Why IPMA Is Not Currently Testing Foam Core Paddles

At IPMA, our role is to provide meaningful, reliable certification for pickleball paddles intended for recreational play and unsanctioned competition. That means our testing standards must be stable, repeatable, and fair—especially for small and independent manufacturers.

At this time, IPMA is not testing or certifying foam core paddles. This decision is intentional, temporary, and rooted in technical and practical realities—not resistance to innovation.


1. Industry Testing Standards Are Still in Flux

Foam core paddles are a rapidly evolving category, and existing test protocols—particularly those being developed or modified by governing bodies—are still changing.

Certifying products against standards that are actively shifting creates confusion for manufacturers and players alike. IPMA believes certification should be based on settled, well-understood criteria, not moving targets.


2. Foam Is Inherently Unstable Over Time

Unlike traditional honeycomb or layered composite cores, foam materials are viscoelastic by nature. This means they are prone to:

  • Compression set
  • Softening with use
  • Changes in rebound and feel over time
  • Internal breakdown that may not be externally visible

Certification implies consistent performance, not just a one-time pass. At present, foam cores do not yet demonstrate the long-term stability required for responsible certification.


3. Wide Variability Across Foam Formulations

“Foam core” is not a single material category. Performance can vary dramatically based on:

  • Density and cell structure
  • Chemical formulation
  • Manufacturing temperature and pressure
  • Expansion and curing methods

Two paddles labeled as foam core can behave very differently, making standardized testing less meaningful until the category matures.


4. Failure Modes Are Often Hidden

Foam core failures tend to be internal and progressive, often going unnoticed until performance drops suddenly or structural failure occurs. This makes post-certification compliance and quality assurance far more difficult than with more established core architectures.


5. Current Testing Was Not Designed for Foam Behavior

Most paddle testing methods assume relatively elastic, predictable core behavior. Foam systems introduce damping and deformation characteristics that existing tests were not designed to measure accurately.

Proper foam testing would require purpose-built equipment and revised methodologies, not minor adjustments.


6. Cost and Access Matter

Developing and maintaining specialized foam testing equipment would significantly increase certification costs. IPMA exists to support small and independent manufacturers—not to create financial barriers that favor only large brands with deep R&D budgets.


7. Certification Should Follow Innovation—Not Chase It

Innovation thrives in experimental and recreational spaces. Certification, however, should come later—after performance characteristics, durability, and safety are well understood.

Choosing not to certify too early is a form of responsible restraint, not opposition.


Our Position Going Forward

IPMA’s decision is not a permanent one. As foam core technology stabilizes, testing standards mature, and reliable methods become available, we are open to revisiting foam paddle certification.

Until then, our focus remains on providing clear, fair, and credible certification for paddle technologies that are proven, stable, and appropriate for the players and manufacturers we serve.

Rising Certification Fees: The Challenge for Small Paddle Brands No One Is Talking About


The pickleball industry is hitting a maturity crest and fast. The paddle market is flooded with thousands of models and brands, and competition has never been tougher.

If you’re an OEM manufacturer trying to grow or simply maintain your position, you face two critical challenges:

  1. How do you attract new brands to your product line?
  2. How do you motivate your existing customers to confidently launch new products?

Right now, the biggest barrier isn’t technology, creativity, or production capability, it’s certification.

Paddle certification costs have skyrocketed. For new brands, entering the market has become financially intimidating. For established customers, launching new technologies now involves real financial risk. Between USAP and UPA-A testing fees, the cost of bringing a paddle to market is anything but encouraging.

The result? Hundreds of manufacturers are sitting on unapproved paddles, selling uncertified products, or avoiding innovation altogether. None of this helps the sport, especially at the recreational level and it’s not a long-term business strategy.


So What’s the Path Forward?

As a paddle manufacturer, you need a way to validate your products, support your customers, and stay competitive without betting the farm on certification fees.

That’s where IPMA comes in.

IPMA provides affordable paddle certification and approval specifically for the recreational market.
By validating that your paddles meet fair-play standards, you can confidently offer approved products, giving both you and your customers a competitive edge.

With IPMA, you get:

  • Affordable certifications and approvals
  • Blanket approvals for catalog models
  • Low-cost association membership
  • An industry voice advocating for manufacturers

IPMA is here to support your growth, helping you build trust, differentiate your products, and compete in a crowded market.

IPMA Benefits for Pickleball Paddle OEMs

Pickleball paddle OEMs can increase sales, improve margins, and diversify their customer base with IPMA certification.

