Golf Stroke Play Scoring

Updated February 2026 · 5 min read

Stroke play is the standard scoring format in golf. Count every stroke on every hole, add them up, and the lowest total wins. It's how PGA Tour events are scored, how handicaps are calculated, and how most golfers play their weekend rounds. If you're keeping score in golf, you're playing stroke play.

Quick Facts

How Stroke Play Works

The rules are as simple as golf gets:

  1. Play every hole from tee to cup.
  2. Count every stroke, including penalties.
  3. Record your score on each hole.
  4. After 18 holes, add up your total.
  5. The player with the lowest total wins.

That's it. No holes won, no points, no partners. Just you against the course, one stroke at a time.

Scoring Terminology

TermMeaning
ParThe expected score for a hole (3, 4, or 5)
BirdieOne stroke under par
EagleTwo strokes under par
BogeyOne stroke over par
Double bogeyTwo strokes over par
Even par (E)Total score equals course par (typically 72)
Over/under parHow many strokes above or below par (e.g., -3 = 3 under, +5 = 5 over)

Gross vs. Net Scoring

Gross Score

Your gross score is the actual number of strokes you took. No adjustments, no handicap — just the raw number. If you took 85 strokes on a par 72 course, your gross score is 85 (+13).

Net Score

Your net score accounts for your handicap. Subtract your course handicap from your gross score to get your net score. If your gross is 85 and your course handicap is 12, your net score is 73 (net +1).

Net scoring is how most casual competitions and club events work. It allows a 20-handicap player to compete fairly against a 5-handicap player.

How Handicaps Work in Stroke Play

Your handicap represents the number of strokes over par you're expected to shoot on a course of average difficulty. It's calculated from your best recent rounds and adjusted for course difficulty (slope and rating).

In a net stroke play event, each player's handicap is subtracted from their gross score. The player with the lowest net score wins. This system means that a 15-handicapper who shoots 87 (net 72) beats a 5-handicapper who shoots 78 (net 73).

Scoring Penalties

In stroke play, every penalty stroke adds to your total. Common penalties:

Why Stroke Play Is the Standard

Complete test of golf. Every stroke matters equally. A bogey on hole 1 counts the same as a bogey on hole 18. There's no hiding from a bad hole.

Fair comparison. In stroke play, everyone plays the same course under the same conditions. The leaderboard is a pure ranking of performance.

Handicap foundation. Your official handicap is based on stroke play scores. Posting accurate stroke play rounds is how the handicap system works.

Strategy Tips

Minimize blow-up holes. The difference between a good round and a bad round is usually 2–3 holes. If you can turn your doubles into bogeys, you'll shave 3–4 strokes off your score without hitting a single shot better.

Play to the middle of greens. Most amateurs lose strokes by short-siding themselves — hitting at pins near the edge of the green and missing into trouble. Aim center-green and two-putt for par. It's boring, but it works.

Take your medicine. In the trees? Chip out sideways. Bad lie in a bunker? Don't try to hit it 150 yards. The fastest way to a big number is trying a hero shot from a bad situation.

Count every stroke honestly. Post accurate scores. Your handicap — and your improvement — depends on honest scoring. A vanity handicap helps no one.

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