Golf can get expensive fast, especially when you are new to the game. Between clubs, gear, technology and advice coming from every direction … it is easy to spend money in ways that do not actually help you improve or learn the game.
The problem, sometimes, is not spending money but spending in the wrong order.
Some purchases help you learn the game faster. Others only matter once you have some experience. This list focuses on what makes sense early and what can wait.
1. Lessons
If you are starting from scratch, lessons are the best place to spend money. This does not mean committing to weekly instruction or a long-term program. It means learning the basics before bad habits form.
A few lessons can teach you how to hold the club, where to stand and what solid contact should feel like. Those fundamentals affect every swing you will ever make. It is much harder to break a bad habit later than it is to learn something correctly from the start.
2. Putter
For a beginner, a good hole is two putts. The reality for many new players is three-putting most greens until they get more comfortable. That is a lot of strokes coming from one club.
There are putters that make putting easier and fit your setup properly. Alignment, balance and length matter more than most beginners realize. If you plan to play golf long term, the putter you buy now can stay in your bag for many years.
Try the: PING Scottsdale Prime Tyne 4 or the Tommy Armour Impact No. 2
3. Golf shoes
Plenty of people say you can play golf in sneakers and be fine. You can but that does not mean it is ideal when you are learning.
When you are trying to pivot, load into the ground and use your lower body effectively, traction and stability matter. Slipping, standing awkwardly or losing balance changes how you move. Those changes show up in your swing.
A good pair of golf shoes provides a stable base. That stability makes it easier to turn, push off the ground and repeat your motion. Sneakers cannot offer the same support or traction, especially on uneven or damp turf.
Try the: Skechers Go Golf Elite 6 (men) and FootJoy Women’s Flex (women)
4. Wedges
Many beginner sets include only a pitching wedge. That is rarely enough. To get out of bunkers and handle shots around the green, you need more loft.
Loft matters. Without enough of it, getting the ball airborne from sand or rough becomes much harder. Make sure you have at least one higher-lofted wedge.
Do not buy used wedges. Groove wear is difficult to see and worn grooves make it harder to control launch and spin. That works against you when you are trying to develop feel and distance control. You do not need the most expensive wedges but you do need grooves that perform.
Try the: Wilson Infinite wedge

5. Golf Balls
You may not need premium golf balls as a new golfer but the cheapest options are not the answer.
Playing the same ball round after round helps you learn distances and predict outcomes. Paying a little more for consistency is worth it if you are serious about improving.
Try the: Vice Pro, Maxfli Tour, or Kirkland Signature
6. Driver
Getting the ball in play off the tee and as far as possible is one of the indicators that helps golfers move toward breaking 100 and eventually 90.
There is a meaningful difference between drivers when it comes to forgiveness and distance. Look for adjustable drivers known for producing consistent shots rather than chasing maximum distance.
Buying a used driver that is two or three years old is fine. Testing results from a reputable source such as MyGolfSpy can help identify models that performed well for golfers in your swing speed range.
7. Rangefinder or GPS
A rangefinder or GPS is a nice accessory, but it is not essential early on. Free GPS apps can handle yardages while you are still learning.
Once you develop more consistency, distances become more important. That is when dedicated devices start to add value, especially if they also offer performance tracking.
Try the: Shot Scope GPS, rangefinder and tracking products

8. Golf Bag
Your golf bag is your home base. It holds your gear, keeps you organized and makes rounds more enjoyable. That said, a premium bag is not essential at the beginning.
Focus on building the set you are going to play with first. Once that is settled, upgrading to a bag that fits your needs (and if you prefer to walk/ride) makes more sense.
Try the: Maxfli Honors Lite
9. Training Aids
I have tested almost every training aid on the market. Many of them work but new golfers can quickly end up with a garage full of useless tools.
Before investing in training aids, you need a clear problem to fix. Early on, there are usually many issues and no clear way to identify which one is causing which result.
Stick with lessons until you have more clarity. When you are ready, start simple.
Try the: Divot Board or Tour Striker Smart Ball

10. Club Fitting
A beginner fitting can help identify forgiving club categories but meaningful fittings require patterns. You need time to develop those patterns first.
Some parts of a golfer’s game progress faster than others. One player may get comfortable with the driver quickly but their irons may take years. Go for a fitting when you feel ready and you are looking for more consistency in a specific club.
If you’re taking lessons, don’t be afraid to ask the professional if your game is ready for a fitting. They have enough insight to know if it will work.
Final thought
Golf gets expensive when you buy the wrong things in the wrong order. New golfers do not need more gear. They need direction, stability and consistency.
Spend money where it helps you learn and save it where it does not.
The post What New Golfers Should Spend Money On First (And What Can Wait) appeared first on MyGolfSpy.