Where The Best Golfers Lived in 2025 According To USGA Data

If you love data, this one’s for you.

Every year, the United States Golf Association issues a report summarizing the data gathered from millions of U.S. golfers who post their scores via the World Handicap System. Having access to these numbers does more than create a handsome presentation for the USGA. It also tells a story of how many are maintaining their handicap index, how the “average golfer” performs and even a snapshot of the growth of golf.

Granted, this data from the USGA is based on the golfers who actually record their handicap index but with 3.68 million entrants, it offers a glimpse into trends among golfers actively tracking their performance.

Top 10 average handicap index by state

State Average handicap index — Male State Average handicap index — Female
Arkansas 10.6 Mississippi 22.0
Mississippi 10.7 Arkansas 23.6
Oklahoma 11.1 Hawaii 23.8
Alabama 11.7 Louisiana 24.7
Tennessee 11.9 North Dakota 25.0
North Dakota 12.3 Oklahoma 25.5
Texas 12.4 Texas 25.7
Louisiana 12.5 Alabama 25.9
Kentucky 12.5 Tennessee 26.6
Kansas 12.6 New Mexico 27.0

Source: USGA 2025 Golf Scorecard

One of the most intriguing datapoints is a ranking of which state has the lowest average handicap posted.

Maybe your mind instantly jumps to states like Florida or California where more pleasant year-round weather can mean more golfing days and more scores to enter. Interestingly, the data shows a different story and neither Florida nor California crack the top 10 states with the lowest average.

Instead, the lowest average goes to Arkansas for male golfers and Mississippi for the females and then it flip flops for the second-lowest. Oklahoma, Alabama, Tennessee, North Dakota, Texas and Louisiana appear in the top 10 lowest averages for both male and female golfers, while Hawaii sneaks in as the third-lowest for the females.

The states where golfers post the most scores

State Number of 9- and 18-hole scores recorded
Florida 11,427,566
California 9,092,772
Texas 4,158,193
Arizona 3,699,328
North Carolina 3,578,831
South Carolina 3,022,996
New York 2,969,144
Massachusetts 2,712,116
Pennsylvania 2,473,885
Georgia 2,367,527

Don’t worry, Florida and California, you’re not left out of this conversation for very long. In fact, your two states earn the top spots (with Florida claiming the No. 1 spot handily) for the most scores reported. The two states recorded almost 20 million scores, showing us how deeply engrained golf is both these regions.

What’s most striking about this datapoint is only one state—Texas—has the third-highest number of recorded scores and one of the lowest handicap index averages. What does this tell us about Florida and California or Arkansas and Mississippi? Maybe it’s up to each of us to draw our own conclusions.

The USGA also reports an overall increase of eight percent among golfers who recorded their scores in 2025 compared to 2024. This is good news no matter where you live since it shows us that golfers are getting more engaged with the game year after year.

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