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Dogleg

A dogleg is a golf hole that bends to the left or right somewhere between the tee and the green, instead of running in a straight line. The name comes from the bent shape of a dog’s hind leg.


What is a dogleg?

A dogleg is a golf hole with a turn in it. Players tee off down a fairway that runs straight for some distance, then the fairway veers left or right at a point called the corner or turning point, and continues in that new direction to the green. The bend can be subtle or close to a right angle, depending on how the architect designed the hole.

Doglegs only appear on par-4s and par-5s. Par-3s are too short to need a turn. The green is meant to be reached in one shot from the tee, so there’s nothing to bend around, and according to The Left Rough, par-3s are the only type of hole that never doglegs because of their shorter distance.

The bend changes how the hole is played. On a straight hole, the obvious shot is straight down the middle. On a dogleg, the player has to think about where on the fairway to land the ball so the next shot has a clear path to the green. Hitting a perfect drive in the wrong spot can leave a player blocked out by trees or hazards on the inside of the corner.

Architects use doglegs for two reasons: variety and strategy. A round of straight holes would be visually monotonous, and golf course designer Scott Macpherson notes that no design feature does more to test a player’s accuracy and control than a simple bend in the hole.

Dogleg left vs. dogleg right

Direction is described from the perspective of a player standing at the tee box and looking down the fairway. If the hole bends left after the corner, it’s a dogleg left. If it bends right, it’s a dogleg right.

This convention matters for how golfers prepare to play the hole. A right-handed player who naturally curves the ball from right to left (a draw) generally has an easier time on a dogleg left, because the ball flight follows the shape of the hole. The same player faces a tougher tee shot on a dogleg right, where the ideal shape would be a left-to-right curve (a fade). For left-handed players, the dynamic flips.

TermWhat it meansSuits this shot shape (right-handed)
Dogleg leftFairway bends left after the cornerDraw (right-to-left ball flight)
Dogleg rightFairway bends right after the cornerFade (left-to-right ball flight)
Straight holeNo bend; tee to green is directAny shape

Note that this is about how the hole pairs with a ball flight, not about which direction is correct. Doglegs in both directions appear on most courses, and a well-designed course has a mix.

Types of doglegs

The bend in a dogleg can be slight or sharp, and the term covers a range of severities. Brent Kelley, writing for LiveAbout, breaks the spectrum into three rough categories.

TypeApproximate angleNotes
Slight dogleg20–30 degreesA gentle bend; some players might not even register it as a dogleg until they read the scorecard.
Moderate doglegAround 45 degreesA clear turn; the green is hidden from the tee.
Severe dogleg60–90 degreesAn extreme bend, sometimes close to a right angle. Rare.

There’s also a separate variant called the double dogleg. This is a hole with two bends instead of one, and it only appears on par-5s, since shorter holes don’t have the length to support two turns. Architect A.W. Tillinghast claimed in a 1926 issue of Golf Illustrated that he originated the double-dogleg, though earlier examples exist. Steve Robert notes that the 19th-century Prestwick course in Scotland had one before Tillinghast’s claim.

How dogleg holes are measured

Yardage on a dogleg is measured along the playing route, not in a straight line from tee to green. The total distance is calculated by adding the yardage from the tee to the corner, then from the corner to the center of the green. This is sometimes called a sight-line or “down the sprinkler line” measurement.

This matters when reading a scorecard. A 420-yard par-4 dogleg is 420 yards along the fairway route, but the tee and the green might only be 350 yards apart in a direct line. That difference is what creates the option to “cut the corner”, meaning the player can fly the ball over the inside of the bend instead of taking the longer fairway route, if they have the distance and the course allows it.

Why doglegs exist

The dogleg is one of the oldest design features in golf. The term appeared in print in a 1902 issue of Golf Illustrated, in a critique of a hole whose line of play was “rather like a dog’s hind leg.” The compound word “dogleg” itself goes back much further. The Oxford English Dictionary records its general English use from 1671, well before golf borrowed it.

The reason doglegs caught on with course architects is straightforward. A.W. Tillinghast, who designed Bethpage Black and Winged Foot, believed that since straight lines are rare in nature, golf holes shouldn’t be linear either. A bent hole tests a player in a way a straight hole cannot, because the optimal landing spot from the tee depends on the direction of the bend.

A famous example is the 13th hole at Augusta National Golf Club, known as Azalea. It’s a 545-yard par-5 with a sharp dogleg left, and the inside of the corner runs along Rae’s Creek, a tributary that punishes players who try to cut too close. The hole was lengthened from 510 yards in 2023 to make it harder for long hitters to overpower the bend, according to Sports Illustrated. Tournament scoring on the 13th has ranged from Jeff Maggert’s albatross-2 in 1994 to Tommy Nakajima’s 13 in 1978.

Related Golf Terms

  • Divot repair — Fixing the mark left on the green by a ball landing from a high trajectory.
  • Dispersion — The spread pattern of a golfer’s shots around a target.
  • Divot — A piece of turf displaced by the clubhead during a swing.
  • Divot repair tool — A pronged tool used to fix ball marks (pitch marks) on the green.
  • Dimples — The small indentations on a golf ball that create aerodynamic lift.

Frequently Asked Questions

Why are par-3 holes never doglegs?

Par-3s are short enough that the green is meant to be reached from the tee in a single shot. There’s no second-shot landing area to bend around, so the design never calls for a turn.

What is the “corner” of a dogleg?

The corner is the point in the fairway where the hole changes direction. It’s also called the turning point. Yardage to the corner is the most important number a golfer checks before deciding how to play the tee shot.

How sharp can a dogleg be?

Most doglegs bend somewhere between 20 and 45 degrees. Severe doglegs of 60 degrees or more are rare, and almost-right-angle bends close to 90 degrees are unusual. Anything past that becomes impractical to play.

What is a double dogleg?

A double dogleg is a par-5 hole with two bends in the fairway, and the two bends can curve in the same direction or in opposite directions. They’re less common than single doglegs. Most appear on longer courses.

Why is it called a dogleg?

The name comes from the resemblance between the bend in the fairway and the angled shape of a dog’s hind leg.

Sources

  • Kelley, Brent. “Explaining What a Dogleg Hole Is in Golf.” LiveAbout. Accessed May 2026.
  • “What Is a Dogleg in Golf?” Golf Monthly. Accessed May 2026.
  • “Dog Leg in Golf: What’s the Best Strategy?” The Left Rough. Accessed May 2026.
  • Macpherson, Scott. “The Dogleg.” Scott Macpherson Golf Design. Accessed May 2026.
  • Oxford English Dictionary. “dogleg, adj. & n.” Accessed May 2026.
  • Robert, Steve. “Doglegs.” Double Agent. Accessed May 2026.
  • “Augusta National Thought One Part of Its Course Needed a Refresh.” Sports Illustrated. Accessed May 2026.
  • “13th Hole at Augusta National: Azalea.” Golf Compendium. Accessed May 2026.
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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