Unwritten Practice Range Etiquette Rules
News

Unwritten Practice Range Etiquette Rules

Support our Mission. We independently test each product we recommend. When you buy through our links, we may earn a commission.

Unwritten Practice Range Etiquette Rules

While some of the standards have evolved over the years, golf remains a game of etiquette.

That doesn’t mean it has to be stuffy and uptight. The etiquette portion, for the most part, refers to common courtesy of other golfers and the course itself. It represents the things you do to ensure the game moves quickly and safely while respecting those around you.

We tend to think of etiquette as how you conduct yourself on the course but it extends beyond that. There is etiquette throughout any facility, including the practice range.

Some parts of practice etiquette are unique to being on a driving range—or more heightened on a range—so I put together a list of previously unwritten practice range etiquette rules.

Airplane Rules For Conversation

When you are on an airplane, the common rule of thumb is that conversation should be held to a minimum. Everyone is sharing the same space so talking excessively during a flight is unnecessary.

Driving ranges should be the same way. Of course, you can interact with people and talk—but don’t stand around yakking on the phone for 15 minutes or have a lengthy and loud conversation with your buddy. Don’t blare music.

There are people at the range who are trying to get better. They are trying to concentrate. Or they want to be out practicing without loud distractions. Just be understanding of those people.

Yes, there are instructors giving lessons on the range. They normally go to a separate area or are on the far end of the range for a reason.

Obviously, there are exceptions to this. If you are at Topgolf or a range where music is blaring, that changes the dynamic. And if you want that type of environment, seek it out. There are plenty of options there.

Be Cognizant Of Where You Are Hitting

This one has several layers to it when it comes to practice facilities.

Step One is to never go out onto the range ahead of the teeing ground. If you break a clubhead or want to grab a tee that flew ahead of you, be 1,000 percent sure nobody is hitting. Ask people to stop hitting or ask an employee for help. Never assume people see you.

Step Two is to watch where you are hitting from. This includes people teeing up ahead or behind of a mat because they want to hit driver, people who are aiming at a far right flag but are struggling with the shanks and right-handed players picking the stall directly to the right of a left-handed player. Just know where you are hitting from relative to everyone else.

Step Three is to watch where you are hitting to—specifically, be wary of the back of the range. There are hundreds of ranges that end at 250 yards or another distance where driver can’t be hit. Maybe someone else is on the back of the range. Maybe one of the holes on the course cuts into the range and a golfer is looking for his ball. Just be aware.

Keep Linear Divot Patterns

This is one that even experienced players forget.

You are using a driving range that must be maintained. If you are hitting off of grass, that grass has to grow back at some point.

How you hit balls impacts how well that grass comes back. It’s such a small consideration so can we all please use linear divot patterns?

All that means is to take divots in a line, one after the other. If you can’t go forward or backward, start a new line with enough space so they don’t connect. The alternatives—like randomly hitting balls anywhere (scatter plot) or making one large square divot (concentrated)—are typically worse for the maintenance staff.

I get that a lot of practice ranges aren’t in great shape. All the more reason to help protect the grass as much as possible. Just do the best you can.

Don’t Try To Hit The Range Picker

I used to pick range balls in college. It’s actually a pretty nice gig. You put on headphones and zone out for awhile—until you get hit. Then it’s like someone blasting a shotgun right next to your ear.

It’s just kind of immature for anyone above 10 years old to take a shot at the picker, especially when the picker is within 50 yards of the teeing ground. Some young kid making minimum wage is just trying to do his job. Aiming at him is the equivalent of going up to someone at their office and hitting a gong as loud as you can while they aren’t looking. Like, can you not!

Yeah, sure, it’s fun to aim at a moving target. But there are flags to aim at and different creative games you can play.

Urinal Rules For Stalls

An unwritten rule for guys is that you don’t use the urinal next to a stranger if there are others available. There isn’t a reason to give someone less space when you have plenty of other options.

Driving ranges are packed these days but I maintain that it’s weird to walk up to a 30-stall range with two people hitting and use a stall next to one of them. It’s nice to be on an empty range hitting in solitude. Don’t invade someone’s space for no reason.

Obviously it’s not weird if you know that person. I’m just talking about if you are by yourself and walk up to a mostly empty range.

This applies to the practice green as well. If there is a green with five holes and only one person is using the green, you don’t need to putt to the same hole.

There can be some exceptions here. Maybe there is more grass or a better mat in a certain section of the range. Maybe you prefer a specific angle.

But, overall, give people space if you can afford it.

No Unsolicited Advice

This is as straightforward as it gets.

Nobody wants swing advice unless they ask for it. I don’t care how well you are hitting it and I don’t care how much someone else is struggling.

I get it. You are a three-handicap and some guy named Fred is seven feet away from you topping every shot because he is choked down to the steel. You could help him in 15 seconds. Please don’t.

Experienced golfers going to the range with a friend who is a beginner can offer to help if the beginner is interested. But, in general, no golfer wants unsolicited advice.

Shopping Cart Rules For Baskets

When you go to the grocery store, you should return your shopping cart to the appropriate place. And when you hit golf balls, you should adequately help clean up any mess you made.

That means pick up broken tees. That means return your basket to where you got it—or hand it to an employee. And while this is going above and beyond, I think it’s a nice touch to offer unused range balls to someone rather than leaving them. If you do leave them, have all the balls in the bucket rather than spilled out on the ground.

These are all just common courtesy best practices. You pick up your toys after using them.

Ranges have to be maintained. Baskets can be limited. Just be a good person.

