The Head Evo Extreme is the value member of Head’s Extreme line — a teardrop frame with fibreglass faces and an accessible price, built for improving players who want power without a pro-level budget.
Head’s Extreme line is its attacking, teardrop-shaped family, and the Evo Extreme is the affordable way in — fibreglass faces and a soft core in place of the pricier carbon builds. That makes it a natural step up for a player moving beyond a basic starter racket who wants a bit more bite without spending flagship money.
This review covers its build, specs and on-court feel, and who it’s for. See also our best Head padel rackets guide.
Head Evo Extreme at a glance

Why it wins: Head’s affordable teardrop — fibreglass faces and a soft core give easy power and forgiveness for improving players, at a fraction of a flagship price. (~$90)
- Teardrop shape — balanced power and control
- Fibreglass faces for a soft, forgiving feel
- Medium balance, generous sweet spot
- Great-value step up from a starter racket
Main features of the Head Evo Extreme
The Evo Extreme brings the Extreme’s attacking shape to a budget-friendly build:
- Teardrop shape balancing power and manoeuvrability
- Fibreglass faces for a soft, arm-friendly response
- Soft EVA core that keeps the sweet spot forgiving
- Medium balance — easy to swing on volleys and smashes
- Accessible price for improving intermediate players
Specification of the Head Evo Extreme
Here are the full specs of the Head Evo Extreme:
- Shape: Teardrop
- Weight: ~360–365 g
- Balance: Medium
- Core: Soft EVA
- Faces: Fibreglass
- Player level: Intermediate
- Type of play: All-round / power
- Pro: —
Our review of the Head Evo Extreme
The Evo Extreme is an easy racket to like. The teardrop shape and soft fibreglass faces give you accessible power with a big, forgiving sweet spot, so you can swing freely without being punished for slightly off-centre contact. It’s noticeably gentler on the arm than a stiff carbon frame.
You give up some of the raw pace and precision of a carbon pala, but for the price that’s a fair trade. It’s a sensible second racket for a player moving beyond a basic starter frame.
Pros
- Easy power and forgiveness
- Soft, arm-friendly feel
- Excellent value
- Versatile teardrop shape
Cons
- Less pace than carbon frames
- Not for advanced attackers
- Fibreglass dampens feedback
Who is the Head Evo Extreme for?
The Evo Extreme is for improving beginners and intermediates who want a forgiving, affordable racket with a bit of attacking bite. Advanced players chasing maximum power should step up to a carbon frame.
How the Head Evo Extreme plays
On groundstrokes and volleys it’s comfortable and forgiving, with enough power to be fun.
On smashes the teardrop gives a useful lift in pace, though it won’t match a stiff diamond.
Head Evo Extreme vs the alternatives
It sits a step below the carbon Head Evo Speed in stiffness, and well below the pro-level Head Coello Pro. Within the Evo line it’s the more attacking, power-leaning option.
Is the Head Evo Extreme worth it?
At its price the Evo Extreme is excellent value — a forgiving, attacking teardrop that flatters an improving game without the cost of a flagship.
Conclusion
The Evo Extreme nails the brief for an improving player: accessible power, a forgiving sweet spot and a feel that’s kind on the arm, all at a price that’s hard to argue with. You give up the raw pace and feedback of a carbon pala, but at this level that’s the right trade. As a confident second racket or a value-first attacking teardrop, it’s an easy recommendation — just don’t expect it to keep up with carbon frames as your game sharpens.
The Head Evo Extreme is a smart-value teardrop for improving players. See how it compares to the rest in our best padel rackets guide.

Lucas Sánchez is the founder of SimplePadel. Born and raised in Spain, Lucas has been living in the US and UK for the last 20 years and currently calls Miami his home. While he’s never played professionally, the dream is still alive.
Lucas loves nothing more than playing (and talking) about padel, and he considers himself lucky to have a wife and family that share his love for the game.