Most golfers spend hours working on their swing, but they overlook one of the fastest game-changers available: tee height. In less than 60 seconds, adjusting how high the ball sits on the tee can completely change launch, spin, contact and ball flight with the driver.
Here’s the reality: many “bad swings” are actually poor impact conditions created before the club even moves. Tee height directly influences where the ball strikes the face — and with today’s drivers, impact location matters immensely.
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If the ball is teed too low, golfers tend to strike the lower portion of the face. That contact often produces a lower-launching shot with excess spin, robbing you of carry distance and creating that weak “ballooning” flight that seems to fall out of the air. Many players also subconsciously steepen their angle of attack when the ball looks too low, which further reduces launch and efficiency.
On the other hand, if the ball is teed excessively high, contact can move too far up the face — or even toward the crown. While modern drivers are designed to optimize slightly higher-face contact, too much can create pop-ups, inconsistent strikes, and shots that launch too high with very little control.
For most stock driver shots, a great checkpoint is having roughly half the golf ball sitting above the top line of the driver when the club is resting on the ground. This helps promote center-to-upper-face contact, which is typically where golfers maximize distance and ball speed.
But here’s where skilled players separate themselves: tee height is also strategic.
Need to maximize carry with a helping wind? Tee it slightly higher. A higher tee can encourage a more upward angle of attack and higher launch conditions, allowing the wind to help carry the ball farther.
Need a controlled “fairway finder” or stinger-style tee shot? Lower the tee height slightly. This often helps reduce launch and keep the ball flight flatter and more penetrating — especially useful into the wind or on tight driving holes where accuracy matters more than distance.
Tour players adjust tee height constantly depending on trajectory, wind, and shot shape, and recreational golfers should too.
The next time you step onto the tee box, don’t just mindlessly stick the tee in the ground. Take a moment and ask yourself: What shot am I trying to hit?
Sometimes shooting lower isn’t about rebuilding your swing. Often it’s simply about changing the setup conditions before the swing even begins. And once you start to master that skill, playing good golf becomes a whole lot easier.