WOMEN'S GOLF CLOTHING
Best Women's Golf Clothing 2026: Brands Actually Doing It Right
The phrase "shrink and pink" describes the approach that too many golf brands have historically taken with women's apparel: take the men's version, reduce the size range, change the color palette to pastels and florals, and call it a women's line. The brands on this list didn't do that. They invested in women-specific pattern development, consulted women golfers about what actually fits and functions on the course, and built products around the reality of a woman's swing, body proportion, and aesthetic preferences. That distinction is the difference between golf clothing you'll wear and golf clothing you'll return.
The 10 Best Women's Golf Clothing Brands
1. Kinona Sport Polo
Kinona was founded by two women — one with a background in sportswear design, the other a lifelong golfer — who were genuinely frustrated by the gap between what the women's golf market offered and what women golfers actually wanted. The result is a brand whose design decisions are informed by women golfers at every stage of development, and the Kinona Sport Polo is the clearest expression of that foundation. It is cut specifically for women's athletic proportions: higher armhole, more room through the hip relative to the chest, and a back hem that's longer than the front to stay tucked through the follow-through without riding up.
The pattern and color choices at Kinona reflect a deliberate rejection of the pastel-and-floral formula that dominated women's golf apparel for decades. The brand offers bold geometric prints, saturated solid colors, and colorway combinations that look like considered fashion choices rather than safe club-appropriate compromise. This matters because women's golf has more sartorial freedom than men's — a woman in a patterned polo and colorful skort is entirely appropriate at virtually any club. Kinona leans into that freedom confidently.
The performance fabric is a moisture-wicking polyester-spandex blend that maintains its shape through the round without the pilling that affects lower-quality synthetics after repeated washing. The collar construction — a detail that distinguishes quality polo construction — lies flat against the neck, holds its shape through the swing, and doesn't gap or strain at the front placket during movement. Kinona also extends their size range to 3X in most styles, which is rare among premium women's golf brands.
At $88 to $110, Kinona sits at the premium-mid tier for women's golf apparel. The price reflects genuine development investment in women-specific construction and the higher cost of smaller-brand production runs relative to mass-market brands. For the golfer who wants clothing that was actually designed for her rather than adapted from a men's pattern, the price is justified. Kinona is available direct from KinonaSport.com with free returns, which is the right way to buy a brand whose fit is this specific.
Pros
- Genuinely women-specific construction throughout
- Bold patterns and colorways — not generic pastels
- Sizes extend to 3X in most styles
- Collar lies flat and holds shape under movement
- Back hem longer than front — stays tucked
Cons
- Premium pricing for a smaller brand
- Bold patterns not for golfers who prefer subtle styling
- Limited retail availability — primarily direct
2. Lululemon Swiftly Tech Polo
Lululemon didn't enter the women's golf market with a dedicated golf line — they captured golf business by building athletic apparel so good that women started wearing it on the course. The Swiftly Tech Polo represents Lululemon's deliberate acknowledgment of that reality: a polo with the Swiftly Tech fabric technology applied to a collar and placket construction that passes golf dress codes. The Swiftly Tech fabric itself is remarkable — a buttery-soft, seam-minimized, four-way stretch blend that moves with the body in a way that most golf-specific synthetics don't approach.
The Silverescent technology embedded in the Swiftly Tech fabric is worth understanding: it's a silver-ion antimicrobial treatment woven into the yarn itself, not applied as a coating that washes off. This keeps the polo fresh through back-to-back playing days without washing — meaningful for travel golfers or anyone playing multiple rounds in a week. The fabric also manages temperature exceptionally well in warm weather, which is the practical test for a polo worn on a hot course in direct sun.
Lululemon's fit philosophy is the key to understanding who this polo is for. The athletic cut is more contoured through the torso than traditional golf polos — it reads as a put-together outfit rather than a utilitarian sports garment. For women who prioritize looking good both on and off the course, this is meaningful. For women who prefer a more relaxed fit or who are buying for the club rather than the gym, the tailored cut may not suit. Lululemon's size range extends from 0 to 20, with an ALIGN extension in select styles — inclusive but not as far as Kinona's 3X.
Pros
- Swiftly Tech fabric is genuinely exceptional
- Silverescent antimicrobial — stays fresh between washes
- Outstanding temperature management in heat
- Athletic cut reads as fashion-forward, not sportswear
- Strong brand reputation for consistent quality
Cons
- Contoured fit doesn't suit everyone
- Size range stops at 20 — not the most inclusive
- Premium price for a casual-adjacent brand
3. Tail Activewear Polo
Tail Activewear has been making women's golf and tennis apparel for over 30 years — long before the athleisure era made women's performance clothing fashionable outside the gym. That longevity represents a genuine commitment to women's athletic apparel construction rather than a trend-chasing pivot, and the Tail polo reflects decades of refinement for the specific demands of women's golf. The cut is developed specifically for the golf swing, with gusset panels under the arm that allow full extension on the backswing without the shirt pulling out of a skort or shorts waistband.
