Iron Yardage Gaps: What’s “Average” For Your Handicap?
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Iron Yardage Gaps: What’s “Average” For Your Handicap?

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Iron Yardage Gaps: What’s “Average” For Your Handicap?

“You should have 10 yards between each iron.”

That’s one of the most common guidelines in golf. And, as a starting point, it makes sense. “Ten yards” is easy to remember and easy to build a bag around.

But when you look at real on-course data from Shot Scope, iron yardage gaps don’t neatly fall into 10-yard increments.

To see what’s really happening, we pulled Shot Scope Performance Average (P-Avg) data and calculated the average gap between irons by handicap. This isn’t launch monitor “perfect strike” carry; it is real on-course performance so keep that in mind.

Iron yardage gaps by handicap (Shot Scope P-Avg)

All numbers below represent the average yardage gap in yards between clubs.

Gap0 HCP5 HCP10 HCP15 HCP20 HCP25 HCP
4i–5i2318121778
5i–6i1511167116
6i–7i7810855
7i–8i1211118810
8i–9i11141010914
9i–PW141313152118

Why 10 yards isn’t a universal truth

Even scratch players don’t live in a perfectly spaced 10-yard world.

Look at the 0 handicap column:

  • 6i–7i is just 7 yards
  • 4i–5i jumps to 23

At lower handicaps, long iron gaps tend to be larger because players generate more speed and deliver loft more consistently. Small changes in loft and ball speed translate into bigger yardage jumps. In the middle of the bag, you’ll see more consistency but not always that perfect 10-yard gap.

But as handicap rises, distance separation starts to compress in the middle of the bag. Notice how the 6-iron to 7-iron gap shrinks to just five yards at the 20- and 25-handicap level. That’s a strike consistency issue.

When contact moves around the face, ball speed fluctuates and yardage gaps disappear. Many higher handicaps don’t just hit shorter shots; they hit several different clubs all about the same distance.

A quick note on the “outliers”

You’ll notice some gaps don’t follow a clean progression. For example, the 15-handicap 5i–6i gap is smaller than the 20-handicap gap in the same spot.

Remember that this is on-course performance data. It reflects real strikes, real equipment choices (game-improvement, super game-improvement irons, etc.) and real confidence levels with certain clubs. Golf performance isn’t perfectly linear and neither are the averages.

Most importantly, neither are yours. And that’s exactly why you need to measure them, track them and have a better understanding.

The takeaway

Ten yards is a helpful benchmark. But your actual yardage gaps are a product of your delivery, your strike pattern and your consistency.

The goal isn’t to force your irons into neat 10-yard buckets. The goal is to know your real carry numbers and identify where gaps compress or jump. Not only will this help you get the correct equipment in your bag but it will make a big difference in your course management skills. Better scores will result.

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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      Jay daniels

      4 months ago

      Hello my golf spy, i disagree a bit. I think if your going through the exercise of finding your gaps why not adjust you lofts/lies to better fit to a smaller gap. More consistent gaps may absolutely help hit it closer more often.

      Jay Daniels

      Reply

      Itsallinurhead

      4 months ago

      I always wondered why, no matter what I end up getting fit into, my 7 and 6 tend to gap too close together. This year I went to a combo set at the 6 iron and hope this issue is resolved.

      Reply

      Andrew

      4 months ago

      What’s the easiest way to confirm base yardage for the bag? At the range with a range finder? Simulator/Trackman?

      Reply

      pineneedlespro

      4 months ago

      Andrew the best way to get your base yardage with certain clubs in the bag is to use golf balls you normally play with; go to certain holes on the golf course so that way you can see how far the ball is carrying. And chart the distance with each club.
      Sometimes it is best to do this is early morning 9 hole round or late evening when the golf course is not busy.

      Reply

      Ivo

      4 months ago

      Somethings wrong with that 6 iron…

      Reply

      pineneedlespro

      4 months ago

      Ivo–if your #6 iron gives you poor results, it may be time to check the club’s length, loft, lie, shaft flex, swing weight and overall weight. One or all of these can give you poor results.

      Reply

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