Golf shoes
Golf Shoes: What to Know Before You Buy
A practical buyer’s guide to shoes that keeps comfort, performance, and real-course use ahead of marketing claims.

Start with the round you actually play
Buying shoes gets easier when you picture a wet sidehill lie with driver in hand, not a product page. Think about what the shoes must handle by hole fourteen: soggy rough, a downhill lie, and a body that wants to cut corners in the setup. Grip, heel lock, and breathability at that point in the round matter most.
Start with what the round actually requires:
- Grip: does the sole hold on wet slopes, muddy paths, and steep sidehill lies?
- Fit: does the upper lock the heel without squeezing the forefoot across 18 holes?
- Breathability: do your feet stay comfortable through a warm summer morning round?
- Waterproofing: does the protection hold after a full season of early starts in dew?
What to test before buying
Don’t judge shoes from a single perfect moment. Walk forty yards in each direction, make three full swings, then check whether the heel still sits firmly in place and the forefoot has room. A shoe that pinches at twenty practice balls will pinch on the 15th tee too.
Fit check: The shoe that keeps you balanced on a wet sidehill in the rain is worth more than the one that looks best walking off the 18th.