Stars now take center stage
One of the most striking features of this year’s releases is the prominence given to the signing collections. At NOX, the mechanics are very clear around Agustín Tapia, but also Edu Alonso, Miguel Lamperti and Aranzazu Osoro. At Bullpadel, Hack 04 2026 remains directly associated with Paquito Navarro. Adidas continues to support the Ale Galán line, HEAD pushes forward the Arturo Coello collection, Wilson extends the Bela saga into V3, while Babolat keeps Juan Lebrón at the forefront of its 2026 showcase.
What’s really changing is not just the presence of a famous name on a product sheet. Brands are now building real families around a player: visual identity, their own universe, variations according to level or style of game, sometimes even a personal symbol like the Coello crown. This is less a question of simple marketing support than of a complete collection, designed to be immediately recognizable.
Why signature ranges take up so much space
From a market point of view, this shift is quite logical. The “padel racket” department is becoming denser, more technical, and sometimes less legible for the player who simply wants to understand for whom a model is intended. Associating a racket with Tapia, Galán, Coello, Bela or Lebrón simplifies the reading of the offer in an instant. The player’s name becomes a shortcut: it tells of a style, a promise, a positioning.
Another important element is that these launches increasingly combine image and technology. NOX’s AT10 2026 features a new mold, Weight Balance, Dual Spin and photochromic paint. Bullpadel emphasizes the Hack 04 2026 and its redesign around an “elite” design and in-house technologies. adidas continues to make customization a strong argument with the Weight & Balance System on the Metalbone 2026. Even Wilson, with the new ENDURE v1 family, presents a very clear line based on control, precision and maneuverability.
Black becomes the visual language of premium
In terms of design, the trend needs to be qualified, but it does exist. Dark palettes occupy an increasingly visible place, especially when a brand wants to establish a more premium, more performance-oriented, more status-oriented image. At adidas, the signal is explicit right down to the product names, with Drive Black 2026, Match Black 2026 and Match Black Lime 2026. This shows that black is no longer confined to the very top end of the market: it is also moving towards more accessible references.
This surge in dark hues doesn’t mean that everything becomes uniformly black. We’re also seeing the appearance of deeper, denser, less garish variations: black and orange on the Viper Juan Lebrón 3.0, intense red but treated in a more statutory manner on the Bullpadel Neuron 02 MX LTD. To put it plainly, the strong colors haven’t disappeared, but they’re often framed by a darker base or a more sober aesthetic than before.
This is perhaps where the 2026 season best reads: brands are no longer just looking to get a racket noticed at ten meters. They also want to give it a more serious, premium, almost fashionable look. Black, graphite, dark contrasts and deep reds serve this visual discourse, without precluding the existence of more expressive series such as certain limited editions from Bullpadel.
Six releases that already tell the story of the season
| Model | Detail |
|---|---|
| NOX AT10 Luxury Genius 18K Alum 2026 | Agustín Tapia’s showcase: new mold, Weight Balance, Dual Spin and photochromic paint. A release that recaps the blend of player signing and technological promotion. See the model. |
| Bullpadel Hack 04 2026 | Paquito Navarro’s racket continues to be one of the strong brands of the early season, with communication focused on power, precision and the player’s visual identity. See the model. |
| Adidas Metalbone 2026 – Ale Galán | A reference still central to adidas’ 2026 line-up, with a strong focus on balance customization and offensive performance. See the model. |
| HEAD Coello Pro / Motion / Team | HEAD shows that a signing collection can now cover several player profiles, from advanced level to the most demanding competitor, while maintaining a coherent Arturo Coello universe. See the collection. |
| Wilson Bela V3 | Wilson continues to bring the Belasteguín legacy to life with a new generation that emphasizes stability, spin and offensive versatility. See the model. |
| Babolat Viper Juan Lebrón 3.0 | A model that keeps Juan Lebrón at the heart of Babolat’s padel strategy, with a very clear reading of the “technical attacker” player and an immediately identifiable orange/black palette. See the model. |
The market now sells a story as well as a racket
In the end, this may be the real lesson of these 2026 releases. The market no longer sells just a diamond shape, a teardrop shape or a round shape. It sells a story, a face, a gesture, an imaginary game. Signatures help people to choose, but they also build loyalty: we’re no longer just buying a model, we’re entering a brand universe.
However, it’s important to keep things in perspective. Yes, signing ranges now dominate the most visible part of the market. Yes, darker colors are gaining court in the most premium launches. But the season is not monolithic: adidas also retains its highly legible entry-level ranges, Bullpadel continues to bring out more expressive editions, and Wilson opens up a new path with ENDURE, more focused on control than on the aura of a single player. To contract extension, you can also refer internally to our selection of the best 2026 padel rackets.
Key takeaway
- The signing collections take center stage in the 2026 padel racket releases.
- Darker colors are particularly popular on premium and performance models, without overshadowing the more expressive editions.
- Brands no longer sell just a technology or a shape, but also a world of players and a strong visual identity.
- The 2026 season confirms that product promotion is moving upmarket, both in terms of design and model staging.


