4 Myths About Weight Transfer In The Golf Swing
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4 Myths About Weight Transfer In The Golf Swing

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4 Myths About Weight Transfer In The Golf Swing

You’ve been told to shift your weight. Load into your back foot on the backswing. Drive into your front foot on the downswing. It sounds simple but it’s not working. You’re swaying, sliding, losing balance.

The problem isn’t that you’re doing it wrong. What you’ve been told about weight transfer is mostly myth. Here are four things everyone gets wrong about weight transfer and what actually happens in a good golf swing.

Myth 1: You should shift your weight to your back foot on the backswing

This is the most common weight transfer instruction and it ruins more swings than it helps. When you actively shift your weight to your back foot, you’re not loading. You’re swaying. Your head moves off the ball, your spine tilts away from the target and your low point moves backward. Now you’re hitting fat shots or lifting up and hitting it thin.

What actually happens in a good backswing is rotation, not lateral shift. Your weight moves slightly into your back foot as a result of turning, but it’s a consequence, not a goal. Good players feel like they’re turning around a stable post, not shifting onto their back leg. The power comes from rotation and the stretch it creates, not from a lateral weight shift.

Make a backswing where your head stays still and your front shoulder turns down and under your chin. Your back leg will naturally accept some weight but you haven’t swayed. You’ve rotated. That’s the difference.

Myth 2: You need to drive hard into your front foot to start the downswing

The second myth is that you initiate the downswing by aggressively shifting your weight to your front foot. This creates the dreaded slide where your hips move laterally toward the target without rotating. Your arms can’t catch up. You leave the face open and block it right or flip your hands and hook it left.

The downswing doesn’t start with a lateral weight shift. It starts with rotation. Your hips turn back toward the target while your upper body is still completing the backswing. This creates separation which creates speed. The weight naturally moves into your front foot as a result of this rotation but the rotation comes first.

Your hips don’t slide toward the target. They turn toward the target. When you rotate properly, your weight ends up on your front foot without you having to think about shifting it there. Stop trying to move your weight and start trying to rotate your hips. The weight will follow.

Myth 3: Your weight should be 50-50 at address

Equal weight distribution at address seems neutral and athletic but for most golfers, it’s a setup for inconsistency.

With irons, you should start with more weight on your front foot. about 60-40. This forward bias encourages you to hit down on the ball and move your low point forward which is what you need for solid iron contact. Starting 50-50 makes it too easy to fall back onto your rear foot during the swing.

With the driver, you can be closer to 50-50 or even slightly favoring your back foot because you want to hit up on the ball. But even then, you’re not making a big shift backward during the backswing. You’re rotating around a centered position. Your setup weight distribution should match the shot you’re trying to hit.

Myth 4: You should finish with all your weight on your front foot

The finish position is often taught as proof of good weight transfer. This is backward thinking. The finish position is a result of what happened during the swing, not a goal in itself. If you try to force yourself into a front-foot finish, you’ll lunge at the ball and lose your spine angle.

Good players do finish on their front foot but they’re not trying to get there. They’re rotating through the ball and the momentum of that rotation carries them into a balanced finish. If you rotate your hips and torso through impact and hold nothing back, you’ll end up on your front foot without thinking about it.

If you’re not finishing on your front foot, the problem isn’t that you’re not shifting your weight. The problem is that you’re not rotating through the ball. Fix the rotation and the finish will fix itself.

The simple truth

Weight transfer isn’t something you do. It’s something that happens when you rotate properly. Stop thinking about shifting your weight back and forward. Start thinking about rotating your body around a stable center. Turn your shoulders on the backswing. Turn your hips on the downswing. Rotate through impact. The weight will move exactly where it needs to be without you forcing it. Good golf swings are built on rotation, not lateral movement.

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For You

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Brendon Elliott

Brendon Elliott

Brendon Elliott

PGA of America Golf Professional Brendon Elliott is an award-winning coach and golf writer. Check out his weekly Monday column on RG.org, and to learn more about Brendon, visit OneMoreRollGolf.com.

Brendon Elliott

Brendon Elliott

Brendon Elliott

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      Garry

      2 months ago

      Moe Norman:
      Vertical drop and horizontal tug – the magic move.

      He moved.

      To each his own for what works, I guess.

      Never had a back problem either – single plane swing, baby!

      Reply

      Red Pill Pharmacy

      3 months ago

      Now see this video on YT posted on 3-27-26:

      Golf Swing Sequence CRITICAL INFO

      Reply

      Livininparadise

      3 months ago

      Brandon, almost 100 % spot on (i disagree with the weight set up for the driver, but to each their own) . This article sums up the swing perfectly. To those people bringing up inconsistencies with other articles, I will say there is a difference between real and feel. So much of the golf swing positions happens naturally with a good set up and a good rotation.

      Reply

      Joseph

      3 months ago

      Good article, but it contradicts the article from a few days ago “Golf Swing Sequence 101” where it states: “The downswing starts with your lower body, specifically a slight shift of your hips toward the target. Not a spin, a shift. Your weight moves to your front foot and then your hips begin to rotate.” But in this article you state: “The downswing doesn’t start with a lateral weight shift. It starts with rotation.” That is actually step 2 in the golf swing sequence 101.

      Reply

      Darren

      3 months ago

      Think Liam Robinson may like a word…..

      Reply

      Tom Forsythe

      2 months ago

      It sure does. The contradiction struck me on first read. Thanks for pointing it out. I’d say it’s one of the best reasons to always be skeptical of general golf instruction. Best to have a pro guide you – and I do – but only a few times a year. The rest of the time I just have to analyze myself, kind of scary inside the six inches between my ears, but a lot easier to notice how my swing moves. At 67, I’m now adjusting my swing to keep my back healthy.

      Reply

      Bryan Reynolds

      3 months ago

      Very good article!

      Reply

      Dweed

      3 months ago

      Yes. This makes total sense. Now all I need to do is…do it.

      Reply

      Livininparadise

      3 months ago

      Yes, it took me over 2 years to break the swaying bad habit. Stick with this and it will pay dividends

      Reply

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