The UPF 50+ sun protection is built into the Tail fabric construction rather than applied as a coating — the fabric's weave density provides the protection throughout the garment's life, not just for the first twenty washes. For golfers who play regularly in sun-intensive environments (the American Southwest, Florida, summer rounds anywhere), this kind of built-in sun protection is a practical health consideration, not just a marketing feature. The moisture-wicking performance is consistent with other premium golf fabrics — sweat moves away from the skin and evaporates rather than pooling.
Tail's design aesthetic is golf-specific rather than crossover lifestyle — the patterns and silhouettes are unmistakably golf apparel. This reads as a strength or limitation depending on the wearer's perspective. For the golfer who wants to look intentionally, properly dressed for golf — not like she wandered onto the course from a yoga class — Tail's construction and aesthetic is exactly right. The size range extends to 2X in most styles, which covers a meaningful portion of the market without reaching the 3X ceiling of Kinona.
Pros
- 30+ years of women's golf apparel experience
- Gusset panels designed for golf swing extension
- Built-in UPF 50+ protection throughout garment life
- Genuine golf-specific construction and aesthetic
- Sizes extend to 2X in most styles
Cons
- Golf-specific aesthetic doesn't cross over as well
- Less bold colorways than Kinona or Foray Golf
- Size range doesn't reach 3X like top competitors
4. Foray Golf Collection
Foray Golf occupies the intersection of editorial fashion and golf performance — it is the brand that fashion-conscious women golfers reach for when they want to look genuinely stylish on the course rather than just appropriately dressed. The brand is women-founded and designed with a clear point of view: golf clothing should reflect the personal style of the wearer, not the conservative conventions of the sport. The Foray polo uses premium performance fabric in colorways and print designs that would look at home in a fashion magazine spread as readily as on the 18th green.
The construction quality at Foray is consistently premium. The polo uses 4-way stretch performance fabric with moisture management, cut specifically for women's athletic proportions with a high armhole, articulated back panel, and a hemline that works tucked or untucked. The attention to finishing details — flatlock seams, clean collar interlining, matched plaid and print patterns at the seams — is notably higher than mass-market brands and comparable to brands at significantly higher price points.
Foray Golf's size range extends to 2X and the brand has been explicit about their commitment to expanding further. They release seasonal collections rather than maintaining a permanent catalog, which means specific styles sell out and aren't restocked — a frustration for consistent buyers, but a reflection of their fashion-brand operational model. For the golfer who views her golf wardrobe as an expression of personal style rather than just appropriate sportswear, Foray Golf is the strongest option at their price point.
Pros
- Best editorial design aesthetic in women's golf
- Premium finishing details — flatlock seams, matched prints
- Women-founded with genuine design point of view
- 4-way stretch with women-specific athletic cut
Cons
- Seasonal collections sell out and aren't restocked
- Size range tops at 2X — not the most inclusive
- Premium pricing for a smaller brand
5. IBKUL Performance Polo
IBKUL (the name derives from the Icelandic word for "cooling") was built around a specific performance claim: their fabric keeps the wearer cooler in hot sun than competing performance fabrics. This claim is backed by independent testing, and the technology involves a combination of high-density UV-blocking weave and a cooling moisture-management system that accelerates evaporation from the skin surface. For golfers who play in heat — the American South in summer, desert Southwest, warm coastal climates — the practical difference in comfort is real.
The UPF 50+ protection is built into the IBKUL fabric by design — every IBKUL garment blocks more than 98% of UV radiation regardless of fabric color, because the protection comes from the weave density rather than a dye or coating. The brand also offers their most popular polo styles in long-sleeve versions, which are practical for golfers with significant sun sensitivity who need maximum coverage without sacrificing performance. The long-sleeve polo with thumb holes for cuff coverage is the most complete sun protection option in women's golf apparel.
IBKUL extends their size range to 3X in most styles, which matches Kinona's reach and exceeds most other brands in this guide. The aesthetic runs more conservative than Kinona or Foray Golf — IBKUL colorways prioritize practical club-appropriateness over fashion statement. The price point at $65 to $80 is among the most accessible for genuine performance fabric in this guide, making IBKUL the strongest recommendation for golfers whose primary concern is sun protection and heat management.
Pros
- Best heat management and cooling in this guide
- UPF 50+ built into weave — not coating-dependent
- Sizes to 3X — among the most inclusive
- Long-sleeve options for maximum sun coverage
- Accessible pricing for genuine performance fabric
Cons
- Conservative colorways — less fashion-forward
- Not for golfers who want bold design aesthetic
- Limited in-store availability
6. Nike Dri-FIT Victory Polo Women's
Nike's Dri-FIT Victory Women's Polo is the accessible-tier benchmark — the polo to recommend to the golfer who is new to the sport and wants reliable performance at a price that doesn't require commitment before they know how much they'll play. Dri-FIT technology is Nike's foundational moisture-management system, used across their entire athletic apparel range, and it works reliably: moisture moves away from the skin and evaporates faster than it would through cotton or a lower-grade synthetic. It is not the most sophisticated or premium performance fabric in this guide, but it is proven, durable, and available.
