Golfing News & Blog Articles
How Far Should You Hit Each Iron? Complete Iron Distance Chart For Every Handicap
How far should you hit your irons? The answer depends more on your handicap than the number on the club. Using performance data from Shot Scope for male golfers, this chart shows the average 4– to 9-iron distances by handicap.
These numbers reflect real on-course results, not just swing speed. Think of them as baselines. If you swing faster or strike it well, you’ll likely hit it farther. If you’re less consistent, you may fall below the averages.
25 Handicap
At the 25-handicap level, long irons are almost unusable. Only seven percent of 4-iron shots hit the green and proximity stretches past 260 feet. Even the 5-iron produces just six percent of greens in regulation with an average leave of more than 230 feet. Distance gaps between clubs start to compress, leaving just a few yards of separation between the 6- and 7-iron. The 9-iron is the most reliable iron in the bag, hitting the green 23 percent of the time.
Club | P-Avg Distance (yards) |
---|---|
4-iron | 151 |
5-iron | 143 |
6-iron | 137 |
7-iron | 132 |
8-iron | 122 |
9-iron | 108 |
20 Handicap
For 20-handicap golfers, the 4-iron finds the green only eight percent of the time with proximity over 200 feet. Mid-irons like the 6-iron hit greens just 15 percent of the time and the 7-iron is barely better at 19 percent. Distance gapping is still somewhat inconsistent for 20-handicap golfers. Some irons have very small distance gaps.
Club | P-Avg Distance (yards) |
---|---|
4-iron | 169 |
5-iron | 162 |
6-iron | 151 |
7-iron | 146 |
8-iron | 138 |
9-iron | 129 |
15 Handicap
By the 15-handicap level, iron play begins to stabilize but long irons remain inefficient. The 7-iron hits the green 20 percent of the time and the 9-iron pushes up to 32 percent, making it the most effective iron in the set. Still, proximity numbers show that even when these golfers hit greens, they aren’t leaving many makeable birdie putts. Distance gapping improves compared to higher handicaps, with most irons separating closer to 10 yards.
Club | P-Avg Distance (yards) |
---|---|
4-iron | 186 |
5-iron | 169 |
6-iron | 162 |
7-iron | 154 |
8-iron | 146 |
9-iron | 136 |
10 Handicap
At the 10-handicap level, iron distances remain strong but consistency is still a limiting factor. GIR rates with the long irons remain low but the 7-iron finds the green about 27 percent of the time. The 9-iron climbs to 40 percent with proximity near 70 feet. That improvement makes the short irons reliable scoring clubs but anything above a 7-iron still leaves a lot of missed greens.
Club | P-Avg Distance (yards) |
---|---|
4-iron | 199 |
5-iron | 187 |
6-iron | 171 |
7-iron | 161 |
8-iron | 150 |
9-iron | 140 |
5 Handicap
Low-handicap golfers control their irons far better. Their proximity numbers tighten under 100 feet with a 6-iron. Green success rises to 37 percent with a 7-iron and 47 percent with a 9-iron. These golfers still don’t make long irons automatic but their misses are closer and more predictable, leaving more chances to save par. You’ll also see the distance gaps between clubs are very consistent.
Club | P-Avg Distance (yards) |
---|---|
4-iron | 201 |
5-iron | 183 |
6-iron | 172 |
7-iron | 164 |
8-iron | 153 |
9-iron | 139 |
0 Handicap (Scratch)
Scratch golfers not only hit their irons farther but they hit them straighter and closer. The short irons are where the gap really shows: around 46 percent GIR with a 7-iron and 60 percent with a 9-iron. With proximity under 50 feet on their 9-iron approaches these players leave themselves more birdie opportunities.
Club | P-Avg Distance (yards) |
---|---|
4-iron | 223 |
5-iron | 200 |
6-iron | 185 |
7-iron | 178 |
8-iron | 166 |
9-iron | 155 |
Final thoughts
Use this iron distance chart as a benchmark. If your numbers are way off or if some clubs are all going the same distance, it may be time for a lesson or a custom iron fitting.
The post How Far Should You Hit Each Iron? Complete Iron Distance Chart For Every Handicap appeared first on MyGolfSpy.