Key Takeaways:
- Reserve Cup Series launches a multi-city era in 2026, with the opener in Miami on January 22–24.
- Top 12 men’s players will battle across three events for the largest prize purse in padel history.
- Miami roster includes Agustin Tapia, Arturo Coello, Ale Galan, Federico Chingotto, and more elite names.
- Venue: Reserve Miami Seaplane, 1000 MacArthur Causeway, Miami, FL 33132; tickets are available.
- Coello/Tapia arrive with a 47-match win streak; Galan/Chingotto made 16 Premier Padel finals this season.
Padel is about to get bigger, louder, and bolder. The Reserve Cup Series returns in 2026 with a new look and a new ambition: to take the sport across multiple world-class cities, starting with a showpiece opener in Miami from January 22 to 24. This isn’t just another tournament. It’s the moment padel steps into a true global series.
Here’s the twist teased in the headline: the 2026 format puts the top 12 men’s players into a three-stop race for the largest prize purse in padel history. That single line changes everything. Stakes are higher. Every point matters. And Miami is first.
What the Reserve Cup Series 2026 Actually Is
The Reserve Cup began as a hit in 2024. In 2026, it evolves. The series will now run across multiple destinations, each chosen for their unique setting and energy. The first stop is Miami, and it sets the tone for a season designed as more than sport. Organizers call it a convergence of sport, culture, and lifestyle—an immersive padel experience, not just a draw sheet.
The key change is structural: rather than a standard knockout bracket that ends in one weekend winner, the top twelve players compete across three events. The cumulative performance decides who walks away with the record-setting payout. In other words, the Reserve Cup is no longer a snapshot—it’s a story arc.
“Three stops, one massive purse—this is how you make padel must-watch.”
Miami: Where the New Era Begins
Miami is more than a warm-weather opener. It’s a statement stage. The event lands at Reserve Miami Seaplane, 1000 MacArthur Causeway, Miami, FL 33132, a dramatic waterfront venue that feels built for big entrances and viral moments. The city’s culture—music, fashion, food—fits the series’ lifestyle-first promise.
Tickets are on sale, and if the 2024 edition taught us anything, seats will go fast when padel’s brightest arrive. Miami is where momentum is made.
The Format, Simplified: Three Events, One Record Payday
Think of the 2026 Reserve Cup Series like a mini-season. The top 12 men’s players collect points or prestige (and plenty of pressure) across three city stops, with Miami serving as the launchpad. The ultimate target? The largest prize purse in padel history, awarded to the standout of the series.
This is a clear break from tradition. It rewards consistency, not just one hot weekend. It also keeps fans engaged from January onward. Every match in Miami could shape the last day of the series months later.
Who’s In: A Field Loaded With Star Power
The Miami lineup is stacked. Here are the confirmed names:
- Agustin Tapia
- Arturo Coello
- Ale Galan
- Federico Chingotto
- Franco Stupaczuk
- Mike Yanguas
- Jon Sanz
- Lucas Bergamini
- Fran Guerrero
- Javi Leal
- Javi Garrido
- Gonza Alfonso
That list blends dominant champions with rising weapons. It guarantees quality from the first serve to the final point.
“If Coello and Tapia are this hot, who dares break the streak in Miami?”
Tapia-Coello vs. Galan-Chingotto: The Rivalry Miami Wants
Headliners Arturo Coello and Agustin Tapia come in with a staggering 47 consecutive victories and the world No. 1 spot secured for 2025. They are the gold standard right now—calm under fire, deadly in the big points, and seemingly two steps ahead when it matters.
But Alejandro Galan and Federico Chingotto are not passengers. They’ve made 16 Premier Padel finals this season, a picture of grinding excellence and tactical clarity. The contrast is compelling: Tapia-Coello punch through you; Galan-Chingotto pick you apart. Miami could deliver the first chapter of a season-long duel.
Why This Series Format Matters for Padel
The three-event arc adds suspense and clarity. Fans can follow a simple story: who can perform in different cities, under different conditions, against a deep field? There’s room for momentum swings, comebacks, and late surges.
It also mirrors what works in other elite sports—clear stakes, big stars, and a calendar that builds toward a payoff. For players, it’s a test of consistency. For fans, it’s a show with a defined ending: one player lifts padel’s richest prize.
“Galan-Chingotto vs. Tapia-Coello on a seaplane base? Take my money.”
Culture, Setting, and the Miami Experience
Organizers say the Reserve Cup is about more than rally counts. It’s about the full experience—sport fused with culture and lifestyle. Miami fits that vision. Expect a crowd that mixes hardcore padel fans with curious newcomers and tastemakers. Expect noise, energy, and backdrops that move straight from the court to your feed.
This matters because padel is growing fast. To reach new audiences, the sport needs moments and places that feel special. The seaplane base, the skyline, and the star power do just that.
What to Watch for in Week One
- Form check: Do Tapia and Coello keep the streak rolling early in 2026?
- Counter-punch: Can Galan and Chingotto turn consistency into wins when the purse looms?
- Breakouts: Players like Franco Stupaczuk, Mike Yanguas, Jon Sanz, and Javi Garrido have the shot-making and swagger to swing a tie—or a series.
- Venue factor: Wind and sightlines at a waterfront venue can test timing. Who adapts quickest?
Tickets, Dates, and How to Be There
The Miami opener runs January 22–24, 2026 at Reserve Miami Seaplane, 1000 MacArthur Causeway. Tickets are available now. If you want to see padel at the highest level—with the biggest stakes the sport has ever seen—this is your chance to get in early.
The Bottom Line
The Reserve Cup Series 2026 is a bet on padel’s future: bigger stages, clearer storylines, and a huge reward at the finish. Miami is the spark. From there, two questions will drive the season: can anyone slow Tapia and Coello, and who will master the three-event marathon to claim the sport’s record prize?
We’ll start to learn the answers on Biscayne Bay. Bring your shades. And don’t blink.

