Analysis
EPIC World Championship 2026: Pickleball’s Singapore Moment
Global brands including Coca-Cola & Stellantis back Singapore's first amateur pickleball world championship. Inside the EPIC 2026 phenomenon.
The inaugural EPIC World Championship 2026 isn’t just pickleball’s coming-out party in Asia. It’s a masterclass in how a small city-state leverages niche sports to punch geopolitically, economically, and culturally far above its weight.
There is a moment — unmistakable to anyone who has followed the rise of Formula 1 in the Gulf, golf in Saudi Arabia, or tennis in the UAE — when a sport stops being a pastime and becomes a geopolitical instrument. Pickleball, the paddle sport that purists once dismissed as “tennis for retired people,” has just had that moment. And it happened, perhaps predictably, in Singapore.
On April 30, 2026, the Kallang Tennis Hub — pressed tight against the gleaming skin of the National Stadium — will host the inaugural EPIC World Championship, the first-ever international amateur pickleball world championship, running through May 3. The tournament is the result of a three-year partnership with the Singapore Tourism Board, placing it alongside other marquee sporting events in the city-state such as Formula 1 and the World Aquatics Championships. More than 1,300 amateur players from over 60 countries are expected to compete. The prize purse starts at a guaranteed US$50,000 and escalates with every new registration, with estimates projecting it toward US$75,000–US$100,000 by tournament day — potentially the richest amateur pickleball purse in history.
And then there are the sponsors. Coca-Cola. Stellantis — showcasing its Leapmotor EV and Alfa Romeo brands as official automotive partner. Genting Dream Cruise. QBE Insurance. HotelPlanner. Singtel. KPay. Carlsberg. Grab. Oatside. These are not scrappy startup brands hedging bets on an emerging sport. These are blue-chip multinationals, regional technology titans, and lifestyle names — and their collective arrival at a pickleball tournament tells you something profound about where both the sport and Singapore are heading.
Pickleball’s Billion-Dollar Moment in Asia
To understand why EPIC matters, you need to understand the numbers that have been quietly terrifying the traditional sports sponsorship industry.
The global pickleball market was valued at USD 2.2 billion in 2024 and is projected to reach USD 9.1 billion by 2034, growing at a compound annual growth rate of 15.3%. US participation alone has been seismic: the sport surged by 311% in participation over the past three years in the US, reaching 19.8 million players in 2024 and projected to climb above 22.7 million by the end of 2025. Globally, the International Federation of Pickleball now counts 78 member countries — double the number from just five years ago, with federations lobbying for Olympic inclusion as early as 2032.
But the statistic that should make every consumer brand CMO stop mid-espresso and reconsider their regional activation strategy is this: over 800 million people in Asia have played pickleball at least once, according to data from research agency Market.us. Eight hundred million. That is not a niche. That is a market.
DUPR (Dynamic Universal Pickleball Rating), the world’s largest pickleball rating platform and EPIC’s official ranking partner, is seeing the evidence in real time. The system already tracks 1.5 million players across 175 countries, with Southeast Asia emerging as one of the fastest-growing regions. Around 20,000 new users join the platform weekly, half of them from countries such as Singapore, Malaysia, and Vietnam.
DUPR is itself backed by an investor list that reads like a who’s-who of American cultural influence: LeBron James, Kevin Durant, Michael B. Jordan, Patrick Mahomes, Andre Agassi, and Gary Vaynerchuk. The platform is chaired by David Kass. When athletes of that commercial caliber put their names — and capital — behind a rating infrastructure, the signal to brand partners is unmistakable: this sport has durability, not just virality.
The Anatomy of a Corporate Bet
What makes EPIC’s sponsor roster genuinely revealing is not any single name — it is the diversity of sector and strategic intent behind it. Each brand is making a different calculated wager, and understanding those bets unlocks the wider logic of why experiential sports sponsorship in Asia is entering a new era.
Coca-Cola’s “Official Sparkling Partner” designation is the clearest signal of mainstream arrival. Coca-Cola does not experiment with fringe sponsorships. Its brand stewardship team runs rigorous reach-and-frequency analyses before committing. When Coca-Cola Zero Sugar is pouring courtside at a pickleball championship in Singapore, it is because the brand’s data confirms that the pickleball demographic — active, health-conscious, socially engaged, skewing 25–55 — is precisely the consumer it is competing for in an era of declining soda consumption. Pickleball, counterintuitively, gives Coca-Cola a wellness adjacency that a sponsorship of, say, a rugby scrum would not.
