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A Plate for Pickleball

The design celebrates the state’s official sport. Additional plates are on the way.

Washington state pickleball plate featuring a yellow pickleball with paddles, labeled "PICKLEBALL STATE SPORT" and the plate number PB00002—a must-have for fans and collectors of unique pickleball accessories.
Photo courtesy of Seattle Metro Pickleball Association

Washington served up a new license plate last week, honoring the state sport of pickleball.

In the works for three years, it’s the second of seven specialty plates to hit the market since getting approved by lawmakers earlier this year. “We’re thrilled to see our efforts become reality,” says Kate Van Gent, vice president of the nonprofit Seattle Metro Pickleball Association, the force behind the new plate. She says the goal has always been to celebrate the sport created in Washington and enjoyed across the state.

Pickleball is a tennis-like sport played with wooden paddles and a plastic ball. It was named the state sport under a 2022 law signed by then-Gov. Jay Inslee, in a ceremony at the Bainbridge Island home where the sport was invented in the 1960s. Today, it ranks among the fastest-growing sports in the country. Van Gent and fellow association leaders began pursuing a plate in 2023. Gathering the required 3,500 signatures on petitions was easy. Getting a law passed wasn’t. They came up short in 2023 and 2024.

This year, state lawmakers included the pickleball plate in an omnibus bill pieced together and passed by overwhelming margins in each chamber. It’s named “Bill’s Bill” for Sen. Bill Ramos of Issaquah, one of those leading the legislative effort, until his unexpected death a week before the session ended. It is one of 13 specialty plates authorized in the law. Seven are getting phased in now. The release schedule for the remaining six depends on factors such as submitted signatures.

A set of pickleball plates will run $157.25, a bit more if you want to personalize them. After covering state production costs, part of the fee goes to the sponsoring nonprofit. Proceeds received by the association will be used for building and maintaining dedicated public pickleball courts. In the days leading up to the launch, the association held an auction for the chance to buy one of the first plates available. Those funds will go entirely to the association for its work to develop courts and promote the sport, Van Gent says.

Bees, a bear, and a volcano

Earlier this month, the state licensing department rolled out a throwback plate design featuring white letters and numbers on an all-black background. As of Nov. 4, 177 had been sold. A plate used briefly in the early 20th century had a similar design. Proceeds from the retro plates will go toward expanding and improving driver education.

Washington license plate design featuring a bee, a monarch butterfly, and a beetle, with the text “Protect Our Pollinators.” A perfect pickleball plate for enthusiasts who care for nature as much as their favorite Pickleball accessories.
Here’s a look at the license plate set to roll out in Washington in late 2025.
Image courtesy of Washington State Beekeepers Association

Pollinators will star on the next speciality plate, though a release date has not been set. The Washington State Beekeepers Association will use money raised for research and educational activities about honey bees. After that, a plate sponsored by the LeMay car museum in Tacoma is expected. Funds generated will go toward education and job training related to automobiles.

The timeline for three additional plates remains uncertain. A plate showcasing Mount St. Helens, Washington’s most active volcano, awaits a redesign after the first one failed testing. The state Department of Transportation tests specialty plates to ensure they can be read by traffic cameras. Sometimes the colors or the size of the graphics can interfere. If that happens, changes are made, approved by the sponsoring organization, and the plate retested, officials said.

For two others, negotiations are taking place with the Department of Licensing and the state agencies sponsoring them. One of those, Keep Washington Evergreen, will support the deployment of electric vehicle charging stations. Sponsored by the Department of Commerce, the plate will feature green lettering on a white background, echoing a design used in the 1970s. The other one on hold is a Smokey Bear plate, proceeds from which will be directed into wildfire prevention programs. This comes from the Department of Natural Resources, where former public lands commissioner Hilary Franz first championed it.

Plates issued under the state’s new law will join the nearly 70 different special license plates in Washington recognizing the military, sports teams, colleges, farmers, orcas, lighthouses, square dancers and wine. Fees vary, with the money generally going to causes tied to each plate. The 13 new plates will be the last for a while. Senate Bill 5444 imposes a moratorium on applications for additional plates until 2029.

Six plates in the pipeline

Other specialty plates in the works include:

• A working forests plate to support the Washington Tree Farm Program. That program helps certify small landowners who practice sustainable forestry.

• A nautical northwest plate to celebrate Whidbey Island’s maritime communities. Money raised would go to Whidbey Island Maritime Heritage Foundation and Historic Whidbey.

• A donate life plate with proceeds going to LifeCenter Northwest to build awareness for organ donation.

• A firefighter memorial plate with funds going to the Washington State Council of Firefighters to benefit firefighters and their families in need.

• A Naval Academy plate with receipts going to the state’s Veterans Stewardship Account to benefit veterans or their families. Washington now has six armed forces special license plates.

• A Seattle Reign FC plate with proceeds going to the RAVE Foundation, the nonprofit charity for the club and for the Seattle Sounders. The Sounders already have a license plate.

Washington State Standard is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Washington State Standard maintains editorial independence. 

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