Putting Make Percentage By Handicap (Full Chart). Are You Above Or Below Average?
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Putting Make Percentage By Handicap (Full Chart). Are You Above Or Below Average?

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Putting Make Percentage By Handicap (Full Chart). Are You Above Or Below Average?

Do you assume you’ll make every putt and get annoyed when you don’t? While you don’t want to set the bar too high or too low, it helps to know which distances you should be making most of the time.

We pulled Shot Scope data showing make percentages from a variety of distances for each handicap level. Take a look at how your putting game stacks up.

Putting make percentage by handicap (Full chart)

Distance0 HCP5 HCP10 HCP15 HCP20 HCP25 HCP
0–3 ft98%96%96%93%90%88%
3–6 ft76%67%65%59%55%48%
6–9 ft49%44%39%36%33%30%
9–12 ft34%34%26%22%18%17%
12–18 ft19%19%18%16%14%12%
18–24 ft12%13%10%9%7%6%
24–30 ft7%7%7%7%5%4%
30 ft+4%3%3%2%2%2%

Where the biggest gaps are

The short putts are where you’ll see the largest difference between high- and low-handicap golfers. While 0-3 feet is telling the largest separator in overall performance is in the 3- to 6-foot range.

  • Scratch golfers make 76 percent from this distance.
  • 25 handicaps make just 48 percent

For context, PGA Tour players make around 87 percent from 3–5 feet. Even scratch amateurs still have room to improve here. The 3- to 6-foot range is where you will see a lot of par-saving putts, and when these can’t convert, there’s a big impact on the scorecard.

Why long putts don’t separate golfers as much

From 18 feet and beyond, the make percentages between low and high handicaps flatten out. In most cases, it’s only a 6 to 8 percentage point difference. While it might sound like good news for higher handicaps, it’s a bit misleading.

The real difference shows up in lag putting and three-putt avoidance:

  • Putts per GIR: 1.85 for scratch versus 2.18 for 25 handicaps
  • 3-putt percentage: 3 percent for scratch versus 13 for 25 handicaps
  • Number of 3-putts per round: 0.8 for scratch versus 5.8 for 25 handicaps.

Better players don’t necessarily make more long putts but they are leaving them closer than the higher handicaps. The result is fewer three-putts.

How to practice the 3– to 6-foot range

Now that you know the problem area, that 3- to 6-foot range, it makes sense to spend a little more time practicing from here. One of the simplest and most effective ways to work on it is the Around the World Drill.

The Around the World Drill

  1. Set up tees or ball markers in a circle around the hole at four distances: 3, 4, 5 and 6 feet.
  2. Start at the 3-foot station and hit one putt from each spot in the circle.
  3. Move out to 4 feet and repeat the process. Continue to 5 feet and then 6.
  4. If you miss, start again from the beginning or keep a score to track your improvement over time.

Final thoughts

The 3– to 6-foot range is where most golfers can save strokes. Spend more time practicing here and you’ll start turning those frustrating missed pars into confident makes that keep your rounds on track.

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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      Donn

      10 months ago

      Don’t let your front wrist twist or twitch AT ALL. Best way to do that? Cross Handed Putting, with a face balanced or a zero torque putter. I wrote a piece in the “Drills and exercises” forum. there are a few good you tubes. And Harvey Penick I think in the green book says he wishes he had converted to x handed years before he finally did. When cross handed, your front hand, low hand, can’t twist unless you are double jointed or Marcel Marceau.

      Reply

      Lloyd

      10 months ago

      Scratch golfers would probably get the ball closer to the hole off the tee and chipping reducing the number of 3 putts and longer putts.

      Reply

      Robin

      10 months ago

      If you play at a MUNI at least mine, you have un fixed divots everywhere.
      I have to move my ball just so I have a decent put.
      They have been fixing it up after mismanagement, they have a ton to fix.
      It’s the only Muni in town plus its only 32 dollars to walk for a senior.
      They should have another chart for municipal golf.

      Reply

      Hopp Man

      10 months ago

      I am probably below average for my handicap on 3-6ft putts, really struggled this year until I heard Michael Breede say use the line on the ball if you are struggling with putting. I started using the line on the ball and pointing it at the hole unless it was a very obvious break, I finally started making putts the last 5 rounds were the best I have putted this year. I believe my issues are related to alignment, aiming and strong right eye dominance. I tend to consistently miss putts on the left,or I just suck.

      Reply

      Turtlehacker

      10 months ago

      I’m with you man. Missed a 3-foot birdie putt today. Pulled the ball back for another try. Sorry to say it took me 4 tries to hole it, missing left each time. It was lipping out.

      Reply

      Dr Tee

      10 months ago

      my short game coach simplifies this entire matter with the following statement: want to make more putts and score better? HIT IT CLOSER ! In other words, the secret to having fewer putts is in the approach shot, chipping, and green side bunker play.

      Reply

      Fake

      10 months ago

      I think this serves as a healthy reminder to putt everything out, even in a friendly game/scramble. Too often does our group just pick up a 5 footer because it’s a club length and “one of us was going to make it.” Practice, practice, practice. Practice the easy stuff so it stays easy.

      Reply

      WBN

      10 months ago

      Agree on putt everything out. Our group has given putts even before they stop rollong. Good guys, loose rules.

      Reply

      OpMan

      10 months ago

      Yada yada yada……. green speeds, green types, conditions, competition pressure………
      this chart is too broad and flattens out these important FACTORS that affect how putts are made or not! I doubt too many see 25 handicappers TRYING hard to make those shortish ones under huge competition pressure, and so they casually just go fanning at it in casual rounds.
      Scratch and Pros are focused on really trying to make them, and do we also have the comparison chart, companion chart to analyse it situationally whether it’s the FIRST putt on the green from CLOSE PROXIMITY to the pin after the approach, or whether it’s the 2nd putt from 3-6 feet?????? HUGE difference in attempt pressure to make birdie or to avoid 3-putts from the initial long lag putts on HUGE greens……..
      I’m a great lag putter from long range, famous for making them all the time from outside 50 feet, but I yip everything inside 4 feet, so I pray for tap ins…… any stats on yips? LMAO

      Reply

      Bob Dole

      10 months ago

      You’re really overcomplicating this. It all comes out in the wash.

      Unless you are a +3 you aren’t playing many of your rounds under any real competition pressure because you aren’t good enough.

      This gives a really good general idea of issues without spending 20 pages going into nuance that may be impossible to measure anyway.

      And no one is making anywhere close to a high percentage outside of 50 ft.

      Reply

      KJC

      10 months ago

      Another excellent article, thanks Brittany. You explain why it is important to set realistic expectations and tells us to focus on what will make the biggest impact on scores.

      Reply

      Andrew the Great!

      10 months ago

      She’s got consistently good stuff, doesn’t she?! I love this one, bookmarking it, and I’m sending it to my nephew who’s just starting and who already has caught the bug. Told him to sign up for MGS emails, too.

      Reply

      Jerry

      10 months ago

      Are we just in an era of bot comments?! What garbage.

      Andrew the Great!

      7 months ago

      I’m not a bot, but Jerry sure seems to be a jerk.

      And the reason I can post this comment months later is because I DID bookmark this link, and because I’m not a bot I just came back today to read it again. So FU, Jerry.

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