Best Women’s Golf Shoes Of 2026: My 5 Favorites, Tested And Ranked
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Best Women’s Golf Shoes Of 2026: My 5 Favorites, Tested And Ranked

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Best Women’s Golf Shoes Of 2026: My 5 Favorites, Tested And Ranked

I play golf a few days a week, mostly in a cart, but as a family we share one, which means I end up walking a good portion of my rounds. That influences how I think about golf shoes. I want something that holds up for long stretches of walking but doesn’t sacrifice the stability and confidence I need when I’m over the ball on an uneven lie or swinging hard on the back nine.

I spent time on the course in each of these shoes. I’ve been playing golf for more than 30 years. I played college golf and spent time as a teaching professional so I’ve been in a lot of golf shoes over the years. Here’s how I ranked my five favorites in 2026 plus a few honorable mentions worth knowing about.

#1 — FootJoy Premiere Series: The best women’s golf shoe of 2026

I grew up playing in FootJoy shoes. Wore them throughout college golf, wore them when I was a teaching professional, and they weren’t always as comfortable as they are today. The Premiere Series has changed that conversation entirely.

Made with premium full-grain leather, enhanced collar padding with leather lining and ARCTrax Outsole Technology, the Premiere is built to perform. The OrthoLite Eco Plush FitBed delivers all-day underfoot comfort that you genuinely feel on hole 14 when your feet would normally be done. The fit is a rounded toe with a slightly narrowed heel. It’s as classic-looking as a golf shoe gets.

At $225, it’s a premium price point, but this is a shoe built to last. I wipe mine down after a round and they look brand new. It’s also a spiked shoe so if I ever need to replace the spikes down the road, I can, and I suspect the shoe itself will long outlive the spikes.

I tried the Packard and the Madison—the Madison leans a bit more traditional in its look but both land firmly in classic territory. This is my pick for the best women’s golf shoe of 2026.

#2 — adidas MC70: Runner-up

This one surprised me and I mean that in the best way.

The MC70 is a spikeless shoe inspired by iconic 1970s golf footwear and it nails that retro look without sacrificing modern performance. Boost cushioning delivers real energy return with each step, the Lightstrike midsole keeps things lightweight and responsive and the spikeless Traxion outsole gives you excellent grip on wet conditions and turf surfaces.

It’s not my favorite adidas shoe for walking the course (more on that below) but for traction and stability, it’s excellent. It’s also a great-looking shoe. One thing worth noting: the tongue is on the thinner side. I think the intention was to give it a more refined, premium feel, and I understand that choice but I would prefer a little more structure there.

Still, at its price point, this shoe delivers. The quality impressed me, the design is timeless and it performs when it counts.

#3 — Heathlander The Golf Shoe: The surprise pick of 2026

I’d been paying attention to Heathlander’s men’s shoes for a while. They’ve been getting a lot of well-deserved attention this year and I didn’t even know they had a women’s option until recently. Now that I’ve spent time in them on the course, I’m genuinely impressed.

The Golf Shoe features a proprietary molded rubber outsole with 9mm tread for serious grip and traction, a shock-absorbing Pebax insole for sustained comfort and one-year weatherproof construction. It ships without cardboard waste in a reusable nylon zipper bag with a cloth dust bag and two extra pairs of laces.

This is a shoe I walk 18 holes in without a second thought. It’s the same price point as the FootJoy Premiere and it earns every penny. This isn’t a higher price tag slapped on a mediocre product. The quality is there. There’s also a touch more cushion than the Premiere and there are plenty of color options and a solid size run to choose from.

Where the Premiere edges it out is in traction and long-term repairability. The FootJoy is a spiked shoe you can maintain over time while the Heathlander’s tread, though more than adequate, is fixed. But if you haven’t tried Heathlander shoes, you have my full green light.

#4 — ECCO Street Vibe: Best women’s golf shoe for summer and off-course versatility

I’ve never met a golf shoe that didn’t require socks. I’ve tried multiple rounds with and without socks in the ECCO Street Vibe and with a golf skort, and these slip-ons. I prefer the no-sock lock.

