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Golf Accessories


Enhance Your Golf Experience with the Right Accessories

Golf accessories are designed to elevate every round, whether you are a high-handicapper seeking confidence and comfort or a touring pro fine-tuning performance. At TGW.com, the selection includes distance-measuring devices, protective headcovers, premium gloves, specialty balls, and functional organizers. Accessories support golfers of all ages and skill levels, from beginners in junior programs to experienced players in leagues or club teams.


Types of Golf Accessories Available

The golf accessories category showcases a diverse range of products. Distance-measuring devices provide accurate yardages for every shot, helping golf teams and competitive amateurs make smart decisions. Headcovers protect club heads and shafts during travel and play, keeping equipment in peak condition. Gloves offer improved grip, tactile feedback, and comfort for a secure connection with the club that benefits players with any swing speed or grip pressure.


Specialty Golf Balls and Training Aids

The accessories selection also features various types of specialty golf balls, suitable for players working on specific parts of their game or for use at charity golf outings and tournaments. Training aids can be used for targeted practice, fitting sessions, or junior golf clinics, allowing for effective development of key swing mechanics and consistency. These tools cater to both recreational golfers and those working with professional instructors to refine accuracy and control.


Golf Organizers and On-Course Essentials

Keeping your gear orderly is simple with available golf organizers, which streamline your preparation for both casual rounds and practice sessions. Organizers help maintain proper club storage, making it easier to transport equipment between home, the car, and the range. On-course essentials such as scorecard holders, divot tools, towels, and ball markers ensure every golfer is equipped for a smooth round, whether playing in competitive league matches or a friendly foursome.


Key Features and Fitting Considerations

Golfers should consider grip style, material technology, and features tailored to playing style or conditions. Fit and feel are critical, especially for gloves and accessories that enhance control and tactile awareness. Products designed to withstand varying weather and turf conditions ensure durability and performance, contributing to reliable shot-making and equipment longevity. Selecting the right accessory can optimize your moment of inertia, spin rates, and turf interaction, enabling players to focus on strategy and shot execution.


Versatility for All Types of Golfers

The accessory selection at TGW suits the needs of single-digit handicaps, seniors seeking comfortable grips, juniors needing lightweight training aids, and mid-handicappers prioritizing workability with distance. Golf organizations, leagues, and charity outings often rely on accessories for event gifts and efficient tournament management. Flexible options allow you to mix and match according to the demands of club fitting days or junior practice sessions.


Outfit your game and discover how quality golf accessories can streamline your experience on the course. Browse TGW's full selection to find products that fit your equipment, training, and tournament needs for every season ahead.

Golf Accessories FAQs


Should I get a GPS watch or a laser rangefinder for my golf game?

The right choice really comes down to how you like to gather information on the course. A laser rangefinder gives you precise, on-demand yardages to the pin or any hazard you point it at, which is ideal if you want exact numbers before committing to a shot. A GPS watch, on the other hand, delivers constant at-a-glance yardages to the front, center, and back of the green without stopping to aim at anything, making it a better fit for golfers who prefer a faster pace and hands-free convenience. If you play a lot of unfamiliar courses or compete where precision matters, the rangefinder is the stronger tool.


What golf accessories are most important for a beginner golfer just starting out?

As a beginner, your priority should be accessories that help you practice consistently and protect your investment in equipment. A quality golf glove improves your grip pressure and connection to the club, which directly affects your ability to square the face at impact, and a divot repair tool with a ball marker is something every course expects you to carry. From there, a rangefinder or entry-level GPS device will help you learn how far you actually hit each club, which is one of the most important pieces of self-knowledge a developing golfer can build. You can find beginner-friendly options across all these categories at TGW Golf Electronics.


What specs matter most when buying a golf glove?

Fit is the single most important spec in a golf glove, and it is something a lot of golfers underestimate. The glove should feel like a second skin, with no bunching in the palm and the velcro tab closing naturally across the back of the hand without pulling. Material matters too: Cabretta leather offers superior feel and grip in dry conditions, while synthetic or hybrid gloves hold up better in heat and humidity and tend to last longer through repeated rounds. If you are getting blisters or losing grip through impact, the glove is either the wrong size or the wrong material for your hand and playing conditions.


How do premium golf balls compare to distance balls, and which one should I buy?

Premium golf balls like urethane-cover tour models are engineered to give skilled players control over spin rate and feel around the greens, offering more short-game workability at the cost of slightly less raw distance off the tee. Distance balls typically use a harder ionomer cover and a lower-compression core, which reduces spin off the driver and translates to more carry for golfers with moderate swing speeds. If you are breaking 85 consistently and your wedge and putting game is where you lose strokes, a tour ball will give you a real performance advantage. If you are still building ball-striking consistency, a distance or mid-range ball will reward you with more forgiveness and longer drives without punishing mishits as severely.


What is the biggest mistake golfers make when buying a rangefinder?

The most common mistake is buying a rangefinder based on maximum range specs without considering slope functionality and display clarity in real playing conditions. Most golfers never actually need 1,000-plus yards of range, but they will absolutely benefit from slope-adjusted yardages that factor in elevation change when the feature is legal to use in their regular rounds. A unit with a clear, fast-locking display matters far more in practice than a chart-topping range number you will never realistically use. Make sure the model you choose has a pin-locking feature with vibration confirmation so you know you have acquired the flag and not a tree or spectator in the background.


How do I know if my golf glove fits correctly before I buy it?

A properly fitting glove should have no excess material at the fingertips, meaning the seam at the end of each finger sits right at the tip of your finger, not beyond it. The palm should lie flat with no creasing or loose fabric when you close your hand around a grip, because bunching in the palm creates inconsistent grip pressure during your swing. Wear it on your lead hand only, and when you fasten the tab it should lie flat across the back of the hand without any pulling or tightness across the knuckles. If you feel any restriction in your wrist hinge or the glove slips slightly at the top of your backswing, size down or try a cadet cut, which is designed for golfers with wider palms and shorter fingers.