I recently watched two students hit balls side by side on the range. One student, about an 8-handicap, made these beautiful, flowing swings that looked like they belonged on Golf Channel. Her backswing was long, graceful, and technically impressive. The other student, a 16-handicap, had this short, compact motion that barely got the club to parallel. Yet he was striping it down the middle while she sprayed balls all over the range.
“Why can’t I hit it like him?” she asked, frustrated after another slice sailed out of the range onto the adjacent ninth fairway.
This question represents everything wrong about how many recreational golfers think about swing mechanics. After 20-plus years of teaching, I’ve learned the “perfect” backswing doesn’t exist. What matters is finding the backswing length that matches your body, your timing and your natural tendencies.
Social media has made this obsession worse. Dramatic full swings get more views than efficient, compact motions. But here’s what I know: Some golfers will always play better with shorter swings while others need that full extension to generate power and maintain rhythm.
Why compact swings work
A shorter backswing offers immediate benefits most golfers ignore. Control becomes easier when you’re not trying to manage a club that travels past parallel. Your timing windows expand. You eliminate the positions where things typically go wrong.
I’ve watched countless students transform their games by shortening their backswings. My favorite example: a 68-year-old retiree who couldn’t break 90 despite decent fundamentals. His long, loose backswing created timing chaos—fat shots, thin shots, everything in between. We shortened his swing to three-quarters. His contact improved immediately. He lost maybe 10 yards of distance but gained 30 yards of accuracy.
“Compact” doesn’t mean restricted or tense. Look at Tony Finau and Jon Rahm. They generate tremendous power from relatively short positions. Their swings are compact but athletic, controlled but aggressive through impact.
When you need the full swing
Some golfers absolutely need that full backswing to play their best golf. These are players with smooth tempos, good flexibility and natural timing. For them, a shorter swing feels rushed and uncomfortable—like trying to sprint in slow motion.
I worked with a college player who’d been told by multiple instructors to shorten his swing. His natural motion was long and flowing but coaches kept trying to make him more compact for “control.” The result? Mechanical, lifeless golf that destroyed his natural rhythm. When we restored his full backswing and worked on other areas, his ball-striking returned immediately.
The longer backswing helps golfers who struggle to generate clubhead speed. If you’re not particularly strong or flexible, that extra length provides the time and space needed to build momentum through the hitting zone.
Find your natural length
The biggest mistake golfers make? Copying what they see on television or social media. Tour players spent decades developing swings that match their specific physical capabilities and competitive demands. Your swing should match your body and your goals.
But here’s what matters more than how far back the club goes: The relationship between your upper body turn and your hip rotation. I’ve seen golfers obsess over getting the club to parallel or past parallel when they should focus on making a full shoulder turn against a more restricted hip turn. This coil creates the power and consistency they’re actually seeking.
Think of it this way: Whether your club reaches parallel, goes past it or stops short doesn’t matter if your upper body isn’t turning properly in relation to your hips. A golfer with a “short” backswing who creates good separation between shoulder and hip rotation will hit it better than someone with a “long” backswing who turns everything together like a spinning top.
Here’s what I tell students: Start with your natural motion and make small adjustments from there. If you naturally make a long backswing, don’t fight it unless it’s causing specific problems. If you’re naturally compact, embrace that efficiency instead of trying to create length you don’t need.
The key is ensuring that, regardless of your backswing length, you’re creating that proper turn relationship. Your shoulders should rotate more than your hips on the way back. That’s where your power comes from—not from how far the club travels.
Pay attention to your best shots. When you stripe one down the middle, what did that backswing feel like? Most golfers already know their optimal length. They just need permission to trust it.

Stop chasing perfection
Your backswing length should serve your game, not some idealized version of what a golf swing should look like. Compact swings aren’t automatically better. Long swings aren’t inherently flawed. What matters is finding the length that allows you to make solid contact consistently while generating adequate power for your game.
Stop chasing the so-called “perfect” backswing. Start perfecting your natural one. Your scorecard will improve when you work with your tendencies instead of against them.
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