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How To Prevent Early Extension In Your Golf Swing

Author

Daniel Foster

Published Apr 06, 2026

Before we answer the question about how to prevent early extension in your golf swing it makes sense to underline exactly what an 'early extension' is. This term refers to a loss of spine angle through the hitting area. As the player comes down towards impact, the hips move closer to the ball, restricting the space your hands have to move in. 

At its worst, this can cause a shank, but even if you aren't shanking, you'll not be striking the ball as sweetly as you can. In the video and article below, Golf Monthly Top 50 Coach Peter Finch discusses how to address this issue...

When you’re in a proper address position, with your hips pushed back and your spine tilted over, you really then want to see that relationship between the hips and the spine being maintained for pretty much your whole golf swing.

If that spine angle begins to change and starts to move back as your hips move forward during the downswing, the club position will change, and not for the better. Specifically, it will get trapped behind you, meaning you'll need to make various compensations in a short space of time approaching impact to hit the ball well. It's a very difficult way to play consistently good golf. 

Instead, as you take the club back, maintain your posture and keep your hips out of the way. Then, from the top, bump your hips towards the target, trying to keep them back and out of the way. If you can feel like your weight is moving into your left heel, that will really help to keep the hips back and stop them from extending early.

A great drill to prevent early extension in your golf swing can be done using an umbrella or an alignment stick, as I demonstrate in the video above. Stick it in the ground just behind and to the left of your lead hip if you're a right-hander. Work on trying to touch the umbrella or alignment stick as you begin the downswing, which will give you the sensation of what it feels like to maintain your posture throughout the final stages of your swing.

It's a hard thing to fix if it has been ingrained across many years, so don't despair if it doesn't immediately translate onto the course. Stick with it and put in the reps and you'll start to notice you're striking the ball better, and hitting it further and straighter.