Father’s Day shopping can get expensive fast, especially if the dad in your life plays golf. Between clubs, shoes, bags, rangefinders and apparel, it’s easy to feel like a good golf gift requires a second mortgage. Thankfully, that’s not true. There are plenty of genuinely useful, good-looking and thoughtful golf gifts that don’t require you to spend a fortune. Whether you’re shopping for a scratch golfer, weekend warrior or the dad who simply loves being around the game, these Father’s Day golf gifts won’t break the bank.
Quince Golf Outfit

I talk about Quince a lot, and that’s because I seriously believe that they’re making the best overall golf apparel in the game, especially with regard to price. For $78, you can get your dad a Flowknit Breeze polo and ProTech Shorts. If you feel like spending a but more, you can throw in the Jack Woven Belt for $60, and you’ve got a complete outfit for $138—that’s nuts especially considering that’s the price of one polo at Holderness & Bourne. continue to be blown away by how well Quince’s golf apparel holds up, fits, and looks. If your dad even remotely cares about how he looks on the course, an outfit from Quince is a great way to keep him looking great without breaking the bank. With that in mind, if you’re only interested in one piece from Quince, I’ve got you covered.
Jones Blind Draw Golf Bag

Similar to Quince, I talk about Jones all the time. Since the beginning of the year, I’ve been alternating between the Evergreen Heritage Trouper and Navy Trouper as my gamer bag. Simply put, I use Jones because Jones is making some of the best golf bags in the industry. Honestly, if it were up to me, I’d say they make the best bags. Period.
The only real downside is that Jones bags typically retail anywhere from $175 to $375. That’s where the Blind Draw offering comes in. With Jones’ Blind Draw sale, you can buy a surprise golf bag for a fraction of the usual price. You won’t know the exact colorway you’re getting, but you do get to choose the style of bag. For example, if you buy a Blind Draw Trouper, you’re getting a Trouper. The colorway is the surprise.
That’s seriously part of the fun. Imagine your dad opening a new golf bag on Father’s Day while you’re just as surprised as he is by what’s inside the box. If you’re worried about getting a bad color, let me put your fears to rest: I’ve never seen a bad-looking Jones bag.
As I mentioned, Jones bags usually retail between $175 and $375. With Blind Draw bags, the most you’ll spend is $135, and that’s for the Trouper, Jones’ most expensive model. If your dad prefers something smaller and lighter, Jones also has Blind Draw options on the Rover for $125, along with carry bag options for $70 and $75. There are also blind draws available on backpacks, duffle bags, and coolers.
Rant over, but this is one of the best values in golf.
MacGregor MT Tourney Wedge Set

$170 for three wedges is insane, especially when you consider that a single brand-new wedge from most major OEMs can cost around $180. I know from personal experience that a lot of people avoid buying clubs for holidays like Father’s Day because equipment prices have gotten genuinely outrageous. That’s why the MacGregor MT Tourney Wedge Set is such a strong gifting option. For a relatively low financial commitment, you can give your dad three new tools for his golfing arsenal: 52, 56 and 60 degrees. I have these wedges myself and, for the price, I think they’re excellent. Are they going to fit every golfer’s exact wedge setup? No. But for $170, this is one of the easiest ways to upgrade someone’s short game without spending the equivalent of a car payment. If your dad needs fresh wedges or simply wants to experiment with a full-face setup, this is a fantastic Father’s Day gift.
Clinch Tactile Golf Glove

My dad and I are the types of people who like to have something unique, and the Clinch Tactile Glove certainly fit that bill. For the longest time, I was a Bruce Bolt guy, but I’ve since moved on. Long story short, the Clinch Glove has the best feel of any golf glove I’ve ever tried. In a lot of ways, they remind me of the Neumann football gloves of yore because the palm is made of a tackified treated leather, giving exceptional feel and something dramatically different from the majority of Cabretta offerings out there. I’ve also found Clinch’s gloves to be much more durable than most other golf gloves. At $25, this is a great buy and a strong Father’s Day gift for the golfer who appreciates something a little different.
Skechers Go Golf Flight Shoes

The Skechers Go Golf Flight was our Best Value golf shoe of 2025 at $95. Right now, Golf Galaxy has the white/grey colorway for $71, which makes an already great value even better. If your dad needs a new pair of golf shoes but you don’t want to spend premium-shoe money, this is a fantastic option. The GO GOLF Flight is comfortable, lightweight and easy to wear, making it a strong choice for walking rounds, casual golfers or anyone who simply wants a reliable pair of shoes. Once again, this is an extremely solid pair of golf shoes for $71. That’s an easy, practical, and frankly great buy.
MacGregor MACSPD Irons

If you really want to spoil Dad this Father’s Day, a new set of irons will usually do the trick. Yes, the MacGregor MACSPD irons are on the more expensive end of this list because, well, they’re irons. But for a brand-new, excellent-performing and extremely fun-to-hit iron set for $493, this is a tremendous value.
In our 2024 testing, the MACSPD earned the title of Most Accurate Game-Improvement Iron thanks to its consistency in ball speed, carry distance, spin and dispersion. In plain English, these irons do what most golfers actually need their irons to do: help them hit more greens. MacGregor has also given MyGolfSpy readers an exclusive 15-percent-off discount code, bringing the MACSPD irons to well under $500. Use code MyGolfSpy at checkout.
It’s not the cheapest Father’s Day gift on this list, but if you really want to give Dad something special, this is a great way to do it.
Tour Edge ZT Putters

Zero-torque putters are no longer just a niche curiosity. In our 2026 Most Wanted Putter testing, we tested 79 putters across three categories: blades, mallets and zero torque. When the data settled, the category story was hard to argue with.
Zero-torque putters averaged a -6.29 PuttView handicap across 26 models. Mallets came in at -3.99 across 29 putters, while blades finished at -2.65 across 24. That’s a 2.3-stroke gap between zero torque and the next-best category. The verdict is straightforward: zero torque performed better, and it wasn’t particularly close.
As a result, the new Tour Edge Zero T putters are a really compelling Father’s Day gift. Tour Edge is bringing four zero-torque models to market for $199.99 each, giving golfers a much lower barrier to entry into one of the hottest putter categories in golf. Compared to much of the zero-torque competition, that is serious value. If Dad has been curious about zero torque but doesn’t want to spend $400 or $500 on a putter, the Tour Edge ZT lineup is a smart way to give dad a low-cost entry into the category.
John
5 seconds ago
I love great golf deals but Isaiah really. A $25.00 golf glove, a golf outfit for around $140 even those prices exceed well beyond my cheapness. However you did hit the mark on the shoes, putters, and wedges. My dad has passed away and I am a father of two girls. If they bought me a golf outfit for a a buck forty I’m afraid I’d have to kick them in the ass. Then I’d kick myself in the ass for not teaching them how to be thrifty.