How to Choose the Best Golf Instructor: Complete Guide [2026]

Are you thinking about taking golf lessons but don’t know how to choose the right instructor? Wondering if PGA certification really matters or if any experienced golfer can teach you well?

Choosing the right golf instructor can make the difference between frustration and real progress, between developing bad habits that are hard to correct or building solid fundamentals from the beginning.

As a professional PGA certificate with more than 35 years of experience as a golf teacher and 5 years in Murcia, I’ve seen many students arrive after investing time and money with unqualified instructors. The results are always the same: inconsistent technique, confused concepts and, worst of all, ingrained habits requiring months to unlearn.

In this complete guide, I’ll explain exactly what to look for in a golf instructor, why PGA certification matters, what questions to ask before committing, and how to evaluate if an instructor is truly right for you.

Why Not All Golf Instructors Are Equal

The reality is that anyone can advertise as a “golf instructor” or “golf coach.” There’s no regulation preventing it. But there are ENORMOUS differences between:

  • An amateur golfer who plays well and charges for “advice”

  • A professional without formal certification

  • A professional with generic certification

  • A certified PGA professional

The PGA Certification Difference

PGA (Professional Golfers’ Association) certification is the gold standard in golf instruction.

It’s not just a title. It’s a rigorous process including:

Exhaustive technical training:

  • Golf swing biomechanics

  • Applied anatomy and physiology

  • Movement analysis

  • Advanced technical correction

  • Equipment fitting

Teaching methodology:

  • Motor learning psychology

  • Effective communication

  • Adaptation to different levels

  • Pedagogical progressions

  • Expectation management

Complete game knowledge:

  • Official rules

  • Etiquette

  • Course strategy

  • Mental game management

  • Specific physical preparation

Mandatory continuing education:

  • Annual updates

  • Technical seminars

  • New methodologies

  • Teaching technology

Rigorous examinations:

  • Theory

  • Practice

  • Supervised teaching

  • Continuous evaluation

A PGA professional invests years and thousands of hours in training. It’s not comparable to someone who simply “plays golf well.”

The 10 Questions You MUST Ask Before Hiring

Before committing to a golf instructor, ask these questions. The answers will tell you everything you need to know:

1. “Do you have PGA certification? From which association?”

Why it matters: PGA certification is the guarantee of professional training.

Ideal answer: “Yes, I’m PGA [Spain/UK/USA, etc.], membership number [number], I can show you my accreditation.”

Red flag: Evasiveness, “I have years of experience but don’t need certification,” or “I’m in the process of certifying” (means they’re NOT certified).

2. “How many years have you been teaching golf professionally?”

Why it matters: Teaching experience (not just playing) is crucial.

Ideal answer: Clear number of years (minimum 3-5 years for solid experience).

Red flag: Confusing years playing with years teaching. “I’ve been playing golf for 20 years” is NOT the same as “I’ve been teaching golf for 20 years.”

3. “What is your teaching methodology?”

Why it matters: Shows if they have a structured system or improvise.

Ideal answer: Clear explanation of their process (initial assessment → diagnosis → progressive plan → follow-up → adjustments).

Red flag: “Depends on the student” without more details, or vague answers without clear structure.

4. “Do you regularly work with students at my level?”

Why it matters: Some instructors specialize in beginners, others in advanced players.

Ideal answer: “Yes, I regularly work with [beginners/intermediates/advanced], in fact [%] of my students are in your handicap range.”

Red flag: “I work with all levels” without being able to give specific examples of your level.

5. “Do you use video analysis?”

Why it matters: Video is an essential modern tool. Seeing your swing is educational and allows objective tracking.

Ideal answer: “Yes, I use video in all lessons with [specific software], I send you the analyses so you can practice with reference.”

Red flag: “I don’t need video, I see mistakes directly” (sign of outdated teaching).

6. “What does each lesson include?”

Why it matters: You should know exactly what you’re getting for your money.

Ideal answer: Clear breakdown (duration, video analysis, practice material, follow-up between lessons, etc.).

Red flag: Only mentioning duration without other details.

