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Regular Flex

Regular flex, marked with an R on the shaft, is a mid-stiffness golf shaft built for players with a moderate swing speed of roughly 84 to 96 mph with a driver. It sits in the middle of the flex scale, softer than stiff (S) and firmer than senior (A).


What is a regular flex in golf?

The R printed on a golf shaft points to its flex, which describes how much the shaft bends during a swing. Regular is the middle setting on the standard ladder that runs from ladies (L), senior (A), regular (R), stiff (S), and extra stiff (X). It is built for the largest group of recreational players: golfers with an average tempo and a driver swing speed somewhere around 84 to 96 mph, according to fitting data published by MyGolfSpy.

A shaft is not a rigid pole. As a golfer swings, the force they create bends the shaft on the way down, then it straightens through impact and releases that stored energy into the clubhead. CaddieHQ compares the motion to a fishing rod loading and then whipping forward on a cast. Regular flex gives a medium amount of that bend, enough to help a moderate swing build speed without feeling loose or unstable.

Most golfers reach for regular almost by default, partly because shops stock it as the standard option and partly because it genuinely fits a wide band of players. A golfer who carries the driver about 200 to 240 yards on a normal swing usually lands in regular territory, per CaddieHQ and Lynx Golf. A 2006 Golf Magazine survey cited by SportsRec found only about 2 percent of PGA Tour players used regular flex in their irons, a reminder that the rating is aimed at everyday golfers rather than elite ball-strikers.

How regular flex fits on the shaft flex scale

Shaft makers label flex with a letter, and almost every brand uses the same five-rung ladder. Regular sits right in the center, which is part of why it gets treated as the baseline that the other flexes are measured against.

FlexLetterTypical driver swing speedApprox. driver carry
LadiesLUnder 72 mphUnder 150 yards
SeniorA72–84 mph150–200 yards
RegularR84–96 mph200–240 yards
StiffS96–105 mph240–270 yards
Extra stiffX105+ mph270+ yards

Swing speed ranges follow fitting baselines reported by GOLF.com (from True Spec Golf) and MyGolfSpy; carry figures are approximate and drawn from Lynx Golf and CaddieHQ. The ranges overlap on purpose, because tempo can push a golfer one rung softer or firmer than speed alone suggests.

A few in-between labels exist too. The most common is SR, short for strong regular, a shaft that sits a notch between regular and stiff. Hireko Golf also points out that some brands skip letters entirely and use frequency numbers, where a 5.0 reading lines up with regular and higher figures mean a stiffer shaft. The label is only a starting point for a fitting, not an exact spec.

Regular flex vs stiff and senior flex

Most people searching this term are deciding between regular and whichever flex sits beside it. Here is how the three middle options compare in practical terms.

Senior (A)Regular (R)Stiff (S)
Driver swing speed72–84 mph84–96 mph96–105 mph
Shaft bendMostMediumLeast
Launch heightHighestModerateLowest
SuitsSmooth, slower temposAverage temposFast, aggressive tempos

The catch is that swing speed does not settle the choice on its own, because tempo changes how hard a player loads the shaft. Practical-Golf points to Nick Price and Fred Couples as the classic illustration: two players with similar speeds who needed completely different shafts, because Price’s short, quick tempo forced far more bend through the shaft than Couples’ long, flowing one. A rhythmic swinger at 95 mph might be happiest in regular, while a sharp, jerky transition at 88 mph could call for stiff. Lynx Golf notes that golfers stuck between two flexes usually score better leaning to the softer one.

Why flex labels are not standardized

Here is the part that catches many golfers off guard: an R on one brand’s shaft is not guaranteed to match an R on another’s. There is no industry standard that governs what counts as regular versus stiff.

GOLF.com, citing True Spec fitter Kris McCormack, reports that one company’s stiff can play like another company’s extra stiff, which makes the letter on the side of the shaft close to meaningless across brands. The same article gives Davis Love III as an example: he has carried a Fujikura shaft labeled 6X alongside a Project X shaft labeled 6.0. Frank Thomas, a former technical director of the USGA, quoted by SportsRec, made the same point years earlier about the absence of uniform flexibility standards.

This is why fitters lean on frequency, measured in cycles per minute (CPM), to gauge true stiffness instead of trusting the printed letter. Hireko Golf notes that around 10 CPM has long been treated as one full flex step. For a golfer reading shaft labels, the practical takeaway is that regular describes a general zone of stiffness, and the same letter can feel different from one shaft to the next.

Related Golf Terms

Frequently Asked Questions

Is regular flex good for beginners?

Often, yes. Many beginners swing in the 84 to 96 mph driver range that regular flex is built for, and its forgiving feel suits players still grooving a repeatable swing. The exception is a beginner with an unusually fast or slow swing.

What swing speed needs a regular flex?

Most fitting charts place regular flex at roughly 84 to 96 mph with a driver, according to MyGolfSpy. Tempo matters too, so the range overlaps with senior below it and stiff above it.

Is regular or stiff flex better?

Neither is better in isolation. Stiff suits faster, more aggressive swings near 96 to 105 mph, while regular fits moderate swings. Playing the wrong one for a given swing tends to cost distance or accuracy.

What does the R on a golf shaft mean?

The R marks the shaft’s flex rating as regular, the middle option on the scale that runs from ladies up to extra stiff.

Is regular flex the same as senior flex?

No. Senior flex (A) is softer and bends more, built for slower swings around 72 to 84 mph. Regular is the next step up in stiffness.

Can two regular flex shafts feel different?

Yes. Because no industry standard defines the flex letters, one brand’s regular can play firmer or softer than another’s, as GOLF.com explains.

Sources

  • GOLF.com. “Shaft flex letters are ‘essentially irrelevant,’ according to an expert club fitter.”
    https://golf.com/gear/shaft-flex-letters-are-essentially-irrelevant-according-to-an-expert/
  • MyGolfSpy. “Golf Driver Shaft Flex Chart: Find the Right Flex for Your Swing Speed.”
    https://mygolfspy.com/news-opinion/instruction/golf-driver-shaft-flex-chart-find-the-right-flex-for-your-swing-speed/
  • Hireko Golf. “The ABCs of Shaft Flex.”
    https://www.hirekogolf.com/the-abcs-of-shaft-flex-no-longer-your-normal-ars
  • SportsRec. “What Is a Regular Flex Shaft?.”
    https://www.sportsrec.com/13732926/regular-flex-shaft-20435html
  • Practical-Golf. “Stiff vs Regular Flex.”
    https://practical-golf.com/stiff-vs-regular-flex
  • Lynx Golf. “Golf Shaft Flex Explained: Regular vs Stiff vs Senior.”
    https://lynxgolfusa.com/blogs/lynx-golf-blog-1/golf-shaft-flex-regular-vs-stiff-vs-senior
  • CaddieHQ. “What Does Regular Flex Mean in Golf Shafts?.”
    https://www.caddiehq.com/resources/what-does-regular-flex-mean-in-golf-shafts
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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