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Pickleball Nets
Vermont
£55
Vermont is a UK-facing racket-sports brand that supplies tennis, badminton and pickleball kit aimed at clubs, schools and home users, with much of its catalogue priced to undercut the bigger US-headquartered names. The Vermont Pickleball Net is the budget anchor of this batch at around £55 on Amazon UK, undercutting Franklin, HEAD, JOOLA, Onix and Selkirk while still offering a regulation-format pickleball setup. That makes it an easy first purchase for parents introducing children to the sport, schools adding pickleball to PE provision, or community groups running occasional pop-up sessions where a heavier club-grade net would be overkill. As you would expect at this price, the build is more entry-level than the premium options, so think of it as a recreational net rather than a daily-driver club fixture. A carry bag is included for transport and off-season storage, and assembly is intentionally simple so non-specialist users can put it up without a manual. Reasonable value for casual play.
Something wrong? Suggest an edit →The budget pick of the batch at around £55 — fine for casual home, garden and school use rather than heavy club duty.
Vermont is a UK-facing racket-sports brand that supplies tennis, badminton and pickleball kit to clubs, schools and home users, typically at prices that undercut the bigger US names by a meaningful margin. The Vermont Pickleball Net is the budget anchor of this batch at around £55 on Amazon UK, beating Franklin, HEAD, JOOLA, Onix and Selkirk on price while still offering a regulation-format pickleball setup with a carry bag included for transport and storage. That combination makes it an easy first purchase for parents introducing kids to the sport, schools adding pickleball to PE provision, or community groups running occasional pop-up sessions where a club-grade net would be overkill. The trade-off, as you would expect at this price point, is that the build is more entry-level than the premium options higher up the batch, so think of it as a recreational net rather than a daily-driver club fixture that gets pitched and packed five evenings a week. Assembly is intentionally simple so non-specialist users can put it up without referring to a manual, the carry bag handles transport and off-season storage, and the regulation dimensions mean you are practising at the right heights from day one. As a low-risk way to get a regulation court up in the garden without committing to a £90 spend, it is hard to argue with.
Hand-written editorial — not auto-generated. By Gary, RacketRise.