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- Par is the expected number of strokes for an expert golfer — lower scores are better
- Birdie (-1), par (0), bogey (+1), and double bogey (+2) are the scores you'll see most often
- A standard 18-hole course has a par of 70-72
- Tracking your score hole by hole reveals patterns you can't see from just a total
Golf scoring is backwards — and that confuses everyone at first
In most sports, higher scores are better. Golf flips that on its head. The fewer strokes you take, the better you did. And the terminology — birdie, bogey, eagle, snowman — sounds like a nature documentary crossed with a weather report.
Let's untangle all of it.
Par: the foundation of everything
Every hole on a golf course has a par value — the number of strokes an expert golfer is expected to take to complete that hole. Par always assumes two putts on the green.
| Hole Type | Par | Expected Shots to Green | + Putts | Distance Range |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Par 3 | 3 | 1 | 2 | 100-250 yards |
| Par 4 | 4 | 2 | 2 | 250-470 yards |
| Par 5 | 5 | 3 | 2 | 470-600+ yards |
A typical 18-hole course consists of four par-3s, ten par-4s, and four par-5s, totaling a course par of 72. Some courses are par 70 or 71, depending on their design.
The scoring terms
Here's every scoring term you'll encounter, from best to worst:
| Term | Strokes vs. Par | How Common |
|---|---|---|
| Albatross (double eagle) | -3 | Extraordinarily rare, even for pros |
| Eagle | -2 | Rare — usually on par 5s |
| Birdie | -1 | Good players make a few per round |
| Par | 0 | The benchmark — solid play |
| Bogey | +1 | The most common score for recreational golfers |
| Double bogey | +2 | Happens regularly for mid-handicappers |
| Triple bogey | +3 | A bad hole, but not unusual for beginners |
| Quadruple bogey+ | +4 or more | The "blow-up" hole |
A few colorful nicknames
- Ace — a hole-in-one (completing a par 3 in one stroke)
- Snowman — a score of 8 on a single hole (the 8 looks like a snowman)
- Turkey — three birdies in a row
- Condor — a score of -4 on a single hole. Has happened maybe 5 times in recorded golf history.
How to read a scorecard
A scorecard tracks your strokes per hole. Here's what a sample scorecard looks like:
| Hole | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | OUT |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Par | 4 | 3 | 5 | 4 | 4 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 4 | 36 |
| Score | 5 | 4 | 6 | 4 | 5 | 3 | 6 | 5 | 4 | 42 |
| +/- | +1 | +1 | +1 | 0 | +1 | 0 | +2 | 0 | 0 | +6 |
This golfer shot 42 on the front nine (6 over par). The "OUT" column totals the first 9 holes. The back nine uses "IN," and both combine for your 18-hole total.
A score of 42+44 = 86 on a par-72 course means you shot 14 over par (often written as "+14").
Gross score vs. net score
Gross score
Your actual total strokes — no adjustments. If you took 92 strokes on an 18-hole course, your gross score is 92.
Net score
Your gross score minus your handicap strokes. If your handicap is 18, your net score would be 92 - 18 = 74. Net scoring is how golfers of different skill levels compete fairly against each other.
What's a "good" score?
This depends entirely on your experience level:
| Golfer Type | Typical Score (Par 72) | What It Means |
|---|---|---|
| Complete beginner | 110-130+ | Totally normal starting point |
| Casual golfer | 95-110 | Plays occasionally, still learning |
| Regular golfer | 85-95 | Plays weekly, works on their game |
| Low handicapper | 75-85 | Skilled amateur |
| Scratch golfer | ~72 | Shoots around par |
| Professional | 65-72 | Elite level |
The average male recreational golfer scores around 96. The average female recreational golfer scores around 108. If you're anywhere in these ranges, you're normal.
Other scoring formats
Stableford
Instead of counting strokes, you earn points based on your score relative to par:
| Score | Points |
|---|---|
| Double bogey or worse | 0 |
| Bogey | 1 |
| Par | 2 |
| Birdie | 3 |
| Eagle | 4 |
| Albatross | 5 |
In Stableford, higher points are better (finally, a golf format where more is more). This system rewards good holes without punishing blow-ups as harshly. A 10 on one hole only costs you 0 points instead of ruining your entire round.
Best ball / Scramble
In a best ball format, each player plays their own ball and the team takes the best score on each hole. In a scramble, everyone hits, the team picks the best shot, and everyone plays from that spot. Scrambles are popular in charity and corporate events because they keep everyone involved and produce lower scores.
Why hole-by-hole scoring matters
Your total score tells you what happened. Hole-by-hole scoring tells you why.
Consider two golfers who both shot 90:
| Golfer A | Golfer B |
|---|---|
| 17 bogeys, 1 par | 12 pars, 3 bogeys, 3 double bogeys |
Same total score — completely different games. Golfer A is remarkably consistent but can't break through to par. Golfer B plays great golf most of the time but has blow-up holes. They need entirely different improvement strategies.
NG Only recording your total score and feeling like you 'played badly'
OK Tracking each hole to discover that 3 bad holes accounted for 80% of your over-par strokes
What to track beyond total score
Once you're comfortable keeping score, add these:
| Stat | What It Reveals |
|---|---|
| Putts per round | How much the short game costs you |
| Fairways hit | Whether your tee shots are in play |
| Greens in regulation | Whether you're reaching the green in the expected strokes |
| Penalties | How many strokes you're giving away to mistakes |
You don't need to track all of these at once. Start with total score and putts, then add more as you get comfortable.
The bottom line
Golf scoring centers on par — the expert benchmark for each hole. Every stroke over par is added, every stroke under is subtracted, and the lowest total wins. Understanding terms like birdie, bogey, and eagle helps you follow the game, but the real power comes from tracking your scores hole by hole to identify where your strokes are going. Start simple, and let the data guide your improvement.
References & Data Notes
Average golfer scores are based on estimates from the National Golf Foundation and USGA handicap data. Par standards and scoring terms follow the Rules of Golf as published by the R&A and USGA.