Every golfer has had that moment. You miss the green by a few yards, chip it to tap-in range and walk off thinking, “I’d rather have been there than facing a 50-foot putt from the wrong tier.” I’ve had rounds where I’ve been short, left or right and still preferred the simple up-and-down over a long, defensive two-putt.
It raises a fair question: Is hitting the green in regulation always better or are some misses actually easier?
To settle it, we dug into Shot Scope data across millions of approach shots. The answer is clear: GIR is the single strongest scoring predictor in amateur golf.
The advantage is massive and consistent. But the distance from the hole, the proximity of your first putt, tells the second half of the story.
Let’s walk through what really happens to your score when you hit (or miss) the green.
The scoring power of GIR
Shot Scope tracked approach shots from 50 to 220 yards across all handicaps and compared the scoring outcomes of GIR hits versus GIR misses. What they found was that missing the green in regulation costs you about 1.13 strokes per hole.
| Situation | Avg Score (vs Par) |
|---|---|
| GIR Hit | +0.05 |
| GIR Miss | +1.18 |
Even if you’re confident with your wedges, you’ll have a hard time arguing the concept that getting up and down is easier than a long-range putt.
How GIR affects different handicaps
The penalty for missing greens gets larger as handicaps rise. Scratch golfers lose less than one stroke when they miss. Higher handicappers lose much more.
| Hcp | GIR Hit | GIR Miss | Scoring Difference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Scratch | -0.11 | 0.66 | 0.77 |
| 5 | -0.03 | 0.83 | 0.86 |
| 10 | 0.05 | 1.00 | 0.96 |
| 15 | 0.13 | 1.21 | 1.07 |
| 20 | 0.21 | 1.42 | 1.21 |
| 25 | 0.30 | 1.64 | 1.34 |
Higher handicaps are essentially punished twice because they hit fewer greens and they pay a steeper price when they miss.
A 25-handicap loses 1.34 strokes by missing a GIR, nearly double the cost for a scratch golfer. That makes GIR the most important “big lever” for improving scoring for mid- and high-handicap players.
Proximity: Why some GIRs help more than others
Hitting the green matters. But where you hit the green matters just as much.
Shot Scope analyzed first-putt distance on GIR holes (inside 50 feet) and found a clear pattern. Once you get outside roughly 30 feet, the advantage of the GIR starts to evaporate because three-putts rise quickly.
| First Putt Distance (ft) | 3-Putt % | Avg Score |
|---|---|---|
| 0–10 ft | 6.6% | -0.13 |
| 10–20 ft | 6.9% | -0.05 |
| 20–30 ft | 13.6% | +0.08 |
| 30–40 ft | 22.0% | +0.19 |
| 40–50 ft | 30.9% | +0.29 |
A few insights stand out.
- Inside 20 feet: Three-putts are below seven percent and scores stay under par.
- 20–30 feet: Scoring crosses into over-par territory and the three-putt rate nearly doubles.
- 30 feet and beyond: Nearly one in four GIRs turns into a three-putt.
- Past 40 feet: Almost a third of these “successful” GIRs end in bogey.
There’s a real tipping point around 30 feet where the safety of a GIR starts giving way to the risk of a three-putt. However, there is no distance, from 10 feet to 50 feet, where a GIR becomes worse than missing the green. It never flips. It only becomes less valuable.
So … does GIR really help your score?
Greens in regulation help your score but the impact depends on how close your shot is to the hole.
Here’s the simplest way to think about it.
- GIR is the strongest scoring stat in amateur golf.
- The higher your handicap, the more GIR matters.
- Proximity determines the value of the GIR and how many strokes it will “save” you.
- The fastest ways to score better are to hit more greens and don’t three-putt.
Conclusion
Golfers often debate whether it’s better to leave themselves an easy chip than a long first putt. Shot Scope’s data makes the answer clear: hitting the green almost always wins. The difference between a hit and a miss is too large to ignore and the effect only becomes more dramatic as handicaps rise.
But the real key isn’t just hitting greens—it’s hitting greens to manageable distances. GIRs inside 20 feet save strokes. GIRs outside 30 feet move you into three-putt territory.
So the path to better scoring isn’t a mystery. It’s a blend of two skills that complement each other.
- Give yourself more chances by finding more greens.
- Keep the advantage by leaving that first putt close enough to lag safely.
Do both and the numbers say your scores will fall—no guesswork required.
The post Does GIR Really Help Your Score? appeared first on MyGolfSpy.
Article Link: https://mygolfspy.com/news-opinion/instruction/does-gir-really-help-your-score/