Used golf equipment

How to Compare Used Golf Equipment

Compare used clubs by role, condition, fit, and total cost — in that order.

How to Compare Used Golf Equipment illustration

Put the clubs into jobs

A used 5-wood, hybrid, and driving iron may all look like “long club” options, but they solve different problems. Compare them by the shot you need: high carry, rough escape, tee accuracy, or a specific gap between clubs.

Comparison table

Category What to compare Deal breaker
Driver/woods Face, crown, shaft fit, adjustability Cracks, dents, wrong shaft profile
Hybrids Launch, offset, sole wear Left-miss pattern you cannot manage
Irons Set makeup, groove wear, shaft consistency Mixed shafts or bent heads
Wedges Grooves, bounce, sole wear Smooth strike area or wrong grind
Putters Length, lie, face insert, alignment Poor aim or damaged insert

Use performance history, not only a launch day

FocusGolf is useful after a used-club test because it tracks shots and distances on Wear OS, Apple Watch, and Garmin without club sensors. Over several rounds, its session history and club-performance data can show whether that used hybrid actually fills the gap you bought it for or simply looked good in the shop.

Comparison habit: Judge the club against the job in your bag, not against every listing on the internet.