Golf glove guides
Best Golf Gloves for Different Types of Golfers
The best glove depends on how often you play, how much you sweat, and how much feel you want.

Beginners and high handicappers
Start with durability and fit. If you’re still learning how the club sits in your fingers, you’ll probably wear certain spots faster. A synthetic or hybrid glove can handle range work without making every practice session expensive.
Look for a secure palm, comfortable seams, and a price that lets you replace the glove before it becomes slippery.
Mid-handicappers
Mid-handicappers often know their preferences. You may want more feel for wedges, better breathability for walking rounds, or extra grip for humid league nights. This is where rotating gloves becomes smart: one fresh glove in play, one drying, one backup.
Low handicappers
Players who control trajectory and distance carefully often care more about feedback. Thin leather can make a three-quarter wedge or flighted 8-iron feel more connected. The trade-off is wear, so care and rotation matter.
Juniors and seniors
Juniors need gloves that fit correctly now, not ones they’ll grow into. Loose fingertips are a swing problem waiting to happen. Seniors may prefer softer materials, easier closures, or slightly more cushioning if hands get sore during long sessions.
Weather-specific players
If you play coastal wind, morning dew, or summer humidity, build a glove setup instead of one-glove loyalty:
- Dry-day glove for feel.
- Rain glove for wet grips.
- Cold-weather glove when fingers lose sensation.
- Spare glove in a plastic bag for emergencies.
Takeaway
The best golf glove is the one that matches your hand, your rounds, and your climate. Fit is the baseline; feel, durability, and weather protection are the fine-tuning.