Golfers on a mission to get better aren’t lazy. If anything, the problem runs in the opposite direction. We watch the videos, hit the range, grind through bad rounds and look for answers after every one. We put in time and effort and then we shoot the same score we shot last year.
The issue is that some of our most ingrained habits feel like the right things to do. They are not. They mimic improvement without producing it. Here are five golf habits worth taking a hard look at.
You practice the shots you already own
The 7-iron feels good so you hit the 7-iron. It’s easier to find your rhythm so you hit some good ones on the range and leave feeling like you are getting somewhere with your game.
But the shots that are costing you strokes are the 40-yard pitch from a tight lie, the punch out from under a tree, the awkward half-wedge from an uneven lie, the 5-iron. Those are the shots you never touched because they’re uncomfortable and uncertain and nobody wants to practice feeling lost.
The range session that helps your score is the one built around your weakest shots, not your favorites. Even if you look like the worst golfer on the range, if you’re working on the hard shots, chances are you’re the only one getting better.

You go through your pre-shot routine without making a decision
The practice swing happened, maybe even before you gave the club a waggle. You took a breath, stepped in, and looked at the target. Everything looked like a pre-shot routine from the outside. But at no point did you commit to a specific target, a specific shot shape or a specific landing area.
The mental side and the commitment are the most important elements of the pre-shot routine.
A routine without a decision is pointless. It gives you the feeling of preparation without any of the mental work that makes preparation useful. On the course, the decision is the whole job. Make sure you incorporate that.
You hit the “safe” club you don’t actually trust
Pulling 3-wood feels responsible. But if you haven’t been hitting it well and don’t fully trust it, you’re not being smarter. You’re just hitting it shorter with the same uncertainty you’d have with driver.
The responsible play and the club you trust are not always the same thing. If your miss rates aren’t any better with your 3-wood than with the driver, hit the driver.
You’re playing the last hole instead of the current one
Having a bad hole is tough to move on from. When you then put pressure on yourself to recoup those lost shots, it makes things even more difficult.
You push a little harder off the next tee, you take on a flag you’d normally miss, you try to make a birdie from a situation that was always going to be a bogey, and then you end up with another double bogey to recover from.
The habit is subtle because it feels like competitiveness. You’re fighting and trying not to give up. But golf doesn’t reward fighting the scorecard. Every hole is its own problem and the golfer who can reset after a double and play the next hole on its own terms will go lower.

You’re waiting until your swing feels right before you take it to the course
This is a difficult one for me because if I have a problem in my swing, I like to work on it until it feels grooved. However, I think there are times this becomes restrictive and postpones improvement.
The swing you have on the range is never the swing you have on the course. The pressure of a real shot, one ball, real stakes, changes everything. There is no range session long enough to manufacture course-ready confidence.
Most importantly, the range will never teach you to score. You need to be able to be on the course with the swing you have that day. The golfers who get better at scoring spend time learning to score, not seeking to perfect a swing they’ll never quite find.
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