Liverpool to get new lifestyle padel club Club Mona in 2027
Liverpool is set to add Club Mona, a nearly 40,000-square-foot padel venue on Great Howard Street near the Titanic Hotel, with an opening planned for early 2027. The project is being positioned as more than a place to book a court: its backers want it to work as a lifestyle and wellness destination built around padel.
The scale of the site points to that ambition. Club Mona is expected to include a commercial gym, a Hyrox-focused training zone, a HIIT studio, yoga and Pilates rooms, and a wellness suite featuring hyperbaric chambers, red light therapy, cryotherapy, recovery technology and treatment rooms. Food, coworking and community space are also part of the plan, along with events and brand activations that would keep the venue busy beyond peak court hours.

That model raises the real question around the club’s audience. Serious players will want the courts, coaching and match-play schedule, but the broader mix of recovery tech, fitness classes and social space suggests the pitch reaches well beyond regular padel users. First-timers, corporate groups and affluent leisure customers all appear to be part of the business case, and the concept leans heavily on the idea that people will pay for the full experience, not just an hour on court.
Liverpool is a sensible place to test that theory. The city has become one of Britain’s most active padel markets, with strong club demand and a steady run of new court development. Club Mona adds another premium option to that growing base, but it will also have to prove that the market can support a venue that behaves like a club, a gym, a wellness studio and a social space at the same time.

The directors behind the project have said they drew inspiration from lifestyle clubs in London and Melbourne, while aiming to make the Liverpool site feel rooted in local culture and open to ordinary players and visitors. That balance will matter when the doors open in 2027. If Club Mona works, it will show how quickly padel in the UK is moving from a court-supply story to a higher-margin hospitality and wellness business built around the sport.