New to Golf

First Time at the Driving Range? Here's Exactly What to Do

Diagram budgeting a first 50-ball driving range bucket: wedge, 7-iron, hybrid, driver, and a calm wedge finish.

The driving range is the single best place to start golf: cheap, low-stakes, no dress code, no one watching, quit whenever you want. It's also weirdly undocumented — everyone assumes you already know how the ball machine works and what to do with your bucket. This guide fixes that: your first time at the driving range, from parking lot to last ball, explained like nobody has yet.

How a Range Works (the Logistics Nobody States)

The Unwritten Range Rules (Learn Once, Belong Forever)

Your First 50 Balls: A Plan That Isn't "Swing Hard 50 Times"

The default beginner move — dumping the bucket and machine-gunning drivers — teaches almost nothing except fatigue. Here's a plan that builds actual skill:

Between every few balls: step back, breathe, re-grip. The rebuild-your-stance reset is where range practice actually beats course play.

Expectations Management (Read Before Ball 1)

Your first bucket will include: topped dribblers, total whiffs (they count as swings only in your memory), one accidental screamer 40 yards right, and — usually somewhere in the last third — two or three shots so pure you'll feel them in your teeth. Those two or three are the hook. Every golfer on that line, including the smooth old guy flushing 7-irons, started with the same bucket you're hitting. The range's great mercy is that nobody's watching and nothing counts.

A note on mats vs. grass: mats forgive "fat" contact (the club bounces into the ball instead of digging), so mat practice flatters you slightly. Fine — beginners need flattering. Just know the lush turf of the course will be a touch less generous.

When to Graduate

You're ready for a real course — start with 9 holes, ideally a short "executive" course — when you can advance the ball airborne more often than not with two different clubs. That's the whole bar. Not distance, not consistency, not a pretty finish. Airborne, most of the time, twice over.

Before that first round, arm yourself with the beginner's etiquette guide and the first-round survival guide — and when the driver becomes the club you reach for instead of the one you fear, you'll understand exactly why we built ours shorter, lighter to aim, and easier to hit than the ones that made the range feel hard.

Ready to find more fairways?

The Fairway Finder driver — 43.5" control length, 460cc titanium, 11° high launch, oversize leather grip. $399 with headcover and 1-year warranty.

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