why it keeps surfacing as a priority market rather than just another stopover.

The player appeal is obvious too. Earlier Dubai Premier Padel P1 coverage named Arturo Coello, Juan Lebron, Alejandro Galan, Agustin Tapia, Ariana Sanchez Fallada, Beatriz Gonzalez and Delfina Brea among the headline names expected around the event. Those are the sorts of stars that sell a venue, but they also explain the strategy: if Premier Padel wants the Gulf to become a genuine growth engine, it needs arenas like Hamdan Sports Complex to keep delivering nights that look and feel like the sport has arrived.
Sources
- [1]x.com
- [2]gulfnews.com
- [3]premierpadel.com