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Snooker scoreboard for clubs: best options for UK leagues

Last updated: March 2026

A snooker scoreboard for a club or pub league has different requirements from a board hanging in someone's home snooker room. It will be used multiple times a week by different people of varying levels of care. It needs to be readable from a distance in a hall that may not be perfectly lit. And if you are running multi-table league nights, you need something that can be managed across several boards simultaneously without a dedicated operator standing at each one.

I have looked at what is available on Amazon UK with those requirements in mind. The honest answer is that most snooker scoreboards are designed primarily for home use, and only a couple of options genuinely serve club and league play well.


What clubs need that home players do not

Durability: A club scoreboard gets used daily by dozens of different people. Brass markers need to slide consistently under use by players with varying levels of care. Boards that feel slightly stiff or fragile in a home setting will degrade quickly in a club environment.

Readability from distance: Club halls are larger than home snooker rooms. A 17.5-inch 2-player board that reads perfectly from across a home room may be inadequate from the far end of a club hall where spectators are watching. Size and character height matter more in a club setting.

Multi-table operation: Running four or six tables simultaneously during a league night means resetting and updating multiple scoreboards at the same time. Manual boards require someone to walk to each table; electronic boards with remote control change the practical reality of managing a busy evening.

Shot clock capability: Many amateur league formats now incorporate timing rules, particularly for leagues that have adopted Shootout-style formats or simply want to keep play moving. Manual boards cannot enforce time limits.


Option 1: The Digital Shootout Clock — best for organised competition

The 15" Digital Snooker Shootout Clock (B0DQ935Y5K) at £179 is the only electronic snooker scoreboard currently available on Amazon UK, and it was clearly designed with clubs and competition in mind.

The feature set makes this obvious:

  • Shot clock modes — Shootout mode (10-minute frames, alternating 15s/10s shot clock), 900 mode (15-minute frames, 20-second shots), Frames mode (customisable 45-second shot clock), and a 25-minute amateur league format
  • Remote control for up to 20 units — control all the scoreboards in your venue from one handset without visiting each table
  • WiFi and web interface — broadcast live scores to a display screen in the bar, waiting area, or online
  • Countdown beeps and whistle alarm — audible alerts mean players cannot ignore the shot clock

For a club running formal league nights with timing rules, these features are not luxury additions. The ability to manage 20 scoreboards from one remote, combined with a live score feed to a bar screen, genuinely changes how a league night operates.

The practical limitations are worth noting. The display measures 380mm x 180mm with characters 38-55mm tall — readable from normal table distance, but not necessarily from the far end of a large club hall. You will also need a mains socket within cable reach of each table. And at £179 per unit, equipping a 6-table club costs over £1,000. That is a meaningful outlay compared to wooden boards at £90-£130 each.

The brand — Smart Scoreboards — is not a recognised name in UK cue sports circles. For a home buyer, that is an acceptable risk. For a club making a multi-unit investment, it is worth considering what the after-sales support looks like before committing.


Option 2: The Peradon 4 Player Mahogany — best traditional club board

If you want wooden boards that will last decades in club use, the Peradon 4 Player Mahogany (B07DQQ49N1) at £128.60 is the correct choice. Peradon have supplied snooker clubs across the UK since 1885. The boards you see on the walls of established snooker clubs around the country are, in many cases, Peradon boards that have been there for twenty or thirty years.

At 76cm x 42cm, the Peradon is the largest traditional wooden board available. The brass rails are solidly anchored and the markers glide cleanly, which matters when different players are operating the board multiple times every evening. The four scoring tracks handle doubles and frame counting across a session without any workaround.

The limitation for multi-table club use is the manual operation. There is no shot clock and no remote management. For casual league nights where timing is not enforced, that is perfectly acceptable. For clubs that want to modernise their operation, it is a constraint.

You can often find Peradon boards at specialist retailers like Home Leisure Direct or Baize Sports Supplies for £76-95, which makes them more economical than the Amazon price for multi-unit purchases. If you are kitting out several tables, it is worth calling a specialist retailer directly for trade pricing.


Option 3: The Funky Chalk Solid Wood 4 Player — best value club board

The Funky Chalk Solid Wood 4 Player (B09GYBVHPM) at £89.95 is the most cost-effective option for clubs that want genuine wooden boards without Peradon pricing. Yorkshire-based Funky Chalk is a real UK cue sports brand with actual customer service.

