Golf Photography: Settings for Swings, Putts, and Course Shots
Golf photography demands a completely different mindset from other sports. You cannot position yourself wherever you like. You cannot fire your shutter during play. The sport polices its own photography culture intensely, and working within those rules while still making compelling images is as much a skill as the camera technique itself.
The Rules Before the Settings
Golf is the only major sport where spectators and photographers are expected to be completely silent and motionless during play. At professional events, media photographers operate under strict accreditation rules that dictate where they can stand and when they can shoot. At amateur and club level, the rules are less formal but the etiquette is the same.
- Never fire the shutter during the backswing or downswing. The click of a camera, even a mirrorless camera with a quiet electronic shutter, is audible in the silence of a golf course and will be noticed by the player. Shoot only after impact.
- Shoot from well off the line of play, not from behind the player or directly in their sightline to the target.
- At professional events, follow the marshal instructions. Positions are assigned and movement during play is prohibited.
- Use electronic shutter where available. Most modern mirrorless cameras can shoot completely silently.
⚠️ Use Silent Shutter at All Times
Enable electronic silent shutter before you arrive at the course. Any shutter sound during a player's backswing or address position is a serious breach of etiquette and will get you removed from professional events. On mirrorless cameras the electronic shutter is typically in the menu under Drive or Silent Shooting. Test it at home before the round.
The Peak Moments in Golf
Impact: The Primary Target
Ball contact happens in under 0.5 milliseconds, far faster than any camera can capture. What you are actually photographing is the moment just after impact, when the club head is still visible near the ball position, the player's body is in maximum extension through the shot, and the follow-through has not yet begun. This frame captures the full athleticism of the swing without the awkward mid-follow-through postures that follow.
The timing cue is audio rather than visual. You hear the click of impact and then fire. By the time your finger moves and the shutter opens, you will be in the right zone. With electronic shutter this is clean. With mechanical shutter, some pre-fire anticipation is needed.
The Top of the Backswing
A golfer at the top of their backswing is in a held position for a fraction of a second, making it technically easier to capture than impact. The image shows full coil and rotation. This works well from the front or side, and is the second most-used image type in golf photography. Fire just as the club reaches maximum height.
The Putt
Putting is slower, more intimate, and gives photographers more time. The moment the ball leaves the putter face, the golfer's eyes are still down, their stance is still, and the image reads as concentration. The ball rolling on the green with the putter still at address is a clean, readable frame. Shoot from behind and to the side of the hole, low, so the hole appears in the background.
Reaction Shots
The three seconds after a significant putt or approach shot, the raised fist, the smile, the head shake, are often the most emotionally resonant images of a round. Stay ready to shoot after the ball lands. These moments are brief and unpredictable but easy to capture if your camera is already up and set.
Settings by Shot Type
| Shot Type | Shutter | Aperture | ISO | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Driver / fairway swing | 1/2000s | f/5.6 | 400–1600 | Freeze club head clearly at impact |
| Top of backswing | 1/500s | f/5.6 | 200–800 | Slower moment, less shutter needed |
| Putting stroke | 1/500s | f/4–f/5.6 | 200–800 | Slow movement, can go lower |
| Bunker shot | 1/2000s | f/5.6 | 400–1600 | Freeze sand spray at impact |
| Chip and pitch | 1/1000s | f/5.6 | 400–800 | Moderate speed, mid-range shutter |
| Course / environmental | 1/250s | f/8–f/11 | 100–400 | Landscape-style, sharpness priority |
| Reaction / celebration | 1/500s | f/4–f/5.6 | 400–1600 | Player is stationary or slow moving |
Lens Choice on the Course
Golf photography requires reach because you cannot get close to players during active play. Most professional golf photography uses 400mm or longer.
| Focal Length | Best Use | Working Distance |
|---|---|---|
| 70–200mm f/2.8 | Putting, close approach shots, reactions | 5–20m access |
| 300mm f/4 | Fairway shots with reasonable access | 15–40m |
| 400–500mm f/4–f/5.6 | Most tee and fairway coverage | 20–60m |
| 600mm+ | Professional events, restricted access zones | 30–80m |
| Wide angle (16–35mm) | Course landscape, environmental portraits | Close access only |
💡 The 70-200mm Is Underrated for Golf
Most photographers gravitate to longer lenses for golf. But a 70-200mm f/2.8 at the green, from the right position, produces tight, clean putting and reaction images with better background separation than a 400mm from further back. At club and amateur level where you can position closer, the 70-200mm often produces the most interesting images. Walk the course first, find where close access is possible, and position there with the shorter lens.
Positioning on the Course
The Tee Box
The tee shot is the highest-speed swing of the round. Position to the side of the tee box and slightly behind, so you see the player's front at impact. Avoid positions directly in front of or behind the player. At professional events, positions are assigned by tournament marshals.
The Fairway
Follow the group from the correct distance, staying well clear of the line of play. Position yourself near interesting foreground or background elements, like fairway bunkers, water hazards, or signature trees, and wait for a player to swing in front of that context.
Around the Green
This is often the best place on the course. Multiple groups spend more time here, the action is closer, and the emotion around significant putts is highest. Position at the opposite side of the hole from the player so you shoot toward the hole with the player behind the ball. The putt rolling toward the camera tells the story of the line and the outcome.
Course and Environmental Photography
The course itself is a subject. Some of the strongest golf images are environmental, placing a small figure in a grand landscape of fairway, trees, or water. For these shots:
- Shoot early morning when light is directional and mist is possible on the fairways
- Use a wide angle or standard lens and stop down to f/8 for front-to-back sharpness
- Wait for a player to walk into the composition rather than asking them to stand in a spot
- The reflection of players in water hazards from above is a clean and often overlooked angle
Autofocus Strategy
Golf AF is different from most sports because the decisive moment, impact, happens in a completely predictable location. The player does not move during the swing. This means you can pre-focus on the address position and shoot single-shot AF or even manual pre-focus.
For continuous AF, subject tracking with face detection works well for following a player as they walk or react after a shot. For swing shots, switch to single-point AF on the torso or head. The player's position at the top of the backswing is essentially static for a fraction of a second, making it easy to acquire focus before pressing the shutter.
Complete Settings Reference
| Setting | Swing / Action | Putting | Course / Environment |
|---|---|---|---|
| Shutter | 1/2000s | 1/500s | 1/250s |
| Aperture | f/5.6 | f/4–f/5.6 | f/8–f/11 |
| ISO | 400–1600 | 200–800 | 100–400 |
| AF mode | Single point or pre-focus | Single point | Single point or manual |
| Drive mode | Silent burst (5–10fps) | Single or low burst | Single shot |
| Shutter type | Electronic (silent) | Electronic (silent) | Any |
Final Thoughts
Golf photography rewards patience and knowledge of the game more than almost any other sport. Knowing which player is likely to make a significant putt, understanding the visual storytelling of a hole, and building trust with players by being unobtrusive, these produce better results than any lens or setting choice.
Be invisible, be silent, and be ready. The settings are a solved problem once you have internalized the etiquette and learned to anticipate the moments that matter.