Arizona Pickleball Courts
Arizona Pickleball Courts image
4.7(56+ Reviews)

Poured-Base Basketball Court in Scottsdale, Maricopa County

A playable regulation court ready for games, with secure hoop anchors, crisp lines, and consistent bounce year-round.

  • Engineered Base And Drainage
  • Written Site Assessment
  • Suited For Foothill Estates

What We Do

Basketball court that helps Home Owners add a playable, regulation court

Covering poured concrete bases or modular tiles, cushioned surfacing, hoop anchors, and precision boundary line painting.

  • Full Basketball Court Build

    Poured concrete or modular tile base, cushioned athletic surfacing, hoop mounting, and precision boundary lines.

  • Basketball Equipment & Layout

    Supply and install goal systems, anchor pockets, and regulation court layout for half or full installations.

Why Arizona Pickleball Courts

Engineered base specs for Scottsdale foothills and estates

When base, drainage, or anchoring are wrong, courts crack, lines fade, and playability suffers.

Common Challenges

  • Shallow bedrock and boulder-strewn slopes

    Granite outcrops and shallow bedrock in Scottsdale force variable excavation depths and unexpected rework during base preparation.

  • Hoop anchor pull-out and localised cracking

    Poorly specified anchors pull loose or stress surrounding slab, causing surface cracking and repairs that interrupt play.

  • Heat and UV fade lines and surfacing

    Strong sun and seasonal storms accelerate acrylic fade and line wear, shortening the interval between recoating and repairs.

How We Help

  • Regulation-dimension court layout

    Court laid out to official half- or full-court dimensions with precise line widths and net placement for sanctioned play.

  • UV-stable acrylic surfacing

    Acrylic surfacing specified for UV and heat resistance to reduce fading and maintain grip under Scottsdale sun.

  • Engineered base and subgrade recommendations

    Site-specific base depth and compaction guidance to limit cracking where shallow bedrock or slopes are present.

  • Secure hoop anchoring systems

    Through-bolt anchors and reinforced pockets prevent hoop pull-out and reduce surface damage around posts.

  • Clear written scope before work

    A written estimate lists base, drainage, surfacing, and line work so costs, timelines, and risks are transparent.

Homeowners, HOAs, and developers planning playable courts

Who We Help

Homeowners, HOAs, and developers planning playable courts

  • Homeowners with luxury or foothill properties

    Owners of Scottsdale estates seeking a backyard half or full court that accounts for slopes, shallow bedrock, and upscale finishes.

  • HOA & community managers upgrading amenities

    Community managers specifying low-maintenance surfacing and clear budgets for resort-style or shared courts in gated communities.

  • Commercial developers adding recreational assets

    Developers integrating courts into resort or residential projects who need engineered bases and predictable timelines.

How We Work

How basketball court works

A clear three-step process from site review to finished court.

  1. Site assessment

    We survey slope, shallow bedrock, and drainage, then record constraints and recommend base depth and access requirements.

  2. Design & estimate

    We specify poured or modular bases, surfacing type, hoop anchors, and provide a written estimate listing scope items.

  3. Install & finish

    Local installation teams perform base work, surfacing, hoop mounting, and line marking, with a final inspection before handover.

Pricing Estimates

How Much Does a Basketball Court Cost?

Prices vary based on court size, surface material, and hoop specifications. Contact us for an exact quote.

Basketball Court Installation Pricing

Court TypeTypical RangeSize (SF)
Half-court (30'×30')$3,600–$14,400900
Full court$12,000–$40,0004,700
Per SF installed$4–$16 per SF

Basketball Court Components

ItemTypical Cost
Concrete/asphalt base$3–$10 per SF
Modular tiles$4–$17 per SF
Basketball hoop & backboard$400–$1,500
Line painting$100–$500

Frequently Asked Questions

Common questions about court builds in Scottsdale

Answers to help you weigh base options, permits, timelines, and local risks.

A small crack can widen as anchors shift, leading to larger slab damage and more extensive repairs. Early repair and proper anchoring avoid costly slab replacement and downtime.
Delaying repairs lets erosion and seasonal runoff undermine the subgrade. That increases settlement, uneven bounce, and more expensive regrading later.
Permits and HOA approvals may be required for grading, drainage, or substantial excavations. We document site needs and note likely permit triggers in the written scope.
Typical installs take two to four weeks from excavation to final lines, depending on base complexity, access, and permit lead times.
Poured concrete gives consistent bounce and long life but needs excavation for bedrock. Modular tiles install faster but can shift without a proper subbase. Site assessment decides best option.
Yes when specified correctly. UV-stable acrylic surfacing, planned drainage, and reinforced anchors prevent fading, pooling, and anchor failure during storms.
About Arizona Pickleball Courts

Who We Are

About Arizona Pickleball Courts

Arizona Pickleball Courts performs sports court installations in Phoenix and nearby areas. We help define engineered base, drainage, surfacing, and line markings. We provide a written site assessment and scope before quoting.

Our Full Story

Our Mission & Values

We exist to make durable, low-maintenance pickleball courts accessible for Arizona homeowners and communities by planning site-specific builds and coordinating experienced local sports court installation teams.

  1. Clear Estimates

    Written quotes listing base, surfacing, and line work

  2. Site Assessment

    On-site review with drainage and base recommendations

  3. Single Contact

    One person handles scheduling and project questions