StackingBirdies
Advertisement
728 × 90 — AdSense Leaderboard (replace with your AdSense code)
Just Starting Out

Beginners' Corner

Golf tips for beginners are most useful when they tell you what to focus on first. Not everything at once. The small number of things that determine whether your early experience is frustrating or genuinely enjoyable.

Curated videos Top YouTube coaches Updated weekly
All Categories
Advertisement
728 × 90 — AdSense In-Content (replace with your AdSense code)

Starting golf as an adult means navigating a game with a reputation for being complicated and a reality that is less daunting than that reputation suggests. What beginners need to know about golf is not the full rulebook or every club in the bag. It is how to make contact, how to keep the ball in play, and how the game is structured around the hole. Grip and setup, a basic swing shape, and an understanding of where the ball needs to go are enough to start playing and improving. Everything else is refinement.

StackingBirdies has built this section as a genuine starting point. If the swing fundamentals feel like the priority, the Swing Basics section covers those in detail. The Grip & Setup section is also worth visiting early. Most beginner problems trace back to those two things.

What should a beginner golfer focus on first?

Focus on making clean contact (ball first, then ground) before worrying about distance, shape, or score. A beginner who consistently strikes the ball solidly with a 7-iron and a short iron can play a round and have a reasonable time. Everything else improves from that foundation. Grip and posture are the two setup variables that most directly affect whether clean contact is achievable, so they are worth getting right from the start.

How long does it take to learn golf?

Long enough to keep you interested. Most beginners can make consistent, playable contact within a few months of regular practice and a handful of lessons. Breaking 100 for the first time typically takes six months to a year for someone who practises a couple of times a week. The game does not have a ceiling, which is either a warning or a recommendation depending on your temperament.

What is a handicap in golf and how does it work?

A handicap is a numerical measure of a golfer's ability relative to par, calculated from recent scored rounds. A golfer with a handicap of 18 is expected to shoot approximately 18 over par on a standard course. The handicap system allows golfers of different ability levels to compete against each other on equal terms: the lower-handicap player gives strokes to the higher-handicap player. Official handicaps are calculated through the World Handicap System formula using the best differentials from your recent rounds, adjusted for course difficulty.

Just Starting Out

Beginners' Corner

Advertisement
300 × 250 — Rectangle (replace with AdSense)
300 × 600 — Half-Page (replace with AdSense)
Highest RPM format
Stay Sharp

A Weekly Tip,
Straight to Your Inbox

The best new instruction videos, drills, and coaching insights — curated every week. Unsubscribe any time with one click.