How Far You Stand From The Golf Ball Might Be The Reason You’re Inconsistent—3 Simple Ways To Fix It
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How Far You Stand From The Golf Ball Might Be The Reason You’re Inconsistent—3 Simple Ways To Fix It

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How Far You Stand From The Golf Ball Might Be The Reason You’re Inconsistent—3 Simple Ways To Fix It

One part of the golf swing that feels surprisingly unclear for a lot of players is how far to stand from the ball.

Grip has checkpoints. Ball position has reference points. But distance from the ball often gets treated like a feel.

Standing too far away or too close changes everything about how the club returns to impact. Your low point shifts, your strike pattern moves and your swing starts making compensations before you even take the club back.

There are simple ways to make your distance from the ball consistent and repeatable.

1. Fix your posture first (This changes your distance automatically)

Most golfers don’t realize they’re setting up in a way that forces them to stand too far from the ball. The biggest issue is the “bar stool” feel. If you feel like you’re sitting into your stance, your weight shifts into your heels and your butt moves too far back. From there, you have no choice but to reach for the ball.

What you want instead: Hinge forward with your weight centered or slightly toward your toes, not sitting back.

Simple wall or chair check

You can use a wall, a chair or anything behind you.

  1. Stand with your back facing it
  2. Keep your heels a few inches away
  3. Hinge into your golf posture

Quick check:

  • Your butt moves slightly back, but does not press into the wall or chair
  • You feel balanced, not stuck on your heels

2. Let your arms hang (Stop reaching for the ball)

Even if your posture is good, you can still ruin your distance from the ball by reaching for it. Golfers get set and then push their hands out to meet the ball instead of letting their arms fall naturally. When that happens, you change your spacing and force a different swing.

What you want instead: Let your arms hang naturally under your shoulders and build your setup around that.

Simple check

Take your normal setup and let your arms hang with no tension. Look at where the hands fall.

  • Your hands should hang roughly over your toes
  • Slightly inside or just outside is fine
  • If your hands fall over your shoelaces, you’re too close
  • If they fall well past your toes, you’re too far

3. Your distance shouldn’t change much between clubs

One of the biggest misconceptions is that you should stand much farther from the ball with longer clubs. That’s where a lot of golfers get into trouble. They step farther away with the driver, start reaching and suddenly the setup looks completely different than it does with an iron.

What you want instead: Small adjustments, not a new setup for every club.

Simple “window” check

  1. Set up with a mid iron
  2. Take note of where your hands hang
  3. Switch to a wedge, then a driver

Quick check:

  • Your hands should stay in a very similar position
  • You may feel slightly more bent over with shorter clubs
  • You may feel a small amount of extra reach with the driver and a taller posture

Final thoughts

Distance from the ball isn’t the most exciting thing to work on.

But once you see how much it affects your strike, your consistency and your ability to repeat a swing, it becomes something worth paying attention to.

Spend a little time on it and a lot of the other pieces start to fall into place.

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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