Club Fitting Myths That Cost Golfers Money
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Club Fitting Myths That Cost Golfers Money

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Club Fitting Myths That Cost Golfers Money

After more than 30 years of playing golf, I’ve been through plenty of club fittings. Some were helpful. Others were not.

Most modern clubs are more adjustable, shafts are more specialized and data is more available than at any point in history.

That complexity leads to wasted money instead of better performance. These are the club-fitting myths that I think continue to cost golfers money.

Myth 1: A fitting is basically the same everywhere

From the outside, fittings look similar. You hit balls, numbers appear and a recommendation follows. It’s easy to assume the difference between fittings comes down to brand selection or how many shafts are on the wall.

The real difference is the fitter.

A knowledgeable fitting professional understands far more than launch monitor numbers. They understand how golfers play, how misses show up on the course, when data needs context and when not to chase a better number just because it exists.

Having a wide range of heads and shafts matters. But fittings rarely fall apart because of limited options. They fall apart when the person running the session doesn’t know how to interpret what they’re seeing or how those changes translate on the golf course.

Myth 2: Perfect shots matter in a fitting

Many fittings are built around your best swings. The shots you wish you could repeat every time. Those shots feel good and they make the data look impressive.

But they tell you very little.

Golf is not played on perfect swings. It’s played on slightly thin strikes, heel misses, toe misses and shots that feel fine but are not quite right.

The best fittings spend time understanding:

  • Where you miss the face
  • How the ball reacts on those misses
  • How big the penalty is when timing is off

Clubs that survive your misses stay in the bag longer. When you go through a fitting, look for the clubs that produce the best misses and make sure your fitter is looking for them too.

Myth 3: If distance goes up, the fitting worked

Distance is the easiest thing to sell in a fitting. It’s visible, measurable and satisfying, especially indoors.

It’s not the main goal of a fitting.

Distance gains can come from changes that introduce problems elsewhere. Lower loft, longer shafts and lower spin can all add yards while quietly hurting consistency.

Spin and flight matter more than many golfers realize. Look for spin consistency, proper flight window and peak height. You’ll also want to measure carry distance reliability, even on those off-center strikes.

A fitter who understands ball flight will give up a few peak yards to deliver tighter windows and more predictable outcomes.

Myth 4: Forgiveness doesn’t get matter when you get better

If you’re going for a fitting because you feel like it’s time to graduate or move on from forgiveness, you may want to reconsider your goals.

Real forgiveness is:

  • Tighter dispersion on misses
  • Less curvature penalty
  • More consistent distance gaps

Golfers often move away from forgiving setups too soon because they associate them with beginner clubs. When clubs are no longer forgiving and misses get punished again, the solution becomes another purchase.

Myth 5: A golf club fitting is all about buying new clubs

A fitting should not just tell you what to buy. It should teach you something about your game.

After decades of playing, my recent fittings gave me insight I didn’t have: how I deliver the club, how spin affects my misses, why certain setups worked and others didn’t.

When a fitting is treated as a transaction, golfers leave with specs but no understanding. When performance changes later, they don’t know why.

The takeaway

Most fitting-related money waste doesn’t come from bad clubs. It comes from misunderstanding what a fitting is meant to do. Talk to your friends about the fitting they went to, find a local fitter with knowledge and access to equipment and remain loyal to them.

For You

For You

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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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      Matt

      5 months ago

      As someone who just fit myself for some clubs leveraging trackman data and GPT (God help me), it’s definitely important to know exactly what you want out of a club.

      When I first got fit for clubs a few years ago, I was just chasing distance in all clubs because, why not. Now, I’m replacing a 3 wood with a tipped shaft because it wasn’t spinning off the turf (why did the fitter basically give me a mini driver? Lol) because experience made me realize I’d rather have an actual chance at approaching a par 5 in 2 than having a slightly shorter tee club than my driver.

      Buy cheap, buy twice — fit with gaps and most playable misses in mind — you’ll be much more satisfied with the wedge that sticks or the 5 wood that lands the green after the round than you’ll be with hitting 3 wood 260 vs 255 off the tee during the round.

      Reply

      Duane

      5 months ago

      Where I live there is no such thing as a good, reliable fitter. All that is available is big box retailers, PXG and Club Champion. It’s the same with teachers/coaches. Find a good one and they will be gone in a few months. The only ones with stability are those at expensive, private clubs.