At 70cm x 36cm, it is slightly smaller than the Peradon, which may be a factor in very large halls. Build quality is a step below the Peradon but well above any of the budget options. For clubs where the boards are used regularly but not in formal competition, the £30-£40 saving per unit adds up meaningfully when you are buying four or six of them.


What to avoid for club use

The budget plastic options (Funky Chalk Economy Plastic at £27.95, Littlecatch at £18.19, Mistillion at £7.59) are not designed for club use. The plastic sliders will degrade quickly under repeated use, and these boards lack the visual authority that a proper club setting requires.

The Jonny 8 Ball 2-player board at £40.40 is an excellent home board but is too small and too limited in player count for club use. Clubs need 4-player boards to handle doubles and frame counting.


Practical recommendations by club type

Pub league on a single table, no formal timing rules: The Peradon 4 Player Mahogany at £128.60 or the Funky Chalk Solid Wood at £89.95. One board, mounted at eye level beside the table, handles all the scoring you need. No electronics required.

Amateur club with 2-4 tables, informal play: Multiple Funky Chalk Solid Wood boards at £89.95 each. Cost-effective for multi-table setup. Easy to source via Amazon with Prime delivery.

Organised league or club running formal competition formats: One or more Digital Shootout Clocks at £179 each, particularly if you play with shot clocks or want live score broadcasting. Supplement with traditional Peradon boards on lower-priority tables where the full electronic feature set is not needed.

Club with 4+ tables wanting full electronic management: Multiple Digital Shootout Clocks. The 20-unit remote control is the decisive feature here — managing six tables simultaneously without a dedicated scorer at each one is a meaningful operational improvement.


Installation notes for clubs

For wooden boards, mount at eye level on the wall at the baulk end of each table. Use appropriate fixings for your wall type — in old pub and club buildings, walls are often brick or block, which takes a standard rawl plug without issue. Check that the board is level before the fixings are set permanently, as a visibly crooked board looks unprofessional in a club setting.

For the electronic clock, you need a mains socket within cable reach. Plan the cable routing before installation — having a cable dangling down the wall in a club setting looks messy and is a trip hazard. Recessing the cable through the wall, or using a cable cover, makes the installation cleaner.


Frequently Asked Questions

How many snooker scoreboards does a club need?

One per table is the minimum. For league nights with multiple tables running simultaneously, each table should have its own board so players do not need to share or improvise. If you are using the Digital Shootout Clock, one remote control manages up to 20 units.

Should a snooker club buy electronic or wooden scoreboards?

It depends on whether your league uses formal timing rules. If you run Shootout-style formats or want to enforce shot clocks, electronic boards are worth the investment. For casual club play without timing, traditional wooden boards from Peradon or Funky Chalk are more durable and cost less per unit.

What size snooker scoreboard is best for a club hall?

Larger is better in club settings. The Peradon 4 Player at 76cm x 42cm is the largest traditional option and reads clearly from across most club halls. For very large venues, the electronic display may still struggle at distance from the far end of the room.

Can I get trade pricing on snooker scoreboards for a club?

Yes. Specialist retailers like Home Leisure Direct and Baize Sports Supplies often offer better prices than Amazon for multi-unit purchases. The Peradon is frequently available at £76-95 from these suppliers. It is worth calling directly for trade or bulk pricing.


Bottom line

For most pub leagues and snooker clubs in the UK, the choice comes down to whether formal shot clocks and remote management are worth the premium. If they are, the Digital Shootout Clock at £179 per unit is the only electronic option on Amazon UK and genuinely delivers on its feature promises. If you want traditional boards that will last decades and look the part, the Peradon at £128.60 is the gold standard.

For a detailed comparison of digital versus traditional boards, see our electronic snooker scoreboard guide. If you also need portable boards for away fixtures, our portable snooker scoreboard article covers the best travel-friendly options. For a full comparison of all snooker scoreboards including home options, see our complete snooker scoreboard guide.

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Prices correct as of March 2026. This article contains affiliate links. If you buy through our links, we may earn a commission at no extra cost to you.

Live prices: Updated hourly from Amazon UK. Prices range from £89.95 to £183.97. Click any product to see full price history.

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