Repair Ball Marks On Chipping Greens

We all tend to associate ball marks with longer shots into greens but marks can also be made with short game shots.

If you are hitting a bucket of pitch shots to a soft green, you could make a lot of ball marks. I would consider that before hitting and/or repair those ball marks when finished.

If you are on a busy short game area with a lot of people hitting, this may not be possible. Do the best you can with it.

Do you have any other items that should be included on this list?

The range should be a fun and welcoming place. These unwritten rules are just trying to keep it that way for everyone involved.

Let me know your thoughts below in the comments.

For You

For You

Best Super Game-improvement irons of 2026 Best Super Game-improvement irons of 2026
Buyer's Guides
Jun 5, 2026
Best Super Game-Improvement Irons of 2026
Buyer's Guide
Jun 5, 2026
I Tested 5 Complete Golf Sets From $199 To $1,599. Here’s Where to Spend Your Money
News
Jun 5, 2026
Scratch by 50: How I Started Practicing Better
Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

Sean is a longtime golf journalist and underachieving 10 handicap who enjoys the game in all forms. If he didn't have an official career writing about golf, Sean would spend most of his free time writing about it anyway. When he isn't playing golf, you can find Sean watching his beloved Florida Panthers hockey team, traveling to a national park or listening to music on his record player. He lives in Nashville with his wife, Anja, and dog, Hogan.

Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

 
Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm





    This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

      Bob

      2 years ago

      Great list…One other thing I’d add: on the practice green/chipping area, limit the number of balls you use. I’ve seen guys pull out a shag bag in a chipping area, and I’m trying to keep my 3 (nice) balls OUT of his shag collection.

      Reply

      Skeeter H.

      2 years ago

      On a crowded practice green, don’t stand next to the hole you just finished while lining up a putt to another hole. You’re taking up two holes! This cluelessness is a big pet peeve of mine. Better yet, go off to the side, out of the way, space 2 tees in the ground and put to them. Aim small, miss small, as they say!

      Reply

      Yummy

      2 years ago

      You don’t mention Private clubs versus local Munis.
      Most of the above relate to local Munis.
      NOBODY fixes ballmarks on private club chipping greens, they have club employees who do it whenever they have maintenance days or whenever there is quite time. They also have plenty of balls and collect them, whereas at Munis you see clowns who bring their shag bag and unload it all at once and pitch it to one spot from 40 yards away and create acne holes and not repair them at all. At Munis there ought to be a rule where it’s 5-balls MAX and give everybody else space.

      Reply

      David West

      2 years ago

      Rake the sand after you’re finished in the bunker!!

      Reply

      Scratch plus

      2 years ago

      If the range wants you to fill your digits with and it’s usually very close by. The container of sand is not for trash and cigarette butts

      Reply

      BH

      2 years ago

      FOR THE LOVE OF ALL THAT IS HOLY, DON’T SPIT SUNFLOWER HULLS ON THE DADGUM PRACTICE GREEN!!!! Or any green!!!!

      Reply

      Tom

      2 years ago

      “No unsolicited advice” – tell that to Shank Haney, the range un-pro who stalks the range, waiting to foist his knowledge of keeping your head down on unsuspecting hacks who are just there to have a good time with their friends or family. Shank is so dedicated to his craft he’s willing and ready to dispense this knowledge for free.

      Reply

      Shawn

      2 years ago

      I live in Portland, OR and almost all the public driving ranges here use mats year-round. I’m a lefty and find it irritating when someone is using a LH stall when there are plenty of RH stalls.

      Reply

      20 Hack

      2 years ago

      Don’t hog the chipping green if it is busy. Try to stay in one area regardless of what you want to work on. Go practice putting and come back until “that guy” leaves. Put your phone away- step away from the green if you need to take a call. Don’t walk around BSing with the air pods in.

      Reply

      Andrew the Great!

      2 years ago

      “This is one that even experienced players forget.” (the linear divot pattern)

      Maybe they “forget” because a generation ago we were told that the “concentrated” pattern was the way to do it, because it was easier to re-seed the entire spot and the entire spot took up less space than the entire area around the linear pattern (NO ONE is going to place their ball between two lines of divots; too distracting, and if the lines aren’t perfect (and they never are), then it makes for erratic contact). So less range area would be off-limits at any given time while the grass was re-growing.

      The “linear” idea is one that sprang up out of nowhere recently, and everyone buys into it even though there’s zero evidence it’s preferable. I mean, did they not know 30 years ago, when the concentrated pattern was promoted, how grass grows?

      Nope, linear is not better than concentrated. If anything, they’re equally proper.

      Reply

      Will

      2 years ago

      I notice the tour players are still doing the concentrated patch on the range and if your practice facility has flags way left and right of your position on the range I’m not sure divot lines going off in three different directions makes sense. But I’m no superintendent so …

      Reply

      ViceProGuy

      2 years ago

      Don’t shout at your buddy when you see him pull in to the parking. I get that you’re excited that Billy finally made it (and we are, too), but please keep it down.

      Reply

    Leave A Reply

    required
    required
    required (your email address will not be published)

    This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

    Best Super Game-improvement irons of 2026 Best Super Game-improvement irons of 2026
    Buyer's Guides
    Jun 5, 2026
    Best Super Game-Improvement Irons of 2026
    Buyer's Guide
    Jun 5, 2026
    I Tested 5 Complete Golf Sets From $199 To $1,599. Here’s Where to Spend Your Money
    News
    Jun 5, 2026
    Scratch by 50: How I Started Practicing Better