Pace of Play Planner
What the Pace of Play Planner is for
Pace is part of good golf. A round feels better when your group knows roughly where it should be after 3, 6, 9, 12, 15, and 18 holes.
Use this planner before a full round, especially at busy Singapore courses. It gives checkpoint times so your group can adjust early instead of rushing late.
- 1. Choose 9 or 18 holes.
- 2. Enter your target round time.
- 3. Check your group against the checkpoint times.
Checkpoints
Your pace plan will appear here.
How the Pace of Play Planner Helps Your Golf
Use the Pace of Play Planner with one clear goal
Pace is part of good golf. A round feels better when your group knows roughly where it should be after 3, 6, 9, 12, 15, and 18 holes.
Use this planner before a full round, especially at busy Singapore courses. It gives checkpoint times so your group can adjust early instead of rushing late.
If you are new, pair this with the course readiness checklist and first round guide. Ready golf, simple routines, and smart tee choices are the easiest ways to save time.
For a stronger learning path, move between the Learn Golf hub, the Where to Play guide, and your member dashboard. That gives you reading, action, and progress in one loop.
Pace of Play Planner Step 1
Choose 9 or
Choose 9 or 18 holes.
Pace of Play Planner Step 2
Enter your target
Enter your target round time.
Pace of Play Planner Step 3
Check your group
Check your group against the checkpoint times.
Pace of Play Planner Reference Table
What to check when using the Pace of Play Planner
| Best use | Before tee time |
|---|---|
| Watch first | Falling behind by hole 6 |
| Next page | Course Readiness Checklist |
Pace of Play Planner Value Chart
Where the Pace of Play Planner gives the most help
Blog Reads for Pace of Play Planner
Extra context for Pace of Play Planner
These blog notes support the tool or guide you are using now. Read one, then come back to the main page so your learning turns into a clear golf action.
The Calm Group Habits Behind Better Pace
Pace improves when the whole group knows the rhythm. These habits help golfers move well without feeling rushed.
Read blog guideWhy Ready Golf Feels Better Than Rushed Golf
Ready golf should feel safe and calm, not careless. This piece explains how groups can move better together.
Read blog guideThe Lost Ball Choice That Protects Pace
A clear lost-ball plan keeps a group moving. This guide explains provisional balls, search time, and simple pace-friendly choices.
Read blog guideNext Steps After the Pace of Play Planner
Turn the Pace of Play Planner result into action
- Read one related lesson in the Learn Golf library.
- Use another tool, such as the practice plan generator, to turn the result into action.
- When you are ready to play, compare courses in the Singapore course guide.