Very few things in golf are more satisfying than making a birdie. It means – despite how the rest of your round might be going – at least two things in your golf game went really well in succession. A birdie also always delivers a welcome dose of momentum to your scorecard.
So, a sensible key to lowering your handicap must be to simply make more birdies, right? Sure, but the reality is that, for most, that’s easier said than done. According to Shot Scope data, 15 and 20 handicappers both make an unglamorous 0.36 birdies per round, just a little better than one birdie for every 54 holes played. Anyone in that handicap range expecting to make a birdie every time they go out should stay optimistic - and opportunistic - but realize it’s statistically only likely to happen approximately once every three rounds.
Even 10 handicappers average less than one birdie per round, 0.72 birdies per 18 holes. Our single-digit friends, the 5-handicap players, pick up the pace by averaging 1.26 birdies per round, which is just slightly better than five birdies for every 72 holes played.
Shot Scope data indicates that scratch golfers average an impressive 2.34 birdies per round, which is almost twice as successful as the 5 handicappers but well behind the PGA TOUR average of 3.72 (data collected throughout the 2025 PGA TOUR season).
The pros simply make breaking par look easy. World No. 1 Scottie Scheffler led the TOUR by averaging 4.61 birdies per round in 2025. He dropped a staggering 350 birdies over the course of 76 rounds on his way to six wins, including two majors. A 15 handicapper would make about 27 birdies over that same stretch of play.
You might be thinking, “My gosh! It would take me 1,000 ROUNDS to make as many birdies as Scottie made in tournaments in 2025!” Close. It would likely take about 972 rounds for a 15 handicapper to reach the 350-birdie mark. Remember the TOUR’s “These Guys Are Good” slogan? The players we watch on TV and from the other side of the ropes play an entirely different caliber of golf than most of us. But don’t lose hope.
WHAT NOW?
Remember, we’re only talking about averages here. You’re plenty capable of multiple-birdie rounds and absolutely capable of increasing the number of chances you have to make more birdies.
Hitting more greens would definitely give you more birdie opportunities. Scratch handicappers hit 55 percent of their greens in regulation (GIR). That percentage drops to 38 percent for 5 handicappers and 30 percent for 10 handicappers. For 15 and 20 handicappers, the GIR conversion rate drops to 24 and 17 percent, respectively.
There’s a clear correlation to hitting more greens and scoring better, but the reality is recreational players of every skill are going to miss a lot of greens and don’t have a ton of time to work on becoming world-class ball strikers. You probably work for a living and don’t have 10 hours a day to improve your swing or to add 25 percent more distance and accuracy to your shots. What you can do is play smarter with your current skill set and work diligently on the deficiencies in your game. Here are some tips:
— Hit your drives a distance and direction that lands in the most generous part of the fairway and away from hazards and other trouble.
— If you’re missing your driver both left and right consistently, take a lesson a try to narrow tendencies down to, at least, a one-way miss that you can play for and use to your advantage.
— Hit your drives to the side of the hole that gives you the clearest shot to the green (away from sand, water or other obstacles, when possible).
— To hit more greens, know the approach distances to the front, middle, and back of every green. The Shot Scope G6 GPS Watch is an amazing tool to help you own this data and play to the most accepting section of the green.
— Dial in your distance-control on wedge shots from 100 yards and in. Every time you can turn three shots into two, you’re chipping away at a better handicap.
— Become a better bunker player.
— Also, work on putts of every length and that break both left-to-right and right-to-left.
— Tracking your birdies for the season, and trying to beat a particular benchmark, can be fun. Or demoralizing.
What you’ll likely find is that the path to better scores isn’t as much about making more birdies as it is about making easy pars and avoiding big numbers. Double-bogey avoidance is a huge key to scoring that isn’t often discussed. On average, a scratch handicapper will go about four rounds in between double bogeys while five handicappers will make one to two (1.44 on average) per round. That stat DOUBLES for 10 handicappers, who average nearly three (2.88) double bogeys per round.
We all know the mistakes that lead to doubles - loose drives, poor attempts at recovery shots, bad misses on approaches, more than one shot around the green, three putts. Turning a par hole into a disappointing double can happen fast. And according to Shot Scope’s data, it does. A 15-handicapper will make 4.68 double bogeys per round and 20 handicappers average 6.66 doubles over 18 holes. When more than one-third of your holes are double bogeys, it’s time to take action.
Turning 10-foot par putts into three- or four-foot opportunities can go a long way. Keeping the ball in play versus chasing distance can help. Every player can have a better short game and getting better inside of 100 yards can be a lot of fun to practice. It’s not thrilling, but improving your lag putting so you two-putt more often than you three-putt is a smart and easy way to lower your scores.
All that said, the satisfaction of holing birdies will always be enticing. So, happy hunting!