By removing costly certification barriers for small brands, IPMA enables more companies to sell your OEM paddles, creating more opportunities for growth, profitability, and long-term stability.

International Pickleball Manufacturers Association OEM benefits and blanket certifications helps build a more sustainable business by developing loyal and profitable customers

1. Blanket Paddle Approvals for Pickleball Paddle OEMs

If you produce paddles sold under multiple brand names with no major material or structural changes, IPMA provides blanket approvals.

One testing fee for the OEM covers multiple paddles for your clients. Each private label or contract customer can proudly display the IPMA Tested seal without paying for duplicate testing.

Benefits: Faster onboarding for new brands, more profitable customers, and a significant competitive advantage for OEMs.

2. Lower Certification Costs for OEMs to Boost Paddle Sales

Small brands don’t need to spend thousands on certification, freeing up funds for inventory, marketing, and growth.

IPMA certification removes a major barrier to small brand success, turning saved costs into increased orders and higher manufacturing volume for OEMs.

3. Affordable, Profitable Paddle Branding for OEMs

With transparent IPMA testing standards, you can help clients create paddles that are credible, professional, and cost effective.

This allows small brands to compete while giving you, the OEM, flexibility to offer customization, better margins, and a wider variety of branded paddles.

Result: Brands grow faster, and your production line stays busy.

4. Diversify Your Customer Base

Relying on one or two large brands can make your business vulnerable to pricing pressure and unpredictable orders.

IPMA membership helps OEMs attract more small, independent brands, all backed by trusted paddle testing standards. Diversifying your customer base builds stability, protects margins, and ensures your business isn’t dependent on a single large customer.

5. Build a Stronger, Healthier Pickleball Industry

By joining IPMA, OEMs become part of a movement that supports accessible quality and fair play across the pickleball market. Manufacturers, brands, and players all benefit when more paddles meet trusted standards and OEMs can profit sustainably.


6. Grow Your OEM Business by Helping Customers Succeed
By lowering the barrier to entry for small brands, IPMA enables more companies to sell your OEM paddles, increasing reach, strengthening margins, and stabilizing your business.

Less certification cost. More credibility. More customers.

➡️ Join the International Paddle Manufacturers Association and grow your paddle manufacturing business through trust, affordability, and collaboration.

Maximizing Marketing Dollars: Why Small Pickleball Paddle Brands Join IPMA

One of the biggest expenses in pickleball is promotion. Maximizing marketing dollar return is one of the reason small and medium sized paddle brands join IPMA.

Every paddle manufacturer knows the biggest hurdle: social validation.
Players want proof of quality. They instinctively look for the USA Pickleball (USAP) or UPA-A approval stamp.

But for growing brands, the reality is:

The Cost is High: Certification fees drain R&D and marketing budgets.
The Process is Slow: Long testing queues mean lost momentum and missed sales cycles.


The IPMA Solution: Credibility Without The Cost

The International Paddle Manufacturers Association (IPMA) is changing the game.

We’re a collective of quality focused manufacturers dedicated to setting an accessible, transparent, and industry backed quality standard for paddles used in non sanctioned play.


Our Value Proposition Is Simple: Save Your Marketing Budget.

When you join IPMA, you gain access to the official IPMA Tested seal of approval.
This seal provides players with the social validation they crave and the proof that your paddles are built to a vetted standard. That means more trust and fewer ad dollars wasted trying to prove your credibility.


The Old Way vs. The IPMA Way

The Old Way (No Certification)The New Way (IPMA Tested)
CostHigh marketing spend to convince players of quality.Low cost — the IPMA seal says it all.
TrustPlayers hesitate to buy an “untested” paddle.High trust — paddles tested to an established industry standard.
GrowthSlow, reliant on word-of-mouth.Accelerated growth through instant credibility.

🛠️ What IPMA Membership Means

Industry Standard Testing
Your paddles are tested against transparent, non-competitive standards for durability, consistency, and material integrity, giving players confidence in your build quality.

The IPMA Seal
Use our globally recognized seal on your packaging, website, and product pages to signal quality instantly.

A United Voice
Collaborate with other top manufacturers to set positive, player first industry standards outside of pro level sanctioning bodies.


Stop pouring money into campaigns trying to convince players you’re good.
Let the IPMA Seal prove it for you.

Join the International Paddle Manufacturers Association and shift your budget from defense (convincing customers) to offense (growing your brand).