Stellantis’s dual-brand play — using EPIC to showcase both the Leapmotor EV (a Chinese-origin brand that Stellantis acquired a significant stake in to crack the Asian EV market) and the premium Alfa Romeo marque — is an elegant piece of simultaneous market positioning. Leapmotor needs Southeast Asian visibility among affluent urban consumers who might consider an EV switch. Alfa Romeo needs experiential brand heat in a market where European luxury automotive brands battle for psychographic territory. A pickleball court full of high-net-worth amateur athletes from 60 countries is, in effect, a targeted test drive of Stellantis’s entire Asian strategy.
Genting Dream Cruise is following a playbook that the cruise industry has deployed successfully in golf and tennis for decades: catch affluent, internationally mobile consumers at the precise moment they are thinking about their next adventure. EPIC winners receive a two-night, three-day cabin voucher for a Star Cruise Genting voyage from Singapore to Thailand. That is not a marketing gimmick — it is a conversion funnel disguised as a prize.
Grab, Singtel, and KPay represent the infrastructure layer of Singapore’s digital economy showing up to own the on-site experience. From ride-hailing to connectivity to payments, these companies understand that a 1,300-person international sporting event — where competitors are navigating an unfamiliar city — is a live, compressed demonstration of Singapore’s app-powered urban ecosystem.
Carlsberg and Oatside — a legacy lager and a Southeast Asian oat milk brand born in Singapore — may appear an unlikely pairing, but together they triangulate the full spectrum of EPIC’s demographic. Pickleball’s genius, commercially speaking, is that it attracts both the Carlsberg-after-the-match crowd and the Oatside-with-my-post-match-smoothie crowd. Few sports can credibly serve both.
Singapore’s Sports-Tourism Masterclass
Victor Cui, EPIC’s co-founder and the former CEO of ONE Championship, has spoken openly about his ambitions. “Pickleball is growing really fast, but I don’t want this event to be in the professional space. This is about mass participation, like a marathon, or Hyrox, or Spartan,” he said. That framing is deliberate and economically astute. Mass-participation events — where athletes are also tourists, and family members are also tourists — generate a fundamentally different tourism ROI than spectator-only sporting events.
“We are proud that Singapore will host the first-ever EPIC World Championship and look forward to witnessing the excitement this fast-growing sport will bring to our shores,” said Melissa Ow, Chief Executive Officer of the Singapore Tourism Board. “EPIC supports our commitment to creating distinctive and memorable experiences for both visitors and locals, while strengthening Singapore’s reputation as a premier sporting destination.”
This is not accidental language. Singapore’s Singapore Tourism Board has spent years architecting what might be called a portfolio approach to event-driven tourism: anchor with proven mega-events like Formula 1 Singapore Grand Prix (which generates an estimated S$150 million in tourism receipts annually), then seed the calendar with aspirational mid-tier events capable of becoming anchor events themselves. The EPIC World Championship, at its current scale, is a seed. But with a three-year STB commitment in place and a prize structure designed to grow with registrations, it is a seed being planted in extraordinarily fertile soil.
Hosting the EPIC World Championship is expected to significantly benefit Singapore’s local economy, with tourism-related businesses such as hotels, restaurants, and transport services likely to experience an uptick in demand as international players and visitors flock to the city. With 1,300-plus competitors each arriving with partners, parents, and friends — and each spending an average of four to seven nights in Singapore — the downstream economic impact is real, compounding, and highly measurable in exactly the metrics the STB cares about.
The broader strategic picture is even more compelling. Singapore is, in effect, performing pickleball diplomacy: using a low-barrier, highly social sport to create sticky, recurring relationships between the Lion City and high-net-worth amateur athletes in 60+ countries. Every participant who loves their EPIC experience becomes an informal brand ambassador for Singapore as a travel destination. That is not spin; that is a well-documented dynamic in sports tourism economics, validated by decades of research into triathlon, marathon, and golf event tourism.
The Amateur Sports Economy: The Frontier Nobody Is Watching Closely Enough
Here is the insight that most sports industry analysts are still underweighting: the amateur sports economy is now growing faster than the professional sports economy in several key metrics.
Professional sports media rights are facing headwinds as streaming fragmentation raises customer acquisition costs. Ticket revenues are squeezed by pricing elasticity limits and the post-pandemic remote entertainment habit. But mass-participation amateur sports? Registration fees, equipment sales, travel packages, affiliated experiences — these are scaling rapidly as a wealthier, more health-conscious global middle class seeks active vacation identities.
