Golf club cleaning
How to Clean Grips and Know When to Replace Them
How to bring tackiness back to grips, spot wear, and decide when cleaning isn't enough anymore.

Why grips get slick
Hands leave oil, sweat, sunscreen, dirt, and range dust. Over time, the surface gets shiny and hard. When that happens, you squeeze harder without realizing it, and tension creeps into your forearms before the takeaway even starts.
A safe grip-cleaning routine
Use warm water, mild soap, and a towel or soft brush. Scrub around the grip, rinse with a damp cloth, and dry thoroughly. Avoid soaking the open end of the grip where water can sneak under the tape.
Signs cleaning won’t fix it
Replace grips when they feel glassy, cracked, hardened, or uneven. Also check the trail-hand thumb area; that’s where many grips wear first. If one club twists at impact more than the others, compare its grip before blaming the swing.
Match grip feel to your hands
Some golfers like soft, tacky grips. Others prefer firmer cord textures in humid weather. If you play in rain or sweat through gloves, texture matters. Try one replacement grip before changing the whole set.
Make it part of your season
Clean grips monthly during active play and more often in hot weather. Regripping once wear appears is cheaper than fighting tension for half a season.
Clean grips and grooves make feedback cleaner too. FocusGolf, a Wear OS, Apple Watch, and Garmin smartwatch app, detects swings automatically without club sensors and tracks motion data such as tempo, speed, consistency, and transition. If your wedge distances or strike pattern improve after fresh grooves and tackier grips, the app’s shot history, club performance, and video review can help separate real improvement from one good range bucket.