The ECCO Street Vibe is a slip-on shoe with an ECCO-TEX waterproof membrane, a removable and washable insole and an outsole inspired by the E-DTS NET design that offers multi-directional traction and all-day walking comfort. It doesn’t fully look like a golf shoe, which is kind of the point. It’s exactly what I love about it.

This is my go-to summer golf shoe. It slips on and off effortlessly, it performs on the course and it transitions seamlessly off it. ECCO shoes in general tend to run a little narrow for me but the Street Vibe fits true to size. The fact that it feels like a street shoe but fully functions as a golf shoe on the course is what makes it a standout.

#5 — adidas Retrocross: Best women’s golf shoe for practice and casual rounds

I wear the Retrocross to the range. I wore them to a Korn Ferry Tour event to follow players on foot and logged 20,000 steps in them. My feet were fine.

That’s really what you need to know. The Retrocross is a spikeless shoe with court-inspired style and a Traxion outsole built for casual rounds but its real strength is just how easy it is to wear. It feels like a walking shoe you want to put on. It’s comfortable right away, not something you have to break in or think about.

It’s not the shoe I’d reach for in a competitive round or on a tough, hilly course. But for practice sessions, quick nines or any time you want footwear that moves between golf and the rest of your day without friction, the Retrocross is the right call.

Honorable mentions

I tested more shoes than the five above and a few deserve recognition even if they didn’t crack my top five. I’ll dig into each of these more specifically in future articles.

ECCO Golf S-Casual — A high-quality, well-constructed shoe and a strong walking option. Great durability in any condition. Like other ECCO shoes I tried, it runs a little narrow, so keep that in mind when sizing.

True Linkswear Antigravity — This one felt like a running shoe the moment I put it on and I’m a runner, so I mean that as a compliment. It features Pebax Superfoam midsole, full-length nylon speedboard, laminated waterproof construction and a recycled ripstop upper. It’s lightweight and comfortable almost instantly. My only hesitation is that the lightness made the price feel a little hard to justify. If walking performance is your top priority, it’s worth trying. These are the shoes I keep reaching for when I know I’m walking.

Alma Mater Beta Derby — A beautifully made shoe. Full-grain waterproof leather, genuine calfskin lining and a level of craftsmanship that feels like it’s from a different era. Zero break-in time, I wore them the first day and they felt like I’d owned them for years. They run a little large compared to some other brands but still within a normal range. The price kept them out of my top five but this would probably be No. 6 on my list. I’m excited to see what Alma Mater does next and this is a shoe I’ll keep wearing.

Anderson Ord AO Coast1 — This is the first release of Anderson Ord women’s shoes, so this is very much a first look. A few things stood out right away. The insole is great. The closest comparison I have is a mattress topper. It’s plush and cushioned but still firm enough to give you the support you need on the course. The real standout though is the stability. I don’t slide in these shoes, and I think that’s at least partially a function of the weight. They have a little more heft to them than most shoes I tested. That’s not necessarily a knock, it’s just worth knowing that this probably wouldn’t be my walk-18 shoe. The full-grain Italian leather and low-profile silhouette make it an easy grab for everyday wear — it doesn’t look like a golf shoe and that’s exactly the appeal.

Final thoughts

I’ll keep testing women’s golf shoes throughout the season and report back. What surprised me most when comparing these side by side was just how different they feel from one another in terms of cushion, traction, construction and overall quality. At the end of the day, a great pair of shoes gives you a strong foundation for a round of golf.

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Brittany Olizarowicz

Brittany Olizarowicz

Brittany Olizarowicz

Britt Olizarowicz is a scratch golfer, former teaching professional and one of MyGolfSpy’s leading voices on equipment testing and golf performance. She has spent more than 15 years working at private clubs in New York and Florida and now specializes in translating test data and swing mechanics into practical advice for everyday golfers. Britt began playing at age 7 and has never left the game. When she’s not writing, you’ll find her on the course, playing pickleball, cooking, running or out on the boat with her family.

Brittany Olizarowicz

Brittany Olizarowicz

Brittany Olizarowicz





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      Marybeth

      2 months ago

      These are all great shoes, would like the manufacturers to realize women want shoes other than white. For those of us who play in wet, humid conditions, white does not hold up to frequent cleaning. Price point is out of my budget.

      Reply

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