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Swing Weight

Swing weight is a measure of how heavy a golf club feels during the swing. It reflects how the club’s weight is distributed between the head end and the grip end, not the club’s actual total weight.


What is swing weight?

Two golf clubs can weigh exactly the same on a kitchen scale and still feel noticeably different when a player swings them. Swing weight is the number that captures that difference. It expresses how the weight of a club is balanced along its length, comparing the mass toward the head against the mass toward the grip.

The idea matters because golfers respond to feel, not to grams. A club whose weight sits farther toward the head feels heavier through the swing and gives the player a stronger sense of where the clubhead is. A club with more weight toward the grip feels lighter and easier to move quickly, even when the two clubs weigh the same overall.

Club fitters and manufacturers use swing weight mainly to keep a set consistent. When every iron in a bag carries a similar swing weight, each one feels familiar in the hands, which helps a golfer repeat the same motion from club to club. That consistency is the original reason the measurement was created.

How swing weight is measured

Swing weight is measured on a special balance scale. The club rests horizontally on a fulcrum positioned 14 inches from the butt of the grip, and the scale reads how much the club tips toward the head. The more the head end pulls down, the higher the swing weight.

The reading comes back as a letter paired with a number, such as D2 or C8. The letter sets the broad band, and the number narrows it down, with A0 at the light end of the scale and the heaviest readings reaching into the F and G range on some scales. According to TGW, a men’s club pulled straight off the rack usually reads between D0 and D2, while a standard women’s club sits around C5 to C7.

The gaps between readings are small. TGW notes that moving a club from D2 to D3 takes only about .07 ounces of extra head weight, roughly the weight of a single penny.

ReadingRelative feelWhere it commonly appears
A0 to C4LightestJunior clubs and some lighter builds
C5 to C9LightStandard women’s clubs
D0 to D2StandardMost men’s clubs sold off the rack
D3 to D9HeavierStronger players, wedges, and custom setups
E0 and aboveRare, heaviest endSpecialty or heavily customised clubs

Swing weight versus total weight

The most common misunderstanding about swing weight is that it describes how much a club weighs. It does not. Total weight is what a scale shows when the whole club is placed on it, measured in grams. Swing weight is about balance, and the two can move independently of each other.

A simple example shows why. One club might weigh 300 grams and read D4, while another weighs 500 grams and also reads D4. The heavier club has far more mass overall, yet both feel the same during the swing because the weight is balanced the same way relative to the hands. A club builder can even add weight to the grip end, which raises the total weight while making the club feel lighter to swing.

Total weightSwing weight
What it measuresThe full mass of the clubHow heavy the club feels when swung
UnitGrams, a fixed numberA letter and number reading, such as D2
Depends onEvery component added togetherWhere the weight sits along the club
Changes whenAny part gets heavier or lighterWeight shifts toward the head or grip

What affects a club’s swing weight

Every part of a club feeds into its swing weight, though a few components carry more influence than others. Head weight has the most direct effect, since the head sits farthest from the hands. Golf Monthly reports that adding about two grams to the head raises the swing weight by one point, while it takes around nine grams in the shaft or five grams in the grip to move the reading the same amount.

Shaft length changes the feel more than most golfers expect. Because a longer shaft holds the head farther from the balance point, lengthening a club by half an inch can raise its swing weight by roughly three points, according to Golf Monthly. Cutting a club shorter has the opposite effect and lightens the swing weight.

Grip choice matters too, and it catches people out. Switching to a heavier grip lowers the swing weight, while a lighter grip raises it. Even the layer of tape under a new grip can shift the reading enough for a player to notice a difference in feel.

Why swing weight matters

For most golfers, swing weight comes down to feel and consistency. A reading that suits a player keeps the club on a repeatable path and tempo, while a poor match can quietly work against them. Tim Briand of True Spec Golf has explained that a swing weight set too light can make it hard to sense where the clubhead is, leading to trouble squaring the face, while one set too heavy can cause fatigue that drags down performance over a round.

Matching swing weight across a set is where the measurement earns its keep. When the irons share a similar reading, they feel like members of the same family, and the golfer can move from a 6-iron to a 9-iron without recalibrating. Some fitters take a different view and build a progressive set, with the longer clubs slightly lighter and the scoring clubs slightly heavier for added control on shorter shots. Neither approach is universally correct, which is why fitting is built around the individual player.

Swing weight and moment of inertia (MOI)

Swing weight has a close cousin that often comes up in fitting conversations: moment of inertia, or MOI. Both try to answer the same question, which is how a club feels to swing, but they go about it differently. Swing weight reads the balance point at a fixed spot on the club, while MOI matching measures the actual resistance of the whole club to being swung.

Some club builders argue that MOI matching produces a more consistent feel across a set, since it accounts for the entire club rather than a single balance point. Tom Wishon and other fitters have promoted the method for that reason. Even so, swing weight stays the standard the major manufacturers build to, partly because it is faster to measure and has nearly a century of history behind it.

Related Golf Terms

  • Bounce — The angle on a wedge sole that keeps the club from digging into turf or sand.
  • Grooves — The lines etched into a clubface that grip the ball and generate spin.
  • Center-shafted putter — A putter with the shaft connecting to the middle of the head.
  • Milled putter — A putter with a precision-machined face for consistent roll and feel.
  • Grind — The shaping of a wedge sole to suit specific turf and shot conditions.

Frequently Asked Questions

What swing weight do most golfers use?

Most men’s clubs sold off the rack read between D0 and D2, and standard women’s clubs sit around C5 to C7, according to TGW. The right reading is a matter of personal feel rather than a fixed rule.

Is a higher swing weight better?

Not by default. A higher reading makes the head feel heavier and can aid control, but it can also bring on fatigue. The best swing weight is the one that matches a player’s strength and tempo.

Does swing weight change the total weight of a club?

Not necessarily. Swing weight describes balance, so a club’s feel can change without its total weight changing much, and the reverse is true as well.

Who invented swing weight?

Robert Adams developed the first swing weight scale, known as the Lorythmic scale, in the 1920s and patented it in 1934. It is still the system most manufacturers use today.

Sources

  • TGW. “What Is Swing Weight in Golf? TGW Explains.”
    https://www.tgw.com/golf-guide/what-is-swing-weight/
  • Golf Monthly. “What Is Swing Weight In Golf?”
    https://www.golfmonthly.com/gear/what-is-swing-weight-in-golf
  • Golf.com. “How important is golf club swing weight?”
    https://golf.com/gear/how-important-is-golf-club-swing-weight/
  • GolfLink. “Golf Swing Weight Chart: How 4 Factors Influence Swing Weight.”
    https://www.golflink.com/equipment/golf-swing-weight-chart
  • Miles of Golf. “What is Swing Weight?”
    https://www.milesofgolf.com/post/what-is-swing-weight
  • Rational Golf. “The History of Swingweight.”
    https://www.rational-golf.com/blog/the-history-of-swingweight
  • Wishon Golf. “Matching Golf Clubs by MOI.”
    https://wishongolf.com/clubmakers-old/matching-golf-clubs-by-moi/
Written by
Jason Miller

Jason Miller is a PGA Teaching Professional and golf equipment analyst with more than 15 years of experience in coaching, competitive golf, and equipment testing. Based in Scottsdale, Arizona, Jason has worked with golfers of all skill levels—from beginners picking up their first clubs to competitive amateurs looking to lower their handicap.

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