If you’ve ever wondered whether your hands should be in front of the ball, level with it or somewhere in between, you’re not alone. Hand position at address affects the entire swing. While hand position may feel different from one club to the next, there’s one universal checkpoint that works for every club.
Point the handle at your lead hip
No matter what club you’re swinging, the butt end of the grip should point toward the inside of your lead hip. Picture the belt loop just left of your zipper (for a right-handed golfer).
The single checkpoint kept with every club in the bag.
- Stops you from setting up with a cupped lead wrist
- Makes it easier to return the club with a flat wrist at impact
- Improves low-point control with irons
- Keeps the takeaway cleaner
- Helps eliminate flipping, scooping, or over-manipulating the clubface
The confusion for most golfers lies in the fact that the hands don’t always look forward.
How hand position changes with each club
Use this table as your quick reference guide for how far forward your hands should be with each golf club you use.
| Club Type | Ball Position | Handle Location (Relative to Ball) | Why It Works |
|---|---|---|---|
| Wedges | Middle of stance | Clearly ahead of the ball | More shaft lean → encourages a downward strike and cleaner contact |
| Short & Mid Irons (8–6 iron) | Slightly ahead of center | Slightly ahead of the ball | Proper compression without excessive lean |
| Long Irons & Hybrids | A little more forward | Nearly level with the ball | Keeps launch playable and prevents digging |
| Driver | Lead heel | Level or slightly behind the ball | Promotes upward hit, adds launch, reduces spin |
What happens if your hand position at address isn’t correct
Small changes in hand position create big changes in wrist angles, clubface orientation and takeaway patterns. Here are some things you may notice if your hand position is incorrect.
Hands too far back
- Lead wrist becomes cupped immediately
- Clubface opens early
- Takeaway gets disconnected and inside
- Results: high-right misses (slice), weak contact, early release
Hands pressed too far forward
- Lead wrist becomes overly bowed at address
- Shoulders tilt excessively
- Club gets trapped behind you
- Results: steep downswings, low left shots, digging, arms-only swings
Final thoughts
Hand position at address might seem like a minimal change or adjustment but it has a big impact. If you point the handle at your lead hip and let the ball position dictate the look, you’ll automatically set up for the swing shape each club demands.
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