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Weight Shift

A weight shift in golf is the movement of a golfer’s body weight from the trail foot during the backswing onto the lead foot during the downswing and follow-through. It is one of the main sources of power and consistent contact in the golf swing.


What is a weight shift in golf?

A weight shift, also called a weight transfer, is the side-to-side movement of a golfer’s body weight during the swing. The golfer starts balanced over the ball, loads weight into the trail foot (the foot farther from the target) as the club swings back, then moves that weight onto the lead foot (the foot closer to the target) while swinging down and through the ball. A baseball pitcher makes the same basic move: rock back, then drive forward.

The shift exists for two reasons. It lets the swing draw power from the ground and the body’s mass rather than the arms alone, and it moves the low point of the swing forward so the club strikes the ball before the turf. The instruction site RotarySwing calls poor weight shift in the downswing the number one problem in most amateur swings. Research backs up the gap between skill levels: a 2008 review by Lindsay and colleagues found that skilled golfers moved their center of mass an average of 12.3 cm toward the target during the downswing, while less skilled players shifted less and later.

How the weight shift works during the swing

The shift follows the same broad pattern in almost every full swing, whatever the club. At address, weight sits close to evenly balanced between the feet. During the backswing, it loads into the trail side, then in the transition, it starts moving toward the target before the club has finished going back. By impact, most of it is on the lead leg, and the finish position has nearly all of it there.

Swing phaseTypical weight or pressure distribution
AddressAround 50/50 between the feet
Top of backswing60% or more into the trail foot
Early downswing70% or more onto the lead foot
ImpactRoughly 75-80% on the lead leg
FinishAbout 90/10 in favor of the lead foot

The backswing and early downswing figures come from training aid maker WhyGolf, whose Pressure Plate is built around those thresholds. The impact figure is the traditional benchmark reported in a 2019 study by Faux and colleagues on the five-iron swing, and the 90/10 finish comes from GolfSpan.

None of this requires a big visible slide. Video analysis of elite players by RotarySwing shows the hips moving laterally toward the target by roughly the width of the pelvis during the downswing, yet those players never appear to be sliding. The turn of the hips and shoulders disguises the lateral move, which is one reason the weight shift is easy to miss when watching professional golf. Equipment testing site MyGolfSpy notes that many amateurs take the advice to “stay centered” too far and lock their weight in place, which drains the swing of its power source.

Weight shift vs. pressure shift

The two terms are used interchangeably in golf instruction, but they describe different things. Weight is the location of the golfer’s center of mass. Pressure is the force the feet apply to the ground, which is what force plates and pressure mats actually measure. Training aid maker WhyGolf notes that instructors often say “weight” with students when the thing they mean is pressure, because weight is the more familiar word.

The distinction matters because the two can move independently. A golfer can push hard into the ground with the trail foot while keeping the torso centered over the ball, shifting pressure without much movement of mass. Skilled players even produce pressure under the lead foot exceeding 100% of their body weight during the downswing, according to golf coach Adam Young, because pushing into the ground generates force beyond what standing still would register. For everyday purposes, though, “weight shift” remains the common umbrella term for both.

Weight shift vs. sway and reverse pivot

Most confusion around the weight shift involves two faults that look superficially similar to it. A sway is a lateral slide of the hips past the trail foot during the backswing, with the weight rolling to the outside of the back foot instead of loading over it. A reverse pivot, also called a reverse weight shift, is the opposite of the correct pattern: the weight leans toward the target on the backswing and falls away from it on the downswing.

MovementBackswingDownswingTypical result
Proper weight shiftLoads over the trail foot while the body turnsMoves onto the lead foot before impactSolid contact and full power
SwayHips slide laterally past the trail footWeight struggles to return in timeInconsistent contact, timing problems
Reverse pivotWeight leans toward the targetWeight falls back onto the trail footSlices and weak or topped shots

A proper shift happens within the width of the stance while the body rotates. Of the two faults, the reverse pivot does more damage, because it removes the power source entirely rather than just mistiming it.

Related Golf Terms

  • Wind cheater — A low, boring shot designed to cut through wind.
  • Greenside flop — A high, soft flop shot played from near the green.
  • Tee ball — Any shot played from the teeing area to begin a hole.
  • Layup shot — A deliberate short shot to a safe position short of trouble.
  • Specialty shot — A creative or unusual shot played for a specific situation.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much weight should be on the lead foot at impact?

A 2019 study on the five-iron swing by Faux and colleagues reports a traditional benchmark of roughly 75-80% of body weight, rising to about 90% by the finish.

Is a weight shift the same as a sway?

No. A sway slides the hips laterally past the trail foot, a fault rather than a technique, while a proper weight shift stays within the stance as the body turns.

Do all golf swings use a weight shift?

Most do. The Stack and Tilt method keeps more weight on the lead foot throughout the swing, though even that pattern involves some movement of pressure between the feet.

Is weight shift the same as weight transfer?

Yes. The two terms describe the same movement and are used interchangeably in golf instruction.

Sources

  • Lindsay, D., et al. “A Review of Biomechanical Differences Between Golfers of Varied Skill Levels.” 2008. Accessed July 6, 2026.
    http://fitforegolf.com/uploads/3/4/1/4/34149388/lindsay_2008_pro_vs_rec_biomechanical_review.pdf
  • Faux, L., et al. “The Effect of Alterations in Foot Centre of Pressure on Lower Body Kinematics During the Five-Iron Golf Swing.” Journal of Sports Sciences, 37(17), 2019. Accessed July 6, 2026.
    https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/02640414.2019.1614714
  • WhyGolf. “A Guide to Weight Shift in the Golf Swing.” Accessed July 6, 2026.
    https://whygolf.com/blogs/whysguyscorner/weight-shift-in-golf-swing
  • Adam Young Golf. “Golf, Ground Force, COP and COM.” Accessed July 6, 2026.
    https://www.adamyounggolf.com/golf-and-cop-what-is-it/
  • GolfSpan. “Weight Shift in Golf Swing.” Accessed July 6, 2026.
    https://www.golfspan.com/tips-and-guides/weight-shift-in-the-golf-swing
  • RotarySwing. “Weight Shift in the Golf Swing.” Accessed July 6, 2026.
    https://rotaryswing.com/golf-instruction/golfbiomechanics/weight-shift-golf-swing
  • MyGolfSpy. “What Tour Pros Know About Weight Shift That You Don’t.” Accessed July 6, 2026.
    https://mygolfspy.com/news-opinion/instruction/what-tour-pros-know-about-weight-shift-that-you-dont/
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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