
Indoor golf practice
How to Structure Indoor Golf Practice
Build indoor sessions with a purpose: warm up, choose one skill, add feedback, create pressure, and review what to do next.
Indoor practice lets you improve when daylight, weather, or time is working against you. Done well, it sharpens technique, distance control, start line, and routine without needing a perfect range day. Use these guides to make indoor sessions structured, measurable, and connected to the shots you'll face outdoors.

Indoor golf practice
Build indoor sessions with a purpose: warm up, choose one skill, add feedback, create pressure, and review what to do next.

Indoor golf practice
Choose indoor drills that give feedback on contact, start line, face control, tempo, and distance instead of simply filling time.

Indoor golf practice
Indoor practice fails when golfers chase numbers, hit too many identical shots, or ignore the gap between a mat swing and a course swing.

Indoor golf practice
Use a compact half-hour plan that warms you up, targets one skill, adds a scoring game, and leaves notes for next time.

Indoor golf practice
Measure the skills that matter indoors: strike pattern, start line, carry control, dispersion, tempo, and how well practice transfers to the course.

Indoor golf practice
Add club changes, routines, targets, lies, pressure games, and consequences so indoor improvement has a better chance of traveling outdoors.