How to Get a Balanced Golf Swing Setup: Step by Step

A balanced golf swing starts before the club moves.

That sounds simple, but it is one of the biggest setup mistakes golfers make. They work on backswing positions, transition moves and impact drills without first checking whether their body is in a position to move well.

If your setup is off balance, your swing has to make compensations.

Here is a step-by-step way to build a more balanced setup.

Step 1: Start with your feet

Your feet are your base.

For most full swings, your feet should be roughly shoulder-width apart. A shorter iron can be a little narrower. A driver can be a little wider.

The key is that you should feel athletic, not stuck.

If your stance is too narrow, you may sway or lose stability. If it is too wide, you may struggle to turn and finish.

Quick test

Take your setup, then gently bounce your knees.

If you feel athletic and stable, your stance width is probably close. If you feel locked, heavy or wobbly, adjust your feet first.

Step 2: Feel pressure in the middle of your feet

Many golfers set up with their weight too much in the heels or too much in the toes.

Both create problems.

Too much in the heels can make you stand up during the swing. Too much in the toes can pull you forward and cause poor contact.

At address, feel pressure through the middle of your feet, maybe slightly toward the balls of the feet. You should feel like you could move in any direction if someone lightly pushed you.

Golf is an athletic motion. Your setup should feel athletic.

Step 3: Hinge from your hips

Good posture does not mean bending from your waist. It means hinging from your hips.

Stand tall, then push your hips slightly back as your chest tilts forward. Let your arms hang naturally from your shoulders.

Your back should feel fairly straight but not rigid. Your knees should have a little flex, not a deep squat.

One of the most common setup mistakes is too much knee bend with too little hip hinge. That can make the golfer sit back, lose rotation and struggle to turn through the shot.

Step 4: Let your arms hang

Once your posture is set, let your arms hang naturally.

Do not reach for the ball. Do not jam your hands too close to your body.

If your arms hang naturally from your shoulders, the club has a better chance to return to the ball without manipulation.

A good checkpoint is whether your hands sit under your shoulders or just slightly outside them. If you feel stretched, you are probably too far from the ball. If you feel crowded, you are probably too close.

Step 5: Match ball position to the club

Balance changes when ball position is wrong.

With wedges and short irons, the ball can be near the middle of the stance. With mid-irons, it moves slightly forward. With fairway woods and driver, it moves farther forward.

Driver is the biggest difference. The ball should be forward enough to promote a sweeping strike.

The mistake is trying to play every club from the same spot. That forces the body to make last-second adjustments.

Step 6: Check your finish

The best way to test your setup is to watch your finish.

A balanced setup should help create a balanced finish.

After each shot, ask yourself one question: Could I hold my finish until the ball lands?

If the answer is no, your setup may need attention.

Falling backward, falling forward or spinning out can all be signs that your starting position was not as balanced as it needed to be.

The balanced setup checklist

Before you swing, check these five things:

  • Feet are athletic and stable
  • Pressure is centered in the feet
  • Posture comes from the hips
  • Arms hang naturally
  • Ball position matches the club

You do not need a perfect setup to play good golf. But you do need a functional one.

The bottom line

Balance is not just something that happens at the end of the swing. It starts at address.

Build a better base, feel pressure in the middle of your feet, hinge from your hips and let your arms hang.

A balanced setup makes the rest of the swing easier.

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