7. “How do you measure progress?”

Why it matters: Without objective measurement, you don’t know if you’re improving.

Ideal answer: Specific metrics (distance, accuracy, consistency, launch monitor numbers if applicable, handicap, round statistics).

Red flag: “You’ll see it in your game” without concrete metrics.

8. “Do you provide a practice plan between lessons?”

Why it matters: 90% of improvement happens in your personal practice. A good instructor guides you in this.

Ideal answer: “Yes, each lesson ends with specific documented exercises for you to practice correctly until the next session.”

Red flag: “Practice what we saw today” without documentation or structure.

9. “Do you know the courses where I regularly play well?”

Why it matters: Local knowledge allows applied teaching, not just driving range technique.

Ideal answer: “Yes, I know [course X] very well, I’ve been playing/teaching there for [years], I can give you specific strategies for those holes.”

Red flag: “The course doesn’t matter, technique is the same” (partially true, but local knowledge adds enormous value).

Signs of an EXCELLENT Golf Instructor

Beyond the questions, observe these indicators:

During the First Lesson or Consultation

GOOD SIGN:

  • Asks you many questions about your goals, experience, playing frequency

  • Observes your swing from multiple angles before saying anything

  • Uses video from the first moment

  • Prioritizes 1-2 key changes, doesn’t overwhelm you with 10 things

  • Explains WHY for each correction, not just “how”

  • Ends with clear plan for next sessions

🚫 BAD SIGN:

  • Starts correcting immediately without evaluating

  • Tells you “everything’s wrong, we need to rebuild your swing from scratch”

  • Doesn’t use video or technology

  • Gives you 5-10 things to change at once

  • Uses technical jargon without explaining in simple terms

  • Doesn’t document anything

Communication and Teaching Style

GOOD SIGN:

  • Adapts to YOUR way of learning (visual, verbal, kinesthetic)

  • Uses analogies and examples that click for you

  • Has patience when you don’t understand something

  • Celebrates small progress

  • Challenges you appropriately without frustrating you

🚫 BAD SIGN:

  • Teaches everyone the same without adapting

  • Gets frustrated if you don’t catch on quickly

  • Compares you negatively to others

  • Too technical without connecting with you

  • Too relaxed without challenging you

Technical Knowledge

GOOD SIGN:

  • Can explain biomechanics in simple terms

  • Understands physical limitations (age, flexibility, injuries)

  • Updates knowledge with latest methodologies

  • Uses modern technology (video, launch monitor, etc.)

  • Knows equipment and can advise on fitting

🚫 BAD SIGN:

  • Teaches “as it’s always been done”

  • Doesn’t consider your individual physique

  • Uses only method/swing that works for them

  • Not up to date with teaching advances

  • Can’t explain WHY something works

Common Mistakes When Choosing an Instructor

Mistake #1: Choosing the Cheapest

The problem: Quality teaching has a cost. Certified professionals invest in training, equipment, insurance, facilities.

The reality: A cheap instructor who doesn’t improve you is MORE EXPENSIVE than an expensive professional who makes you progress.

The solution: Evaluate value, not just price. What’s included? What results do they promise?

Mistake #2: Choosing the Best Player

The problem: Being a good player ≠ being a good instructor. They’re different skills.

The reality: Many great players are terrible instructors. And vice versa.

The solution: Ask about TEACHING experience and results with students, not the instructor’s handicap.

Mistake #3: Not Trying Several Before Deciding

The problem: Instructor-student chemistry matters. You don’t know if you connect without trying.

The reality: The same instructor can be excellent for one person and mediocre for another depending on compatibility.

The solution: Take trial lessons with 2-3 instructors before committing to a package.

Mistake #4: Constantly Changing Instructors

The problem: Changing every 2-3 lessons doesn’t allow any method to work.

The reality: Technical changes require time (minimum 8-12 lessons).

The solution: Give an instructor at least 2-3 months before judging results.

Mistake #5: Not Communicating Clear Expectations

The problem: If the instructor doesn’t know what you want to achieve, they can’t design an adequate plan.

