Amateur golf
A Beginner's Guide to Amateur Golf
Start here if you want to understand handicaps, formats, etiquette, and why amateur golf is more than casual weekend play.

What amateur golf really means
Amateur golf covers anyone who plays without earning a living from tournament prize money. That might be a new golfer trying to break 100, a scratch player chasing a state championship, a junior in a team match, or a retiree playing the Saturday stableford. The level changes, but the core idea is the same: you compete, improve, and respect the game while keeping golf as a sport rather than a profession.
The first things to learn
A beginner doesn’t need to know every ruling on day one. Focus on the pieces that make rounds smoother:
- Handicap: a way to let different skill levels compete fairly.
- Format: stroke play counts every shot; match play is hole-by-hole.
- Etiquette: be ready, repair pitch marks, rake bunkers, and keep pace.
- Local rules: always check the noticeboard or starter’s sheet.
How to get involved
Start with low-pressure golf. Play nine holes, enter a fun scramble, or join a beginner-friendly club night before signing up for a medal. Keep score honestly, but don’t let the card become the whole story. The early wins are simple: fewer lost balls, better pace, one confident tee shot, or one sensible bogey after trouble.
Beginner’s tip: Your first goal in amateur golf isn’t to impress anyone. It’s to become a reliable playing partner who knows where to stand, when to hit, and how to keep moving.
Quick recap
Amateur golf is welcoming when you treat it as a learning path. Know the basic format, ask polite questions, and build experience one round at a time.