The 30-second version
- Topspin (roll) makes the ball dip, so you can hit harder with control — the key to roll volleys and offensive dinks.
- Slice/backspin keeps the ball low and skidding — great on returns and some drops.
- The secret is brushing the ball (low-to-high for topspin, high-to-low for slice), not hitting flat through it.
- Spin is a 4.0+ weapon that adds margin and forces awkward, low contact from your opponent.
Part of our guide to improving your pickleball game.

Once your soft game is reliable, spin is how you add offense without adding errors. Topspin lets you swing faster and still keep the ball in; slice keeps the ball uncomfortably low. Learning to brush the ball instead of hitting flat through it is what turns a 3.5 into a 4.0.
Why does spin matter in pickleball?
Spin creates shape and margin. Topspin pulls the ball down into the court, so you can hit with more pace and still land it — that’s why roll volleys and topspin dinks are so effective. Backspin (slice) keeps the ball low and makes it skid and die, forcing your opponent to hit up from an awkward height. Either way, you’re making the ball do something that pressures them.
How to hit topspin (the roll)
- Brush low to high. Start your paddle below the ball and brush up the back of it, closing the face slightly. You’re wiping up the ball, not hitting through it.
- Contact out front and accelerate through the brush — the faster the brush, the more spin.
- Use it on roll volleys and dinks: a topspin roll off a dink dips into the opponent’s feet; a roll volley attacks a slightly high ball with control.
How to hit slice (backspin)
- Brush high to low with a slightly open face, cutting under the back of the ball.
- Keep it compact — a controlled cut, not a big chop. Used on returns to keep them low and on some resets and drops to make the ball die.
Drills to build spin
- Roll dinks: rally cross-court dinks where every ball must have topspin — brush up on each one.
- Roll volleys off feeds: a partner feeds slightly high balls; roll them with topspin for control.
- Slice returns: practice deep returns with backspin so they stay low and skid at the returner’s feet.
When to use topspin vs. slice
Reach for topspin when you want to attack — roll volleys, offensive dinks, and dipping passing shots. Reach for slice when you want to stay low and neutral — returns of serve and the occasional low drop. Topspin adds offense; slice adds control and keeps the ball out of your opponent’s strike zone.
Common spin mistakes
- Rotating the face too much — you’ll mis-hit and spray it. Brush, don’t flip.
- Trying to topspin a ball that’s too low — you’ll net it. Only roll a ball you can brush up on.
- Over-swinging — spin comes from the brush speed, not a huge motion.
Which levels this skill helps
This skill shows up on these rungs of the skill ladder:
Frequently asked questions
How do I put spin on a pickleball?
Brush the ball instead of hitting flat through it: low-to-high with a slightly closed face for topspin, high-to-low with a slightly open face for slice. Contact the ball out front and accelerate through the brush.
What is a roll volley?
A roll volley is a volley hit with topspin by brushing up the back of the ball. The topspin lets you attack a slightly high ball with pace while still bringing it down into the court — a core 4.0+ offensive shot.
When should I use topspin vs. slice?
Use topspin to attack — roll volleys, offensive dinks, dipping drives. Use slice to stay low and neutral — deep returns and some drops. Topspin adds offense; slice keeps the ball out of your opponent’s strike zone.
Does spin actually matter in pickleball?
Yes — at 4.0 and up it’s a real weapon. Spin adds margin (topspin lets you hit harder and still land it) and forces awkward, low contact from your opponent (slice). It won’t save a poor soft game, but it sharpens a good one.
Why do my spin shots go long or into the net?
Usually too much face rotation or trying to spin a ball that’s too low. Keep the motion a compact brush, contact out front, and only roll balls you can brush upward on.
Want a coach to fast-track it?
Reading is one thing — grooving it under pressure is another. I run private lessons and clinics in Central Mass that drill exactly these skills. Your first session is half off.
