Amateur golf
How Qualification and Competition Work in Amateur Golf
Understand entries, handicaps, qualifying rounds, match play brackets, and the small details that make amateur events run smoothly.

The usual route in
Most amateur events start with eligibility. You may need an active handicap, a club membership, age category, residency, school affiliation, or a handicap limit. Some events are open entry until the field fills; stronger championships often use handicap ballots or local qualifying.
Common competition formats
| Format | How it works | What changes for you |
|---|---|---|
| Stroke play | Count every shot | Avoid big numbers; every hole matters |
| Match play | Win, lose, or halve each hole | Momentum and smart concessions matter |
| Stableford | Points based on net score | Pick up when you can’t score; protect pace |
| Team events | Best ball, foursomes, scrambles | Communication and role clarity are key |
Before you tee it up
Read the conditions of competition before the morning of the event. Check tees, handicap allowances, tie-break rules, starting times, practice restrictions, and whether distance-measuring devices are allowed. Arriving with those answers settled frees your mind for the first tee shot.
Competition habits that help
Good amateurs prepare boringly well. They mark balls, carry snacks, know their start time, and have a rain glove ready. They also understand that qualifying isn’t always about heroic golf. In tough weather, a steady 78 with no disasters can beat a flashier round full of doubles.
Takeaway
Qualification looks complicated from the outside, but most events follow a simple pattern: meet the entry rules, understand the format, show up prepared, and keep your score correctly.