Best Golf Drills For Beginners At The Range
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Best Golf Drills For Beginners At The Range

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Best Golf Drills For Beginners At The Range

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Over the course of my nearly three decades in golf, I’ve witnessed, countless times, beginner golfers walk up to the range, buy a bucket of balls, pull out the driver and launch into an hour-long session of wild, inconsistent swings.

Mindless ball-whacking does zero for improvement. This whole “quantity beats quality” mentality is a line of thinking that traps golfers in an endless loop of mediocrity.

Beginners and, actually, an entirely too large percentage of golfers show up and bash drivers for an hour straight. Setup? Ignored. Grip? Who cares. Swing plane? Never heard of it.

Meanwhile, the basics that actually matter—the stuff that turns triple bogeys into pars—get tossed aside like yesterday’s scorecard.

Here is a quick dose of reality for all golfers: the range can transform your game but only if you show up with a plan instead of just emptying buckets.

The mistake that’s keeping you terrible

I’ve taught everyone from complete beginners to improving mid-handicappers and they all make the same error: they practice without purpose. This mindset runs so deep that players will hit ball after ball without a plan, rather than focusing on specific improvements.

Watching a beginner spend $30 on range balls and hitting a driver for an entire hour is an all-too-common sight. Not one swing looks the same. No feedback, no adjustment, no improvement.

Eight drills that will transform your range sessions

Drill #1: The alignment stick setup

Place alignment sticks (or clubs) on the ground: one at your feet pointing at the target, one behind the ball pointing in the same direction. This forces proper setup every single swing. Use your first 10 balls just getting comfortable with correct alignment.

Drill #2: The 7-iron only session

For the entire bucket, just hit a 7-iron. Learn to hit it straight, then work on distance control. Hit 10 balls with 75 percent effort, 10 at 50 percent and then 10 at 100 percent. This builds tempo and teaches you that power comes from technique, not effort.

Drill #3: The impact bag progression

Start without a ball. Make slow swings, focusing only on impact position: left wrist flat, weight on the front foot, hands ahead of the clubface. Then add balls, maintaining that same feeling. This drill alone fixes most beginner swing flaws.

Drill #4: The feet-together balance drill

Hit 20 balls with your feet touching. This forces you to swing in balance and use your body correctly, rather than just your arms. Start with short irons and work up. You’ll be amazed how solidly you can hit it.

Drill #5: The target practice progression

Pick specific targets at 50, 75, 100 and 125 yards. Hit five balls to each target with appropriate clubs. Don’t just aim “somewhere out there.” Golf rewards precision so practice precision from day one.

Drill #6: The tempo counting drill

Count “one-two” during your swing: “one” on the backswing, “two” through impact. Hit 20 balls focusing only on smooth tempo. Speed comes later. Rhythm comes first and lasts forever.

Drill #7: The short-game circle

Drop 10 balls in a circle around a practice green. Hit each shot to a different pin position using different clubs: wedge, 9-iron, even putter from off the green. A sharp short game saves more strokes than driving distance.

Drill #8: The pre-shot routine builder

Every single ball gets the same routine: step behind the ball, pick your target, take practice swings, step up and hit. No shortcuts. Building this habit now prevents rushing on the course later.

The one thing that still ruins practice

You need to avoid the temptation to hit balls mindlessly when things start clicking. Even when you’re hitting it well, stick to your drill plan. Random swinging builds bad habits faster than you think.

The smart approach? Finish each drill completely before moving to the next one, even if you start hitting it poorly.

Why beginners stay frustrated

Range practice looks easy from the outside and golfers assume any swing is good practice. The basic principle remains: quality beats quantity every time. But beginners get addicted to the instant gratification of ball striking.

Master these eight drills. They’re proven, systematic ways to build a repeatable swing without developing bad habits. Stop wasting money on range balls that teach you nothing.

The driving range isn’t trying to trick you. It’s actually the most efficient learning environment when you use it correctly. Take advantage of that opportunity.

For You

For You

Chris Gotterup Chris Gotterup
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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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Brendon Elliott

Brendon Elliott

Brendon Elliott





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      Bill B

      10 months ago

      Another option: Pretend playing a practice round. Hit driver and be honest where it would end up(Fairway, rough, or in trouble). Now, what shot would you hit next. Here’s where you can experiment on different shots/clubs. Maybe punching out with a 6-iron is better than squeezing an 8-iron between the trees. Do this drill at the end of hitting a bucket. Maybe the last 20-30 balls.

      Reply

      Jon Konkler

      10 months ago

      I started doing this last winter with the last 15-20 balls left in the bucket. It really helps me get ready for spring golf.

      Reply

      Dwayne

      10 months ago

      Yes, practice the low cut and low hook. Such needed, I go into the trees way too much.

      Reply

      Jim Aude

      10 months ago

      I love all of the tips!
      Only thing I would change is the 1-2 drill by making it 1-2—3 allowing for more time in the backswing.

      Reply

      Bob

      10 months ago

      All of these are great!
      I’m copying them to my Notes app and taking them to the range.

      Reply

      Andrew Graham

      10 months ago

      I think drill #1 is wrong. “Place alignment sticks (or clubs) on the ground: one at your feet pointing AT THE TARGET, one behind the ball pointing in the same direction”. If your feet are pointing at the target your club will be aimed out to the right. I think the setup should be alignment rod behind the ball pointing at the target, another at your feet parallel to the first.

      Reply

      Andrew the Great!

      10 months ago

      “Place alignment sticks (or clubs) on the ground: one at your feet pointing at the target” ~ if it’s pointed at the target, and you line up your feet with the stick, won’t your ball flight path go *right* of the target? Shouldn’t the stick that lines up your feet be pointing parallel *left* of your target and target line? I think so. I think one alignment stick should align with your toes, parallel left of the target line, and the other alignment stick should be just outside the ball, and that’s the one that should be pointing at the target, no?

      Reply

      Putt2Survive

      10 months ago

      I just started an app called Core Golf. It structures my practice session with measured exercises (some of them in the article). Not sure if it will make my golf better, but at least practice feels more purposeful.

      Reply

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    Chris Gotterup Chris Gotterup
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