Back pain and golf
Common Back Pain and Golf Mistakes Golfers Make
Avoid the habits that make sore backs worse: cold starts, marathon range sessions, poor recovery, and ego-driven swings.

The pattern behind many flare-ups
Golfers often blame one swing, but back trouble is usually a stack of small choices: sitting all morning, rushing to the first tee, taking three hard drivers, then walking into the round tight. Add thick rough, awkward lies, and a heavy bag, and the back complains.
Mistakes to watch
| Mistake | Better choice |
|---|---|
| No warm-up | Five minutes of movement before balls |
| Too many full swings | Alternate full shots, pitches, and breaks |
| Hitting through pain | Stop, assess, and seek help if symptoms persist |
| Copying extreme positions | Build a swing around your mobility |
The ego problem
Back pain and golf often collide when a player tries to swing harder because distance has dropped. That can make sequencing worse. A smoother tempo, more club, and better contact may protect your back and your score.
Recovery matters
Post-round stiffness is feedback. Gentle walking, hydration, mobility, and sleep are not glamorous, but they influence how you feel for the next practice. If soreness keeps escalating, don’t self-diagnose from swing tips.
Final thoughts
Most mistakes are fixable with planning. Warm up, manage volume, and treat pain as information rather than an enemy to ignore.