Ask most golfers what their Handicap Index represents and you’ll likely get a little hemming, then a little hawing. Eventually, you’ll get a rough guess. Ask them where that number comes from and you’ll almost certainly get a blank stare, followed by, “It comes from my phone.”
A lot of wonky math goes into your Handicap Index. While you may never do the math yourself, it’s important for serious golfers to understand where the numbers come from and what they mean. The good news is that since the advent of the World Handicap System in 2020, every governing body on the planet uses essentially the same system.
The better news?
All of them have an app.
No matter where you live, the math is virtually the same so let’s see what a Handicap Index is, where it comes from and what it really means.
And why you should care.
What Is a Handicap?
According to the USGA, more than 3.2 million golfers in the U.S. carry a Handicap Index. That’s a 23-percent increase from 2020. Of those 3.2 million, 81 percent are men. The average Handicap Index is 28.7 for women and 14.2 for men, although nearly 70 percent of men carry a Handicap Index between 5.0 and 19.9. Only two percent of men and 0.75 percent of women are scratch or better.
In its Rules of Handicapping, the USGA identifies a “Bogey Golfer” as a player with a Handicap Index of approximately 20 for men and approximately 24 for women.
That’s all well and good, but what does your Handicap Index really mean?
Just because the USGA says your handicap is 10, that doesn’t mean you normally shoot 10 over par. It also doesn’t mean you should expect to shoot 10 over par any time you tee it up. Your Handicap Index is a good deal wonkier than that.
Your handicap is based on your eight best Score Differentials from your last 20 rounds. Note the term Score Differentials. It’s not the same as your actual score (we’ll discuss the difference later).
We’ll get to the math behind it all in a minute. But first understand handicaps exist for one simple reason. No, it’s not so you can tell the world how freaking awesome you are at this game. A handicap is a mechanism that allows golfers of different skill levels to compete evenly head to head. It’s similar to horse racing, where handicappers assign additional weights to faster horses to give them all an equal chance of winning. The better the horse, the more weight is has to carry.
Your Handicap Index is the same thing.
Only different.
A Centuries’-Long Struggle
The first known references to handicaps date to the late 17th Century. By the late 19th Century, golfers in Scotland would negotiate strokes before teeing off. Common terms included “third-one,” which meant the better golfer would give one stroke every three holes. “Half-one” was one stroke every two holes. “One More” and “Two More” would be one or two strokes per hole.
Eventually, the Scots settled on a system based on the average of a golfer’s three best scores during the year compared to a new concept called “par.”
The USGA Handicap System was formalized in 1911. It was based on the Scottish three-score average but it included a system that assessed the average good score of a scratch golfer at every course.
The system has evolved over the past 113 years with changes, addendums and alterations. The entire globe unified under the World Handicap System in 2020. Before that, the biggest changes came in the 1970s and early ‘80s, when the Course Rating and Slope Rating systems were developed.
Course Rating and Slope Rating are key elements to determine your Handicap Index. Unfortunately, most golfers have no idea what they mean beyond “the higher the number, the harder the course.”
Course Rating and Slope Rating
Introduced in 1976, the USGA Course Rating system assesses how difficult a course would be for a scratch golfer. The number itself estimates a scratch golfer’s best scores. For example, a par-71 with a 68.4 rating is noticeably easier than one with a 73.8 rating. A scratch golfer would average just over 68 for 18 holes on the easier course and just under 74 on the harder one.
Conversely, “Slope Rating” expresses course difficulty for bogey golfers compared to scratch golfers. The higher the Slope Rating, the higher the expected score differential between a scratch and a bogey golfer. Slope puts into numbers the fact that course difficulty is not linear.
The USGA Handicap System says an average difficulty course has a Slope rating of 113. (Keep that number in mind.) Slope is based on several factors including elevation, doglegs, forced carries, water, trees, green sizes and surfaces, bunkers, fairway widths and rough. You know, all the things that make you want to snap your 5-iron over your knee.
Raters then determine the Bogey Rating, what a bogey golfer would shoot on the course. Then they pull out the calculator.
