How to Fix a Slice in Golf Fast

How to Fix a Slice in Golf Fast

The slice is the most common swing fault in golf — and also one of the most frustrating. Watching your ball curve weakly right (for right-handed golfers) over and over again is enough to shake anyone’s confidence off the tee.

The good news? You can fix your slice. And you don’t need to rebuild your entire swing to do it.

In this guide, we’ll show you exactly how to fix a slice with simple setup and swing adjustments that you can implement in your very next round.


🧠 What Causes a Slice?

A slice happens when the clubface is open relative to the swing path at impact. This creates side spin, causing the ball to curve right (for right-handed players).

The most common culprits:

  • Weak grip

  • Open clubface at setup or impact

  • Out-to-in (over-the-top) swing path

  • Poor weight transfer or early release


🔟 10 Actionable Tips to Fix a Slice in Golf


1. Strengthen Your Grip

Check your grip first. A weak grip (hands too far left on the handle) makes it harder to square the clubface.

✅ Fix:

  • Rotate your lead (left) hand slightly to the right

  • See 2–3 knuckles on your left hand

  • Your trail (right) hand should sit under the grip, not on top


2. Square Your Clubface at Setup

A lot of players slice because they start open at address.

✅ Fix:

  • Lay the club flat behind the ball

  • Make sure the leading edge is perpendicular to the target line

  • Double check that your feet, hips, and shoulders aren’t aimed right


3. Drop Your Trail Foot Back Slightly

This “closed stance” helps promote an in-to-out swing path and discourages coming over the top.

✅ Fix:

  • Pull your right foot (for righties) back 2–3 inches

  • Keep shoulders square or slightly closed


4. Focus on an In-to-Out Path

Slicers often swing outside-in, cutting across the ball.

✅ Drill:

  • Place a headcover just outside the target line

  • Practice swinging from inside the headcover to out

  • Feel like you’re hitting the ball to right field (for baseball players)


5. Keep the Trail Elbow Tucked

Flying right elbow = steep, slicing path.

✅ Fix:

  • Keep the trail elbow close to your side during the downswing

  • Think “tuck and rotate” instead of “lift and throw”


6. Shift Your Weight — Don’t Hang Back

Hanging back leaves the clubface open and causes weak, high slices.

✅ Fix:

  • Transfer weight into your lead leg during the downswing

  • Feel pressure under your lead foot before impact


7. Don’t Flip the Wrists — Rotate the Body

Flipping = weak and open. Rotating = strong and square.

✅ Fix:

  • Rotate your chest through the ball

  • Let the clubface naturally release (you don’t have to “manipulate” it)


8. Hit Draws on the Range

Don’t just try to eliminate the slice — practice hitting the opposite shot.

✅ Drill:

  • Pick a target line

  • Start the ball right, curve it left

  • Exaggerate the draw pattern to retrain your swing


9. Use the Right Equipment

Gear matters. Slicers should look for:

  • Offset drivers

  • More upright lie angles

  • Draw-biased weighting

  • Softer, higher-launching shafts


10. Stay Loose and Trust the Fix

A tight grip and overthinking can undo everything. Once you’ve adjusted:

  • Stay relaxed

  • Swing within yourself

  • Trust the path and release


🚀 Bonus: Quick Fix for the Tee Box

If you’re mid-round and slicing everything:

  • Tee the ball higher

  • Move it slightly forward in your stance

  • Grip the club slightly stronger

  • Aim slightly right and swing out to right field

You may not hit a draw, but you’ll minimize the curve and keep the ball in play.


Final Thoughts: You Don’t Have to Live with a Slice

Fixing a slice in golf is 100% doable — and often faster than you think. The key is addressing setup and swing path first, then trusting the correction. Combine these simple changes with a few focused practice sessions and you’ll start hitting straight, powerful drives in no time.

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