If you haven’t heard by now, MacGregor has a set of three wedges for $170. That’s less than the price of a single brand-new wedge nowadays, but more disturbingly, that’s nearly the price of a single golf polo from some brands. That is absolutely ridiculous.
In my best polos article, I ranked the best golf polos under $40, under $80, and over $90. The more I sit with my rankings and the more golf I play, I’ve realized one thing: Quince makes the best overall polo in golf, and its only real competition is Uniqlo. I’ve said it before: both Quince and Uniqlo are making polos that punch way above their weight class in terms of price and quality. But the unfortunate reality is this: they perform completely above their price.
No mass-produced synthetic golf polo should cost $100. Honestly, most shouldn’t cost more than $50. Even $50 seems steep, especially considering what the overwhelming majority of golf shirts are made of nowadays: synthetic materials. Yes, you heard that right— the majority of golf polos nowadays are 100 percent synthetic—usually a blend of polyester, spandex, and/or nylon.
That’s where this whole “premium polo” conversation starts to fall apart. Because what, exactly, is premium about a mass-produced synthetic golf shirt in 2026?
I’m not asking that rhetorically. I mean it literally. What is the meaningful difference between a $29.90 Uniqlo polo and a $120 Greyson polo when both are built around the same basic idea: lightweight synthetic fabric, stretch, moisture-wicking performance, a modern fit and enough shape retention to survive a few trips through the wash?
My Greyson polo (left) and my Uniqlo polo (right). While slightly less wrinkled, the Greyson polo costs $120 whereas the Uniqlo costs $29.90. There isn’t a world where the Greyson polo is four times better than the Uniqlo.
Is the Greyson “nicer”? Sure. The collar is more unique. The placket is longer and deeper. The shirt has a more elevated visual identity. I’m not pretending those things aren’t real. If you know anything about me, it’s that I care deeply about my appearance on the course. However, I also understand that you can look good without spending a lot of money.
Are the slightly more elevated details on the Greyson shirt worth four times the price of the Uniqlo?
No.
As you can see, the Greyson polo and the Uniqlo polo are 100 percent synthetic. With an almost identical makeup, feel in-hand, on-course performance, and durability after numerous washes, I can’t find any meaningful quality gap between these polos.
That’s the problem with premium golf polos today. The category has become so saturated with synthetic performance fabrics that any type of hierarchy no longer exists. Twenty years ago, maybe a lightweight, moisture-wicking polo felt meaningfully different from the boxy cotton parachutes golfers wore in the 90s. Back then, performance fabric was a revolutionary invention. Today, it’s the bare minimum.
Almost every modern golf polo stretches. Almost every golf polo is moisture-wicking. Almost every golf polo claims to be “breathable, cooling, lightweight, easy-care and built for all-day comfort.” You can find those features at Uniqlo. You can find them at Quince. You can find them at big-box retailers. You can find them on Amazon. At this point, “performance fabric” is not a luxury feature. It is table stakes.
And yet, plenty of premium golf brands are still pricing these shirts as if they’ve cracked some secret code. Let me tell you something: they haven’t, and their shirts are going to perform, look and feel pretty similar to what you can get for a whole lot less.
A 90-something-percent polyester polo with a little elastane is not a miracle of modern garment engineering, nor is it expensive to make. It’s not inherently luxurious. It is, in many cases, the same basic synthetic recipe everyone else is using, only with a better logo, a more aspirational brand story and a much higher margin.
This is where the collar argument becomes so telling. You’ll hear brands talk about having the best collar in golf, the perfect collar, a collar that won’t curl, a collar that holds its shape, a collar that makes the shirt look more refined. Fine. A good collar is better than a bad collar.
But if the collar is your key selling point, that’s not saying much. Actually, it’s saying everything.
It tells me there may not be much else to justify the price. If the main difference between a $30 polo and a $120 polo is that one has a slightly better collar and a deeper placket, then the premium brand has not made a four-times-better product. It has made a slightly nicer version of a product that already exists at a much more honest price.
That’s why brands like Uniqlo and Quince, in my opinion, are truly making the best polos in golf. They’re not making “good for the price” polos in the backhanded compliment sense. They’re making legitimately good golf polos at prices that make the rest of the market look ridiculous.
This is not about whether a Greyson polo is bad. It’s not. This is not about whether Peter Millar, Johnnie-O, Holderness & Bourne, or any other premium golf brand makes comfortable or even good golf shirts. Many of them do. The question is whether those shirts are meaningfully better than the budget-friendly competition in a way that justifies charging $100, $110 or $120.
More often than not, I don’t think they are.
The other part of this that never gets mentioned enough is what these shirts are actually made of. They’ve been dressed up with words like technical, performance, cooling and moisture-wicking, but the reality is that most of these polos are plastic, petroleum based-synthetics: polyester, nylon, and elastane.
Look, I understand why golfers like them. I wear them, too. Cotton holds moisture, and it can feel hotter. It doesn’t always perform as well in heat, especially for walkers or anyone who sweats a lot. I’m not pretending every golfer should abandon performance fabric and start playing summer rounds in heavyweight cotton pique.
But let’s be honest about what we’re buying. A lot of “premium” golf polos are mass-produced, synthetic, microplastic-shedding garments being sold under the language of luxury. That doesn’t mean they’re useless. It means the marketing has gotten way ahead of the product.
This is also why I have a lot of respect for brands like B. Draddy and Arnie McNair charging higher prices for 100-percent cotton polos. You may or may not want to wear cotton on the course, but at least they’re offering a different proposition. There is a material and philosophical difference.
I’m not inherently against expensive clothing. I’m against average products being treated as exceptional because the price tag says they are. I’m against calling something premium when the fabric, construction and performance features are nearly indistinguishable from shirts that cost a quarter of the price. I’m not here to tell anyone how to spend their money. If you want to pay four times more for the expensive shirt, rock on.
However, let’s stop pretending most premium golf polos are premium because of what they are. In many cases, they are premium because of what they cost. When a $29.90 Uniqlo or $34.90 Quince polo can stand next to a $120 shirt without any real quality gap, the problem is certainly not Uniqlo or Quince.
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