The reality: “Improve” is vague. “Lower handicap from 28 to 20 in 6 months” is specific.

The solution: Define SMART goals (Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Relevant, Time-bound).

What to Expect in the Learning Process

First 1-3 Lessons: Evaluation and Fundamentals

  • Complete analysis of your current swing

  • Identification of 1-2 key priorities

  • First adjustments (normally feels strange/uncomfortable at first)

  • Establishment of improvement plan

Normal: Feeling temporarily worse (you’re changing patterns) Not normal: Not understanding WHAT you’re changing or WHY

Lessons 4-8: Integration of Changes

  • Progressive work on corrections

  • Changes start feeling more natural

  • First signs of improvement in consistency

  • Possible addition of second element to work on

Normal: Ups and downs (good days and bad days) Not normal: Zero progress or growing confusion

Lessons 9-15: Consolidation

  • Changes integrated into natural swing

  • Measurable improvement in statistics

  • Work on more advanced elements

  • Greater autonomy in your practice

Normal: Visible and measurable improvement Not normal: Total stagnation without explanation

Beyond 15 Lessons: Refinement

  • Fine adjustments

  • Work on specific situations

  • Competition preparation if applicable

  • Maintenance and continuous improvement

Why Choose a PGA Instructor in Murcia and Alicante (Local Advantage)

If you’re going to play regularly in Murcia or southern Alicante, there are specific advantages to working with a local PGA instructor:

Course Knowledge

An instructor who knows La Finca, Roda, La Torre, etc., can:

  • Teach you specific strategies for difficult holes

  • Prepare you for typical conditions of each course

  • Give you specific green-reading tips

  • Help you with club selection according to local layout

Local Climate Adaptation

Murcia has specific conditions:

  • Frequent wind (ball flight management)

  • Fast greens in summer (putting technique)

  • Firm ground (approach adjustments)

A local instructor teaches you adapted to these real conditions.

Continuity

If you live or visit Murcia or south of Alicante regularly:

  • Long-term follow-up

  • Consistent lessons in same place

  • Progress documented year after year

  • Solid instructor-student relationship

How We Work at Gardarsson Golf School

Let me explain how I apply these principles in my teaching:

My Teaching Philosophy

1. Evaluation before action I don’t correct anything without first understanding your swing, your goals, your limitations.

2. Simplicity over complexity One well-executed change is worth more than ten mediocre changes.

3. Education, not just instruction I explain the WHY. I want you to understand your swing, not depend on me.

4. Objective measurement We use video, data, statistics. Not vague “feelings.”

5. Guided practice Each lesson ends with a specific plan of what to practice and how.

What’s Included Working With Me

Official PGA certification – Verifiable membership number ✓ 35+ years experience – Hundreds of students at all levels ✓ Professional video analysis – Specialized software, recordings you take with you ✓ Expert local knowledge – 5 years teaching on Murcia and Alicante courses ✓ Structured methodology – Proven system, not improvisation ✓ Lessons in your language – Spanish, English, German, Icelandic ✓ Practice materials – Documented exercises, reference videos ✓ Continuous follow-up – Available via WhatsApp between lessons ✓ Flexibility – Individual, group, clinics, playing lessons

The Decision is Yours (But Make It Informed)

It doesn’t matter if you ultimately choose to work with me or another instructor. What matters is that you make an INFORMED decision.

Use the questions from this guide. Observe the signs. Trust your instinct after evaluating objectively.

A good golf instructor is an investment in your game that will pay dividends for years. A bad instructor is wasted time and money, and bad habits to undo.

Take the time necessary to choose well.

Looking for a Certified PGA Instructor in Murcia or Alicante?

If you’re looking for professional golf lessons in Murcia / Alicante with:

  • Official PGA certification

  • Proven experience (35+ years)

  • Structured methodology

  • Expert knowledge of local courses

  • Teaching in your language

I’d love to talk with you.

👉 CONTACT FOR FREE INITIAL CONSULTATION 👈

No pressure. No mandatory packages. Just an honest conversation about your goals and how I can help you.

Your golf deserves certified professional teaching.

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