      Reply

      panensaham

      5 months ago

      This was an interesting read and clearly explained. I appreciate the effort put into organizing the content in a simple way.

      Reply

      DA

      5 months ago

      Finding a good fitter is like finding a good doctor, if you have one, great. If you don’t, you are kinda of lost.

      And I live in a heavily-populated area, I have no idea where no go.

      Maybe a leap of faith.

      Reply

      Tom Powers

      5 months ago

      Article is ok…but?, the real truth in getting a real (helpful) fitting is getting a real (truthful) rep to work with you. Problem?, Ain’t Too Many of them Around :( My history?, I have found 3 and each come from a career chasing the sun, but with out much luck. THEN KNOW the ins-outs of teaching and fitting. All the Best !!

      Reply

      Adam m

      5 months ago

      Great points but the bigger problem is that there is no accreditation program to say which fitters are experienced and great and which aren’t. It would be beneficial for all parties if something like that existed.

      Reply

      Steve Young

      5 months ago

      Good article. However, finding an experienced fitter working in your interest, not a big box store or OEM, is difficult. Tom Wishon has written 11 books on club design and fitting. Watch one of his YouTube videos before you spend money and time.

      Reply

      Jack fearns

      5 months ago

      I trained under Tom in the mid 80’s someplace in Pa , forget , it was a 1 week school in club repair etc . He as I were ahead of the times as far as club fitting !

      Reply

      Robert G

      5 months ago

      Fittings are noting but an up-sell scam. A very expensive scam. It’s like a Venus fly trap, they have a captive audience
      and convince you to spend a lot of money and you will play like Tiger Woods. It’s all bull shit they just want your cash.
      They prey on your vulnerability.
      Save your money go to your local PGA pro and take some lessons, you will play better and save a shit load of money.

      Reply

      Fake

      5 months ago

      My local PGA pro fit me for my clubs. They are great, and reasonably priced.

      Reply

      Don Morrison

      5 months ago

      Very good article. I totally agree!

      Reply

      Douglas Mael

      5 months ago

      Absolutely! As a long-time professional clubfitter, I find everything presented in this summary to be spot-on!

      Reply

      Dale C.

      5 months ago

      In the last five years, I got fitted twice at a big box store both indoors off a mat. I bought a new set of irons from each one based on the fantastic numbers off the screen. I felt like I had good fitters on both events. The key is hitting off a mat vs. hitting outdoors on real grass. You can’t miss off a mat because it’s like teeing it up on every shot. As soon as I went to the golf course it was a disaster!! I finally bought a set after attending a demo day and hit many shots on GRASS with different models until I was confident I had found irons I could hit on the course. I’m still using them today three years later. It was an expensive lesson in getting fitted indoors vs. outdoors.

      Reply

      Matt

      5 months ago

      Yep, fitting clubs that are meant to get into the ground on a mat is impossible // it’s too bad there aren’t more dedicated outdoor fitting locations instead of us normal people having to go well out of our ways to do so, instead of guessing something like what grind and bounce I need on a wedge

      Reply

      Darren

      5 months ago

      I’d rather pay for a fitters time so they haven’t got a dog in the race.

      Reply

      HikingMike

      5 months ago

      Yeah I recommend people do this also. Going to the free fittings from the manufacturers and hitting the new model can be fun. But if you pay for a fitting with no predetermined club then you are far more likely to come out with a better recommendation for you. And bonus points for developing a relationship with a fitter, and/or using an independent shop.

      Reply

      MarkM

      5 months ago

      All very true, nice article.
      BUT you might want to edit this title line:
      “Myth 4: Forgiveness doesn’t GET matter when you get better” :)

      Reply

      Boise Pro 59

      5 months ago

      Brilliant article….the fitter makes the difference! Most big box stores fail to properly train their fitters.
      Your especially spot on that a fitting doesn’t necessarily mean you need to buy something. I’ve had some golfers that may need a new shaft or two or a lie angle adjustment. Biggest need usually is new grips.

      Reply

      Jack fearns

      5 months ago

      Agree, went to 2 different fittings . One sucked & cost me $3k ! Other awesome ! No names but left second fitter $100 tip !!

      Reply

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