5 Reasons IPMA Makes Sense for Small Pickleball Paddle Brands

For small pickleball paddle brands, IPMA certification offers a powerful and affordable way to build trust and credibility. The IPMA certification for small pickleball paddle brands helps manufacturers prove their paddles meet recognized standards for fair play without the high costs of USAPA or UPA-A approval. It’s the best way for small brands to stand out from uncertified imports and show players that their equipment is legitimate, tested, and ready for real play. Here are five reasons why IPMA certification makes sense for small pickleball paddle brands looking to grow with confidence.

1. IPMA Certification Builds Trust for Small Pickleball Brands
Uncertified paddles are often lumped in with the low quality, noncompliant imports flooding online marketplaces.
Displaying the IPMA Seal instantly signals that your brand’s paddles meet recognized standards and fair play guidelines.

2. Affordable Credibility Without USAPA Costs

For most small pickleball paddle brands, USAPA approval costs thousands per model. IPMA certification delivers similar consumer confidence for a fraction of the cost and is perfect for growing, value driven brands.

3. MIPMA Certification Strengthens Marketing and Sales Messaging

Instead of explaining why your uncertified paddle is still good, you can proudly say,

“Our paddle is IPMA Certified for fair play and affordability.”
That short message builds trust faster and makes your marketing more efficient.

4. Blanket Certification Saves Money Across Multiple Paddle Models

Many pickleball manufacturers sell the same paddle to multiple brands with only cosmetic changes. The IPMA’s blanket certification program allows a manufacturer to certify one design at the factory level and then allow its customer brands using that model to apply for certification without retesting.

5. IPMA Certification Lets Small Brands Focus on Innovation

Instead of pouring money into expensive certification fees, small pickleball paddle brands can reinvest in innovation, better materials, technology, that enhance the player experience. IPMA certification keeps compliance affordable and creative progress within reach.


The Bottom Line

The IPMA is more than a compliance badge it’s a trust signal and a marketing tool designed for small, authentic brands that want to grow sustainably.

You’re not only protecting your reputation you’re unlocking a powerful layer of credibility that directly converts into consumer confidence and sales.

Small brands deserve a fair playing field. The IPMA helps make that possible.

The Challenge of Rising Testing Costs for Smaller Brands and Manufacturers

Paddle testing is exponentially increasing retail paddle costs and having a dramatic impact on smaller manufacturers, local brands, recreational play, and the overall accessibility of the sport.

Image depicting the increasing costs of pickleball paddle certification

Compounding this problem is the speed of innovation in paddle technology. With new materials and designs constantly evolving, the average market life of a paddle is just six to eight months. That’s all the time a brand has to recover its development, testing, and production costs and hopefully earn a profit before the next generation of paddles arrives.

Because there aren’t many alternatives to USAPA and UPA-A testing, smaller manufacturers are left vulnerable to the whims of regulators and the pressures of big business. High certification fees are particularly burdensome for brands outside the U.S., or in regions where pickleball is just developing, effectively barring them from entering the market and limiting global competition.


The Problem

The USAPA recently introduced new testing for paddle rebound, a change that nearly doubled certification costs. Now, they’re proposing another test for spin generation. Based on the specialized equipment required, this will likely add another 25–50% to certification costs.

These expenses function like tariffs. They’re not absorbed by manufacturers they are passed directly to consumers. A $6.00 per paddle increase in certification costs can add $20–$40 to the retail price of a paddle. That’s a lot to ask the average recreational player to absorb in order to essentially support a certification process for pro level players.

And because there aren’t many alternatives to current industry testing, smaller manufacturers are left vulnerable to the whims of regulators and the pressures of big business.


The Bigger Picture

Across the industry, testing and compliance costs are adding millions of dollars annually to the price of paddles. These rising costs discourage innovation, limit competition, and make the sport less accessible, especially to new and recreational players.

Most pickleball players aren’t professionals. They’re families, retirees, and people discovering a fun, social sport. Requiring aerospace level testing for recreational equipment doesn’t make the game fairer, it just makes it more expensive.


The IPMA Solution

The International Pickleball Manufacturers Association was created by independent paddle makers and passionate players who believe in transparency, affordability, and accessibility.

The IPMA tests paddles to the same performance standards as the USAPA but without the massive overhead of using testing services designed for NASA grade components. Our process is open, efficient, and affordable. We keep the focus on fair play not profit.

We’re not here to compete with other governing bodies. We’re here to complement them by offering a practical, affordable alternative that ensures quality and consistency without driving players or small brands out of the game.