Pickleball grew by over 223% in participation from 2020 to 2024, making it the fastest-growing sport in the US for three years running. Experts project annual growth rates between 15–20% in 2025 and 2026. The Asia-Pacific region is the next frontier: Asia Pacific is anticipated to be the fastest-growing region in the pickleball equipment market. When you overlay those growth curves with Singapore’s geographic centrality, English-language infrastructure, world-class sports venues, and political stability — the case for EPIC’s location is not just logical. It is inevitable.
This is precisely why DRYWORLD Brands Inc. — a performance apparel company — signed a multi-year deal as EPIC’s official fashion and technical partner. Brand-building in pickleball is still relatively affordable compared to established sports. The category leaders of 2030 are being established right now, in 2026, at events like EPIC.
Why This Isn’t “Just” a Pickleball Tournament
Let me state the thesis plainly, because the geopolitical dimension of EPIC deserves more attention than it typically receives in sports business coverage.
When Coca-Cola, Stellantis, a national telco, a digital payment platform, and a Southeast Asian oat milk brand all converge on a single amateur sporting event in Singapore, they are collectively signaling that Southeast Asia has arrived as a primary arena for global brand strategy — not an afterthought, not an emerging market, but a destination of genuine strategic priority.
“This is a landmark moment in pickleball,” said Tito Machado, CEO of DUPR. “By requiring DUPR for every competitor and welcoming top-ranked amateur players from every nation, we’re taking a bold step to unite amateur athletes worldwide and redefine what’s possible in global sport.”
That redefining is happening along multiple axes simultaneously. EPIC is setting a global standard for how amateur sports should be professionalized and packaged — with a meritocratic DUPR ranking system, a scaling prize structure, a festival experience designed for family attendance, and an open-door spectator policy that keeps the event democratic while delivering premium sponsor value. It is, in essence, a proof of concept for the next generation of sports tourism events.
“Pickleball is one of the few sports in the world where youth and seniors can compete together. It brings friends, families and entire communities into the same space and post-Covid, people are craving that kind of social connection again,” Cui explained. That observation is not mere marketing copy. It is a deeply accurate read of the post-pandemic consumer psyche — and it explains why brands across every category from beverages to automotive to insurance are racing to attach their names to it.
The Road From Singapore to the World Stage
If EPIC delivers on its vision — and the depth of its corporate backing strongly suggests it will — the implications extend well beyond a four-day tournament in Singapore. The EPIC Global Qualifier Network, already spanning Istanbul, Barcelona, Dubai, Bangkok, Kuala Lumpur, and beyond, is building a global infrastructure that mirrors what ironman and the World Marathon Majors built for endurance sports over two decades. The difference is that EPIC is building that infrastructure in years, not decades, because it benefits from DUPR’s pre-existing data infrastructure, the democratizing effect of social media, and a sport with a uniquely low barrier to entry.
The Asian Pickleball Association has already officially sanctioned the EPIC World Championship, giving national federations across the continent a pathway to participate. Eight new dual-use pickleball courts are being added at the Singapore Sports Hub by early 2026. The local club and league infrastructure is deepening by the month. Singapore is not just hosting a tournament. It is engineering a long-term hub.
For brands, the arithmetic is straightforward: get in now, at reasonable scale, and own the category narrative before the inevitable consolidation. The brands that sponsor the inaugural EPIC World Championship will be the brands that define pickleball culture in Asia for the next decade. Coca-Cola, Stellantis, and their co-sponsors appear to understand this. The brands absent from Kallang’s courts this April may look back on 2026 as the year they were too cautious.
Conclusion: The Paddle That Moved the Needle
In thirty years of covering the intersection of global sport, commerce, and geopolitics, I have learned to pay attention when an event attracts unlikely coalitions. When a homegrown oat milk brand and a European automotive conglomerate find common cause at an amateur pickleball tournament in a city-state smaller than London, something structurally important is happening beneath the surface.
What is happening is this: Asia is no longer waiting for the Western sports industry to arrive with its established formats and its established prices. Asia — and Singapore in particular — is building its own sporting architecture, on its own terms, at the intersection of community, wellness, and global ambition. Pickleball, with its radical inclusivity and its frictionless entry point, is the perfect sport for that moment.
The EPIC World Championship 2026 is not a curiosity. It is a case study in the new economics of global sports — one that C-suites, tourism strategists, and brand managers would do well to study carefully. Because the next EPIC is already being planned, the DUPR database keeps growing at 20,000 users a week, and Singapore is not finished building.
The question is no longer whether pickleball belongs on the world stage. The question is which brands, which cities, and which investors are agile enough to claim their position before the courts fill up entirely.