Skip to main content

Golf Etiquette Rules: What Every Golfer Needs to Know Before Playing

Last updated: March 21, 2026

TLDR

Golf etiquette is a set of conventions around pace, courtesy, and course care that experienced golfers expect everyone to follow. Ready golf, maintaining honors, and knowing when to pick up are the most important for casual play.

DEFINITION

Ready Golf
A pace-of-play practice where golfers hit when ready rather than strictly following honors (lowest score hits first). Widely encouraged for casual rounds to maintain pace. The traditional honors system still applies in formal competition.

DEFINITION

Honors
The traditional order of play where the player with the lowest score on the previous hole tees off first on the next hole. On the first tee, honors are often determined by coin flip or agreed order.

DEFINITION

Gimme
An informal concession in casual play where a putt is deemed short enough to be given without actually putting out. Accepted in casual rounds as a pace-of-play courtesy. Not permitted in stroke play for official handicap posting — all putts must be holed in rounds you intend to post.

DEFINITION

Pace of Play Standard
The expected time for a round, typically 4 hours for 18 holes for a foursome. Course rangers enforce pace standards. Groups playing more than one hole behind the group ahead may be asked to skip a hole or pick up the pace.

Golf etiquette is not in the official rulebook. The Rules of Golf govern what you can and cannot do; etiquette governs how you should behave. Most of it comes down to two principles: do not slow down the round and do not disturb other players.

Why Etiquette Matters More Than Rules to Most Golfers

Casual golfers break golf rules constantly without realizing it — playing from the wrong spot, taking relief incorrectly, misidentifying their ball. These infractions rarely affect anyone else’s round.

Bad etiquette, on the other hand, directly affects every other person on the course. Slow play, leaving footprints in bunkers, talking during someone’s backswing — these impose costs on others. The social contract of golf relies on everyone following etiquette even when no one is formally enforcing it.

The Pace of Play Problem

Pace is the central etiquette concern at most courses. The standard for 18 holes is roughly 4 hours for a foursome. Rounds that stretch to 5+ hours are uncomfortable for everyone.

Common pace violations:

  • Not having a club selected before you reach your ball
  • Searching more than 3 minutes for a lost ball (the Rules of Golf allow only 3 minutes)
  • Not being ready to hit when it is your turn
  • Slow walking between shots

Ready golf is the solution for casual rounds. In a ready golf format, you hit when prepared rather than waiting for strict honors order. Most public courses explicitly encourage ready golf.

On the Green

The green has more etiquette rules than anywhere else on the course:

  • Do not walk through another player’s putting line (the path from their ball to the hole)
  • Mark your ball with a coin and lift it if it is in someone else’s path
  • Tend the pin if someone asks you to hold it while they putt
  • Repair your ball mark (the dent from your approach shot landing)
  • Step off the green before recording scores

Social Play and Respect

Golf is a social game. Part of the etiquette is knowing when to give a gimme generously in casual rounds, when to keep conversation going between shots, and when to be quiet while someone is over the ball. Reading the room — knowing whether your playing partners want a casual social round or a more focused competitive round — matters as much as any specific rule.

Apps like Birvix can match you with partners who share similar preferences around pace and format before you book a round together.

What is ready golf and when should I use it?

Ready golf means hitting when you are prepared rather than waiting for strict honors order. This is the recommended approach for casual rounds at public courses where pace of play is a primary concern. Ready golf on the green means the closest player to the hole putts first if doing so does not disturb other players' lines. In formal competition, the traditional honors order applies.

Should I play gimmes in casual rounds?

Gimmes are part of casual golf culture. Inside the leather (roughly 2 feet from the hole) is the common informal standard for what qualifies as a gimme. The key rule: if you are posting the round for your handicap, all putts must be holed. Rounds with accepted gimmes should not be posted to your handicap record as they are not played under official conditions.

What are the most important etiquette rules for a beginner's first round?

The four most important: (1) Keep up with the group ahead — if you fall behind, be ready to let faster groups play through. (2) Stay quiet and still when others are hitting. (3) Repair your ball marks on the green. (4) Rake bunkers after playing from them. These four habits cover the most common violations that frustrate experienced players.

Like what you're reading?

Get early access to Birvix and play golf on your terms.

Want to learn more?

  • P2P tee-time exchange
  • Peer-reviewed playing partners
  • Handicap integrity protection
What does 'the honor' mean on the first tee?
The honor is the right to tee off first on a given hole. On the first tee, honors are often determined by coin flip, card draw, or mutual agreement. After the first hole, the player with the lowest score has honors on the next tee. In ready golf, this formality is relaxed.
Is it rude to ask someone to pick up in a casual round?
It depends on context. In a casual social round where everyone is relaxed about score, suggesting someone pick up when they are already triple bogey and far from the hole is common and generally accepted. In competitive rounds or when someone is posting for handicap, you would not ask them to pick up without their agreement.
How close to the hole does a putt have to be to be given as a gimme?
There is no official length. 'Inside the leather' (roughly the length of the putter grip, about 18 inches to 2 feet) is the most common informal standard. In casual gambling rounds, the length may be agreed on at the start. In serious competition or handicap rounds, all putts must be holed.
What is the etiquette for pace on a par-3 over water?
If you hit a ball in the water, do not immediately tee up another ball in the same spot — let others in your group hit first if they are ready. If you lose multiple balls and are holding up the group significantly, the correct etiquette is to pick up and let others finish the hole. Holding up a group for 10 minutes on a single hole is considered poor form.

Ready to play golf on your own terms?

Get Started — Free

Keep reading