Why It Matters

Pickleball is supposed to be fun, inclusive, and affordable. Smaller brands help keep the market healthy by supporting local clubs, sponsoring community events, and giving players genuine choices.

The IPMA makes it possible for those brands to keep innovating while ensuring fair play for recreational players who shouldn’t have to subsidize elite-level competition through inflated paddle prices.


Pickleball should stay fun, inclusive, and accessible. Smaller brands keep the market healthy, support local clubs, and give players real choice.

Support the manufacturers who support your local clubs and associations. Together, we can keep pickleball open, fair, and fun — for everyone.

New PBCoR Testing Costs — What It Means and how IPMA is Helping Smaller Brands and Players

USAPA is developing yet another paddle test designed around pro-level players and for 95% of regular players, it’s irrelevant.

The USAPA is currently working on a new spin test to limit the amount of spin a paddle can generate. At first glance, it looks like another $60,000 piece of equipment complete with an air cannon, lasers, and high-speed cameras. The real question is: how much will this test cost consumers and manufacturers?

The recently introduced PBCoR test has already added over $1,500 to the cost of paddle approved. It’s unlikely the new spin test will cost any less. That means the total cost of certifying a new paddle could easily exceed $6,000–$8,000 USD, plus pre-testing and samples which can easily add another $1,500–$2,000.

For small manufacturers already burdened by the cost of recertifying existing paddles to meet the new Paddle Ball Coefficient of Restitution (PBCoR) standard, the big question is: how much more will it cost to certify new models, and will they be required to recertify all paddles again to meet the new spin standard?

There are hundreds of small manufacturers and independent brands feeling the pressure of these escalating testing costs. The USAPA seems to be overlooking its true strength which is a community made up of these very brands that form the foundation of the sport’s growth and accessibility.

These increased fees are also creating a significant problem in the marketplace, as more small brands resort to launching unapproved or untested paddles at lower prices just to stay competitive.

At the recreational level, USAPA approval serves primarily as social validation. An indication that a paddle meets a certain standard of quality and fairness for play. Yet for most non tournament players, this validation is largely irrelevant, while the cost of that approval is still reflected in the paddle’s price.

For smaller brands focused on the recreational market, the question becomes: does the increased price premium truly justify the testing expense, and how much of that cost is passed on to the player?

This is where IPMA approval provides a meaningful alternative. IPMA testing and certification offer affordable social validation for recreational players and assurance that the paddle they’re buying meets fair play standards and offers reliable quality. For manufacturers, this translates into higher perceived value and faster cost recovery, while keeping retail prices fair and competitive.

Rising testing costs and increasingly complex standards are creating new challenges for smaller paddle makers, the same companies that help keep the sport affordable and accessible especially at a local level.

 IPMA supports an approach to paddle testing and approval that maintains high standards while keeping certification fair and attainable for all to ensure the integrity of the game at all levels.

Learn more about how IPMA is working to keep paddle certification fair, affordable, and accessible for all manufacturers ultimately to keep it fair on the courts for everyone.

IPMA Announces blanket manufacturer approval

A display wall of pickleball paddles. Approved by the international pickleball manufacturers association

The International Pickleball Manufacturers Association (IPMA) is pleased to introduce the Blanket Certification Program, created to reduce costs and streamline certification for paddle manufacturers and independent brands.

Many manufacturers produce identical paddle models that are marketed under multiple brand names. Under the existing certification systems, however, each brand must undergo its own testing and approval, resulting in unnecessary duplication, higher expenses, and slower time to market.

This structure often discourages manufacturers from introducing innovative new products, as smaller brands tend to rely on their already-approved paddles rather than investing in new certifications. The result is a significant barrier to entry for emerging brands and a system that reinforces dependence on major, established brands.

IPMA’s Blanket Certification addresses this challenge directly. A single certification of a paddle model now extends to all associated brands using that identical design. This program delivers:

  • Cost efficiency – one certification applies across multiple brands
  • Accelerated approval – faster access to market without duplicate testing
  • Expanded opportunity – manufacturers and smaller brands can remain competitive by lowering the costs of certifying new products, enabling more frequent innovation and market entry

This initiative reflects IPMA’s ongoing commitment to fair, transparent, and affordable certification for recreational and non-sanctioned play. By removing unnecessary barriers, we help manufacturers and brands expand their reach while ensuring players have access to high-quality, industry-compliant paddles.

For manufacturers working with multiple brand partners, the Blanket Certification Program provides a practical and cost-effective path to growth.