3 Things Every Amateur Should Do With Their Feet (To Play Better Golf)

Better ball striking and increased consistency on the course is a realistic ambition for every amateur golfer... the secret lies in what you do with your feet!

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Using your feet more effectively will improve your golf swing
(Image credit: Howard Boylan)

Most golfers spend endless hours working on their grip, takeaway, or release. While that isn't wrong, very few pay attention to the only thing connecting them to the ground throughout the swing: their feet!

The golf swing works from the ground up. The best players in the world are not just swinging the club beautifully; they are using the ground incredibly well.

Through something called ground reaction forces, elite golfers create clubhead speed, stability, and consistency by applying pressure into the ground in very specific ways.

Ground reaction forces may sound technical, but the idea is actually very simple. The harder and more efficiently you push into the ground, the more energy the ground gives back.

For most golfers, improving how the feet work during the swing can completely transform the quality of their movement and ball striking.

So, to help you cut your handicap in 2026, here are three things every golfer should do with their feet to improve their golf swing.

3 Things Every Amateur Golfer Should Do With Their Feet

1. Load into the inside of the trail foot

One of the biggest mistakes amateurs make in the backswing is swaying too far away from the target.

Instead of loading pressure correctly into the trail foot, the body drifts laterally, which immediately reduces stability (pictured below). Good players do the opposite!

3 Things Every Amateur Golfer Should Do With Their Feet (To Play Better Golf)

A sway in the backswing is a common amateur mistake

(Image credit: Howard Boylan)

During the backswing, pressure should move into the inside of the trail foot.

For a right-handed golfer, that means loading into the inside of the right foot rather than rolling onto the outside edge. This creates resistance and allows the body to coil much more efficiently.

A great feeling is to imagine gently screwing the trail foot into the ground during the backswing. The direction of pressure should feel like it is moving towards roughly 4:30 pm on a clock face.

If you were to swing a golf club on ice (not recommended), your back foot would slip out behind you! Friction from the ground prevents this from happening.

Doing this correctly helps you stay more centred, maintain balance, and store energy without excessive movement.

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During the backswing pressure should move to the inside of the trail foot

(Image credit: Howard Boylan)

When pressure moves to the outside of the trail foot, golfers often lose posture, struggle with sequencing, and find consistent contact much harder.

2. Shift pressure into the lead foot earlier

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Shifting pressure to the lead side early is how the top golfers strike it so consistently

(Image credit: Howard Boylan)

One of the most interesting things we see from force plate research is how early elite golfers begin shifting pressure back towards the target.

Most amateurs stay on their trail side for far too long. Great players begin moving pressure into the lead foot before the backswing has even finished.

Importantly, this is pressure movement rather than a huge body slide. The upper body may still appear to be completing the backswing, but underneath them the pressure is already moving forwards.

For a right-handed golfer, pressure should begin building into the ball of the lead foot, especially underneath the big toe and second toe area.

This early pressure shift is critical for sequencing the downswing properly. It helps golfers control the low point, improve strike quality, and create more clubhead speed without feeling like they are swinging harder.

Golfers who hang back on the trail foot often struggle with thin strikes, blocks, and inconsistent contact because the body never gets organised properly through impact.

3. Push in opposite directions to create rotation

Ground reaction forces are not just about pushing hard into the ground; they are about pushing in the correct direction.

As pressure shifts into the lead side, the lead foot should feel like it is pushing into the ground towards roughly 10:30 am on a clock face, while the trail foot is resisting towards 4:30 pm. This creates what is known as a force couple.

Those opposing forces help rotate the pelvis and torso powerfully through the ball. A simple way to picture it is imagining two rugby players standing on either side of you, both pushing in opposite directions to rotate your body.

That is effectively what the ground is helping great players do during the swing.

This is why long hitters often appear athletic and explosive through impact. They are not simply swinging harder; they are using the ground far more efficiently.

The golf swing lasts around 1.25 seconds, with the downswing being roughly 0.24 seconds; there is very little time to organise movement.

Golfers who improve how they load, shift, and push through their feet can create more speed, better strikes, and a swing that feels far more natural.

Often the biggest improvements in golf do not start with the hands -they start with the feet.

Baz Plummer
Staff Writer

Baz joined Golf Monthly in January 2024, and now leads the instruction section across all platforms - including print and digital. Working closely with Golf Monthly's Top 50 Coaches, he aims to curate and share useful tips on every aspect of the game - helping amateurs of all abilities to play better golf. Baz also contributes weekly to the features section, sharing his thoughts on the game we love and the topics that matter most. A member at Sand Moor Golf Club in Leeds, he looks forward to getting out on the course at least once a week in the pursuit of a respectable handicap.

Baz is currently playing:

Driver: Benross Delta XT

3-Wood: Benross Delta XT

Hybrid: TaylorMade Stealth 4 Hybrid

Irons: Benross Delta XT 5-PW

Wedges: TaylorMade RAC 60, Callaway Jaws MD5 54

Putter: TaylorMade Spider Tour

With contributions from