Posted July 28, 2025
If you’re looking for a new sport or hobby that positively impacts your health, look no further than the game of golf. Golfing is an excellent form of exercise that scores you many physical and mental health benefits.
Golf may not appear to be a physically demanding sport as it involves standing still for each shot and hitting a stationary ball. Yet, one round of golf involves walking for hours and using your brain to calculate distances and challenging shots. Plus, golfing gets you outdoors, which can boost your mood, provides social opportunities and comes with a low risk of injury—not to mention, anyone can play.
You now have an excuse to spend the afternoon on the golf course, away from everything, because it’s fore your health!
Find out five ways golfing benefits your physical and mental health. You will still reap some benefits if you play using a golf cart. However, the full health benefits come when you ditch the golf cart and play on foot—the way the game was meant to be played.
Any form of exercise is essential for a healthy heart. Just like you exercise to build muscle, exercising strengthens your heart. Regular exercise is the best way to improve heart health, maintain weight, and increase muscle strength, flexibility and balance. It also reduces stress and can help you sleep better at night.
Walking the course, carrying your clubs and swinging the golf club increase your heart rate. In fact, a recent study in the National Library of Medicine found the heart rate level of golfers over a two-hour period on a hilly course without the use of carts reached 50 to 85 percent of their maximum heart rate.
The target heart rate for moderately intense exercise is about 50 to 70 percent of your maximum heart rate, while vigorous physical activity is about 70 to 85 percent of your maximum.
Golf is a mentally stimulating sport that involves tallying scores, strategic thinking to plan and execute shots, problem solving and fostering hand-eye coordination. In addition, increased heart rate means increased blood flow to the brain, which can stimulate and improve nerve cell connections.
That’s why engaging in golf on a regular basis can enhance brain function and memory retention to slow the onset of cognitive decline.
A regular walking routine boosts your metabolism and can lead to weight loss and overtime, a lower BMI. The number of steps recommended per day to help you lose weight is 10,000 steps. Walking an 18-hole golf course far exceeds this number.
A similar study on golfers in the National Library of Medicine revealed a golfer on average takes about 12,000 steps per 18-hole round of golf, which equals approximately six miles. While it varies according to sex, age, weight and terrain, each mile you walk burns between 70 and 140 calories, according to the American Heart Association. So, for six miles, you can expect burning between 420 and 840 calories. Choose a golf course with numerous hills while carrying your clubs and you may burn even more calories.
Both physical activity and positive social contact release natural chemicals in your brain called endorphins, which reduce stress and improve your mood. In fact, research has shown walking can help reduce anxiety and depression, most especially when it’s performed outside in nature.
When you pair exercise and sunlight together, it can increase serotonin levels in the brain. Serotonin helps with mood regulation by reducing feelings of sadness or anxiety, while boosting joy and happiness.
Sunlight also increases your vitamin D levels. Many people, especially in Northeast Ohio’s climate, do not get enough of the “sunshine” vitamin, which can lead to depression-like symptoms.
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