Let’s consider a course with a Course Rating of 74. If the raters establish a Bogey Rating of 99, here’s how the USGA would figure the Slope:
(Bogey Rating – Course Rating) x 5.381 (a math constant for men’s golf) = Slope.
In this case, the delta between the bogey golfer’s score and the Rating is 25 (99-74).
25 x 5.381 = 135 Slope.
That means the course has significantly more bite than an average course with a Slope of 113.
Calculating Your Handicap Index
As mentioned, your Handicap Index is the average of your eight best Score Differentials over your last 20 rounds.
Score Differential accounts for both Course Rating and Slope Rating. It also includes your Adjusted Gross Score, based on a Net Double Bogey max score on any hole. You’ll also find something called PCC, Playing Conditions Calculation. The World Handicap System allows for adjustments if a course or weather conditions affect play. I’ve yet to see it implemented in my Index but it’s there.
Let’s take two rounds at somewhat similar golf courses as examples. First is Shaker Hills in Harvard, Mass, a par-72 with a Course Rating of 70.4 and a Slope of 138 from the Blue/White combo tees. Here’s the formula used to determine your Score Differential:
(113 ÷ Slope) × (Adjust Gross Score – Course Rating – PCC) = Score Differential.
Remember, 113 is the Slope for a course of average difficulty. Let’s say you shoot an 86, or 14 over par. Here’s what it would look like:
(113 ÷ 138) × (86 – 70.4 – 0 PCC) = Score Differential
.82 × 15.6 = 12.8
For handicap purposes, that 86 is considered an 84.8.
The next day you play Maplegate in Bellingham, Mass. It’s also a par-72 with a lower Slope (128) than Shaker but a higher Course Rating (72.2). Let’s say you shoot an 81:
(113 ÷ 128) × (81 – 72.2 – 0 PCC) = Score Differential
.88 × 8.8 = 7.7
For handicap purposes, that’s a 79.7.
Now, do that math for your last 20 scores. Then find the eight best Score Differentials and average them out. That’s your Handicap Index.
What About Course Handicap?
The anchor point for your Handicap Index is that 113 Slope Rating. According to the USGA Handicap System, your Handicap Index is what you’d likely shoot over par on a course with that Slope.
Let’s say you’re playing a friendly match at Maplegate. You and your opponent need your Course Handicaps to make the match even.
Pre-World Handicap System, it was pretty simple:
(Slope ÷ 113) × HCP = Course Handicap
For the 6-handicapper, the Course Handicap would look like this:
(128 ÷ 113) × 6 = Course Handicap
1.13 × 6 = 6.78
If you round up, that makes it a 7 Course Handicap.
Your opponent is a 14 Handicap Index. Here’s what he’d get:
1.13 × 14 = 15.82
Round that up to 16. If we had played straight handicaps, your opponent would get eight strokes. But with Course Handicap factored in, he or she would get nine strokes.
The World Handicap System added a wrinkle to all this in 2020 by including par in the equation. Everything stays the same except, at the end, you add the Course Rating minus Par from the tees you’re playing.
In the case of Maplegate, the Course Rating is 72.2 while the course is par-72. The updated formula would only add 0.2 to each Course Handicap. Depending on the course, the extra math could mean getting or giving an additional stroke. We know how cutthroat Member-Member and Member-Guest events can be but, for the casual $2 Nassau, it’s a difference without a distinction.
The World Handicap System Clarified
The USGA and the world’s other governing bodies (The R&A, Golf Australia, The European Golf Association, The South African Golf Association, The Argentine Golf Association, Golf Canada and the Council of National Golf Unions) all administer the World Handicap system in their respective jurisdictions.
Before 2020, each jurisdiction had its own handicap methodology. If you played in the UK prior to 2020, for example, you couldn’t enter your scores into the USGA’s GHIN app for consideration. The World Handicap System unifies handicapping so your Handicap Index is valid anywhere.
We hope this math exercise helps clarify where your Handicap Index comes from and what it means. To learn more, you can check out the World Handicap System website or the USGA website page on handicaps.
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