Pickleball Court Installation in Las Vegas, NV
Regulation pickleball courts poured, finished and striped to spec. Centurion builds backyard and community courts across the Las Vegas Valley that play true and hold up to the desert heat.
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A Court That Plays Right Starts With the Slab
A pickleball court is only as good as the concrete under it. The official playing area is 20 by 44 feet, but a proper court needs run-off space around it, which is why we build on a pad closer to 30 by 60 feet so players have room to chase a ball without running into a fence. We lay out the slab, set the grade and pour a reinforced base that stays flat and true for years.
We have poured flatwork in the Las Vegas Valley for over 30 years, so we know what desert soil and 110-degree summers do to concrete that was not prepped right. Every court we build gets the base compaction, the reinforcement and the slope it needs so the surface drains, resists cracking and gives you a consistent bounce across the whole court.
- Standard 20 by 44 ft play area with proper run-off margins
- Reinforced, properly graded slab that drains and stays flat
- Slip-resistant acrylic surface coating built for the sun
- Crisp, regulation striping and a net post setup that lasts
How We Build a Pickleball Court
From the first layout to the final stripe, every step is set up so the finished court plays true and lasts. Here is how a Centurion court comes together.
Layout & Grading
We mark out the full footprint, set the grade and prep the subgrade so the pad sits level with a slight, deliberate slope for drainage.
Base & Compaction
The subbase is graded and compacted to a firm, even surface. A solid base is what keeps the slab from settling or cracking later.
Reinforced Pour
We pour a reinforced concrete slab to thickness, then float and finish it flat. Flatness here is what gives you a true, consistent bounce.
Cure & Crack Control
The slab cures properly and we place control joints so the concrete moves where we want it to, not in the middle of your court.
Surface Coating
We apply a slip-resistant acrylic sport coating that handles the UV and heat, gives you grip, and stands up to year-round play.
Striping & Net Posts
Regulation lines are laid out and painted clean, and we set sleeves and posts so your net sits at the right height and stays put.
One Crew, Concrete to Coating
Plenty of outfits can pour a slab. Fewer can pour a slab flat enough to play on and then finish it as a real sport court. We handle the whole job in house, from the dirt work to the final stripe, so there is no finger-pointing if something is off. You deal with one crew that owns the result.
- 30+ years pouring flatwork across the Las Vegas Valley
- Residential backyard courts and community facility courts
- Custom colors, double courts and fencing coordination
- Licensed, insured, and clear with you start to finish
More Concrete We Pour
Concrete Slabs
The flat, reinforced base behind every court and pad.
Patio Installation
Turn the space around your court into outdoor living.
Decorative Concrete
Color and finish to tie the court into your yard.
Concrete Paving
Walkways and pads to connect the court to the house.
Concrete Finishing
The flat, true finish a sport surface depends on.
Concrete Resurfacing
Refresh an existing slab before recoating and striping.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much does a pickleball court cost to install?
Most full court installs land somewhere in the range of $20,000 to $40,000, and where you fall depends on the size of the pad, the site prep involved, the surface coating you choose, and extras like fencing and lighting. We walk your property, talk through what you want, and give you a clear written estimate before any work starts.
How long does it take to build a court?
A typical court runs about two to four weeks from start to finish. The big variables are site prep and the cure time the concrete needs before we can coat and stripe it. We do not rush the cure, because that is what protects the slab from cracking, but we keep the schedule tight everywhere we can.
Can you fit a court in a small backyard?
Often, yes. The play area is 20 by 44 feet and a regulation court wants run-off space around that, but we can lay out the space to make the most of what you have. We will tell you straight whether your yard fits a full court or a tighter footprint that still plays well.
What surface do you use, concrete or asphalt?
We build on a reinforced concrete slab and finish it with an acrylic sport coating. Concrete gives you a flatter, more stable base than asphalt, which matters for a true bounce, and it holds up better to the Las Vegas heat over the long run. The coating supplies the grip, color and line markings on top.
Do you maintain courts after they are built?
Yes. Surface coatings wear over time, especially under full desert sun, so we offer recoating and restriping to keep your court playing and looking like new. We can also seal cracks and handle slab repairs if the concrete ever needs attention.
Request Your Free Estimate
Tell us about your concrete project and we will respond within 24 hours. No pressure, no obligation.
- We respond to every request within 24 hours
- Licensed & insured Las Vegas crew
- Built for desert heat & soil movement
- Clear, honest pricing with no surprises
