Understanding how golfers of different skill levels use their wedges can highlight where your setup might need adjusting. Using Shot Scope’s wedge loft gapping data, we can see what lofts golfers carry, how often each wedge is used inside 50 yards and the average distances golfers achieve across handicaps.
This breakdown gives you a clear picture of wedge trends, helping you compare your bag setup with players of similar ability.
About the wedge gapping data
Shot Scope has helped us gather this data showing how golfers at different levels set up and use their wedges. For each loft from 48 through 60 degrees, the data reports:
Club Loft — the loft in degrees. % of Users Carrying — share of golfers in that handicap group who carry that wedge (players may carry multiple lofts). % of Shots Hit Within 50 yards — among all shots from 50 yards and in, the percentage taken with that wedge (adds up to ~100% for each group). P-Avg Distance (yards) — the “performance average” distance for that wedge, which includes chips, pitches and other short shots. (This is different from Shot Scope’s full-swing distance data.)This framework lets you compare how often each wedge is carried, how it’s used in scoring range and how far it typically goes across handicap levels.
25-handicap wedge gapping chart
Higher-handicap golfers tend to rely on higher-lofted wedges, with the 56 and 60 seeing the most use. Average distances are shorter, with a heavy concentration of shots inside 50 yards taken with those lofts.
Club Loft | % of Users Carrying | % of Shots ≤50 yds | P-Avg Distance (yds) |
---|---|---|---|
48° | 10% | 3% | 79 |
50° | 28% | 8% | 77 |
52° | 28% | 11% | 67 |
54° | 24% | 15% | 59 |
56° | 40% | 25% | 52 |
58° | 23% | 13% | 45 |
60° | 46% | 26% | 43 |
20-handicap wedge gapping chart
At the 20-handicap level, wedge setups become more balanced, though the 56 and 60 still dominate usage around the greens. Distances increase slightly compared to higher handicaps.
Club Loft | % of Users Carrying | % of Shots ≤50 yds | P-Avg Distance (yds) |
---|---|---|---|
48° | 11% | 2% | 86 |
50° | 30% | 8% | 83 |
52° | 30% | 10% | 71 |
54° | 29% | 16% | 60 |
56° | 40% | 23% | 53 |
58° | 28% | 18% | 46 |
60° | 44% | 24% | 43 |
15-handicap wedge gapping chart
Mid-handicap golfers start to see more even distribution between lofts, with 50, 54 and 58 gaining popularity.
Club Loft | % of Users Carrying | % of Shots ≤50 yds | P-Avg Distance (yds) |
---|---|---|---|
48° | 12% | 3% | 93 |
50° | 33% | 8% | 88 |
52° | 31% | 10% | 77 |
54° | 34% | 17% | 63 |
56° | 40% | 23% | 56 |
58° | 31% | 19% | 45 |
60° | 44% | 22% | 44 |
10-handicap wedge gapping chart
As golfers approach single digits, the preferred setup trends more toward 50, 54 and 58. Distances increase again and wedge usage becomes more evenly spread across lofts.
Club Loft | % of Users Carrying | % of Shots ≤50 yds | P-Avg Distance (yds) |
---|---|---|---|
48° | 13% | 2% | 98 |
50° | 39% | 7% | 94 |
52° | 30% | 7% | 83 |
54° | 42% | 19% | 69 |
56° | 39% | 23% | 60 |
58° | 37% | 21% | 48 |
60° | 42% | 21% | 45 |
5-handicap wedge gapping chart
Better players start to show consistent gapping, with strong adoption of the 50-, 54- and 58 degree wedge setup. Distances stretch further and there’s less reliance on just one or two wedges inside 50 yards.
Club Loft | % of Users Carrying | % of Shots ≤50 yds | P-Avg Distance (yds) |
---|---|---|---|
48° | 12% | 2% | 104 |
50° | 43% | 7% | 100 |
52° | 29% | 7% | 90 |
54° | 45% | 19% | 73 |
56° | 39% | 21% | 64 |
58° | 40% | 23% | 50 |
60° | 42% | 22% | 47 |
Scratch golfer wedge gapping chart
Scratch golfers show the clearest wedge strategy: 50, 54 and 58 dominate. Distances are significantly higher and the 58-degree wedge sees the largest share of shots inside 50 yards.
Club Loft | % of Users Carrying | % of Shots ≤50 yds | P-Avg Distance (yds) |
---|---|---|---|
48° | 13% | 1% | 112 |
50° | 48% | 6% | 107 |
52° | 28% | 6% | 98 |
54° | 50% | 18% | 80 |
56° | 37% | 15% | 72 |
58° | 46% | 31% | 52 |
60° | 39% | 24% | 49 |
Key takeaways
Here’s a high-level look at some of what we found when digging through this data.
Bag composition shifts with ability: Higher handicaps often carry a 56 and a 60, leaning heavily on the 56 for short shots. Better players gravitate to a 50/54/58 setup, spreading gapping more evenly. Inside 50 yards: Scratch golfers hit a large share of their short shots with the 58, showing confidence in higher-lofted, spin-control plays. 48-degree wedge is the least-used across all groups: Only about 10–13 percent of golfers in any handicap carry it, suggesting most players rely on their pitching wedge (often 44 to 46 degrees) instead of adding a dedicated 48.Final thoughts
Wedge gapping is often overlooked but this data shows just how much it changes with skill level. Higher handicaps lean on 56- and 60-degree wedges for most shots, while better players build more balanced setups around 50, 54 and 58 degrees. Distances also scale significantly with ability, meaning the same loft plays very differently depending on who is swinging it.
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