What is a Slope Rating®, and what does it represent?

A USGA Slope Rating reflects the relative difficulty of a course for a golfer with a USGA Handicap Index® above scratch, compared to the difficulty of the course for a scratch golfer.

How often should a course be rated?

A course must be re-rated at least every 10 years, even if it has not changed in any way. Newly constructed courses change rapidly in the first few years, and must be re-rated after five years.

What factors are used in Course Rating™?

Yardage is the predominant factor in determining a USGA Course Rating. The effective playing length of a hole may be substantially different from its actual length, which includes roll, elevation, dogleg/forced lay-up, prevailing wind and altitude.

Obstacle factors (bunkers, water trees, etc.) are considered separately on their effect on the play of scratch and bogey golfer on each hole. Course management and maintenance practices must be consistent from day to day, and month to month, so that the USGA Course Ratings will remain valid. Minor construction or moving a teeing ground can impact course rating.

What do the numbers mean?

Question: Which golf course is more difficult?

Answer: Easy… at every handicap level, the answer is Course A! Surprised? Many, if not most golfers probably would have guessed Course B. It just goes to illustrate the many myths and misunderstandings that abound regarding the subject of Slope.

Course Rating Slope
Course A 71.3 121
Course B 69.2 132

Myth No. 1

Slope Rating is the major indicator of the difficulty. Or to put it another way the higher the Slope, the more difficult the course. Wrong! As the above example confirms, it is the Course Rating and not the Slope Rating, which is the more dominant factor defining course difficulty.

As each score a golfer posts is broken down into a numeric value known as a “differential,” it is the Course Rating that is the more important factor in the calculation (Adjusted Score minus Course Rating multiplied by 113 divided by Slope Rating).

To put the Course Rating vs. Slope Rating debate into perspective, it takes more than 20 units of Slope to have the same impact as a single stroke of Course Rating on a 5-handicapper. As a golfer’s handicap increases, this ratio of the importance of the two values changes, but even for a 20-handicapper it takes five to six points of slope to have the same impact as one stroke in the Course Rating.

Myth No. 1a

Two courses with the same Slope are of equal difficulty. Wrong! A course with a rating of 71.5/125 is about two strokes more difficult than a course with a rating of 69.6/125 at every handicap level.

Myth No. 2

Slope Rating can be compared from one course to another. Wrong! There is nothing more dangerous than trying to draw any sort of meaningful conclusions by comparing Slope Rating from one course to another.

What is Slope?

Slope merely tells how “proportionately” more difficult that a golf course (by tee set up) plays for higher handicapped golfers as opposed to lower handicapped golfers. The more difficult the play proportionally for the higher handicappers, the greater the Slope.

That’s it! Slope doesn’t tell you how the course proportionally plays from any other set of tees, let alone tell you how it compares with other courses.

This proportionate difficulty is measured via a course rating process that evaluates each hole and each shot through the eyes of a scratch golfer and bogey golfer. This process is so thorough that an actual rating for how the scratch and the bogey golfer is computed, and it is the gap between the Course (or Scratch) Rating and Bogey Rating™ that determines the Slope.

For example, a set of tees may be issued a Course Rating of 71.0 and a Bogey Rating of 92.0. What this means is that if a scratch golfer were to complete 20 rounds, we would expect his 10 best scores to average around 70.5. If a golfer with a Handicap Index of 20.0 were to complete 20 rounds, we would expect his 10 best scores to average around 92.0. Based upon this gap of 23.8 strokes between the two ratings (92 – 71= 21), a Men’s Slope Rating of 113 would be issued (difference in ratings times 5.381). *A constant of 5.381 is achieved by finding the slope of a line between 71.0 and 92.0. These are the scratch and bogey ratings of the USGA standard course with a rating of 71.0/113.

The Scratch and Bogey Ratings are somewhat volatile, and when a series of factors or obstacles on a course tend to effect one of the two golfers, then things will happen to the Slope.

For example, if a set of tees has a high number of holes that the bogey golfer can reach the green in “regulation,” an upward pressure on the Slope will be exerted. Think about it … on most of these holes the bogey golfer is approaching the green with a long iron or a fairway wood, while the scratch golfer has a wedge or less in his/her hands. Clearly the bogey golfer is much more susceptible to any of the green-side trouble present on the holes (bunkers, difficult chips, etc.) … the kind of trouble which can cause scores to soar. Such a scenario will force the Bogey Rating higher, and when the gap between the two ratings widens the result will be a higher Slope.

Now consider a set of tees, even on the same course, where most of the holes are unreachable in regulation for the bogey golfer. Now it is the scratch golfer who has the longer approach shots, perhaps with mid to long irons, while the bogey golfer may merely be chipping/pitching to the green in one over regulation. To a certain degree, the tide of proportionate difficulty has turned. Though both ratings will be increased because of the added length of these tees, the gap between the Scratch and Bogey Ratings may be staying relatively constant or may widen at a very slow rate.

These upward and downward pressures help explain why a Slope Rating may increase sharply at a course from the forward tees to the middle tees (Bogey Rating as the approach shot becomes longer), yet hardly change from middle tees to back tees (gap increasing slowly due to shorter approach shots of the bogey golfer). It also explains how a shorter course can be issued a Slope that may seem to be a little high, or how a longer course may be issued a Slope Rating that may seem a little low.

Another factor that can greatly impact the Slope is forced lay-ups. If the scratch golfer is forced to lay-up on a hole because of any one of a number of obstacles (water hazard, severe dogleg, etc.), this will increase the Scratch Rating. That’s because of the extra yardage of the approach shot. It will leave the Bogey Rating untouched. This higher Scratch Rating narrows the gap with the Bogey Rating and decreases the Slope Rating. Conversely, if the forced lay-ups only affect higher handicappers, the Bogey Rating and Slope Rating will increase.