Nike's size range for the Victory Women's Polo extends from XS to 3X — matching Kinona and IBKUL for inclusive sizing at the top end of this guide. This commitment to a broad size range is significant because Nike has the retail scale to carry that full size range across their retail channels, not just direct online. A 3X women's Nike polo is findable in major retail stores, not just ordered online and returned if the fit is wrong. For plus-size golfers, Nike's broad availability across channels is a practical advantage over smaller specialty brands.
The women's Victory polo is genuinely patterned for women's proportions — it is not the men's polo with a feminine colorway. The cut accommodates a fuller hip relative to the waist, the armhole placement is appropriate for women's shoulder structure, and the collar construction is finished at a scale appropriate for women's necklines rather than scaled down from a men's collar. At $50 to $65, it is the most straightforward first-buy recommendation for a woman golfer who needs a reliable, well-fitting polo without spending $90 or more.
Pros
- Most accessible price for genuine performance polo
- Sizes XS–3X across most retail channels
- Women-specific construction — not adapted men's pattern
- Wide retail availability for easy return/exchange
- Nike reliability and consistent quality
Cons
- Less premium fabric feel than upper-tier options
- Conservative colorways compared to fashion-focused brands
- Nike branding prominent — not for low-logo preferences
7. EP Pro Performance Polo
EP Pro (Ellen Parker Pro) has served the traditional club golf market for decades, building apparel that meets the specific aesthetic expectations of private club play rather than the broader sportswear or lifestyle market. The EP Pro Performance Polo is the current expression of that tradition: a polo cut and styled to look appropriate in the most formal clubhouse environments, made with performance fabric that meets the functional demands of actual golf. It is not the most fashion-forward polo in this guide, and it is not trying to be.
The construction uses stretch-performance fabric with full moisture management, but the fit is deliberately more relaxed and the silhouette more traditional than the athletic cuts of Lululemon or Kinona. For women who play at private clubs with conservative dress codes — where conforming to established norms is genuinely important for social reasons — EP Pro's traditional aesthetic is exactly the right choice. The polo reads as appropriately elegant rather than athletic or trendy, which matters in certain club environments.
EP Pro's colorways lean toward the classic end: solid colors, tone-on-tone textures, subtle patterns. The brand doesn't chase seasonal fashion trends, which means the polo you buy this year will still look current in three years — an advantage if you're building a functional wardrobe rather than a fashion rotation. The size range extends to 2X, and fit feedback from the brand's long-serving customer base suggests the sizing runs true to standard sizing more consistently than many competitors.
Pros
- Best choice for formal private club environments
- Timeless styling — doesn't date seasonally
- Consistent sizing relative to standard measurements
- Performance fabric meets functional golf demands
Cons
- Not fashion-forward — traditional by design
- Size range limited to 2X
- Less innovative construction than newer brands
8. Sofibella Tennis-to-Golf Polo
Sofibella designs for the crossover between tennis and golf — two sports with overlapping apparel requirements (polo dress codes, sun exposure, lateral movement, swing pattern construction) and overlapping demographics. The tennis-to-golf polo is built on a women's athletic pattern refined for rotational sports rather than linear sports, which means the back panel has adequate mobility for both a forehand swing and a golf swing without the shirt catching or pulling. For women who play both sports, this dual-purpose construction is genuinely practical.
The performance fabric at Sofibella is solid mid-tier — moisture-wicking polyester with adequate stretch, not the premium feel of Lululemon's Swiftly Tech or the specialized cooling of IBKUL, but reliable and well-suited to the athletic use case. The colorway range includes both classic neutrals and more vibrant options, with a design aesthetic that skews slightly more playful than traditional golf apparel without crossing into fashion-brand territory. The polo transitions credibly from tennis clinic to afternoon golf round.
At $60 to $80, Sofibella provides good value for a performance polo with genuine crossover athletic construction. The size range extends to 2X, the construction quality holds up through regular washing without premature degradation, and the brand's technical pattern development for rotational sports is a genuine differentiator at this price point. The primary limitation compared to the top brands in this guide is in the premium feel of the fabric and the depth of the inclusive sizing range.
Pros
- Tennis-to-golf construction for dual-sport players
- Good value at the mid-range price point
- Rotational sport athletic pattern development
- Colorway range balances classic and vibrant
Cons
- Fabric feel below premium-tier competitors
- Size range only to 2X
- Less established in golf-specific retail channels
9. JoFit Limeade Polo
JoFit occupies the value tier with more commitment to women-specific construction than most brands at comparable prices. The Limeade polo uses a fabric blend and construction approach developed specifically for women's golf apparel — not a generic athletic fabric cut to a vaguely feminine silhouette. The fit accommodates a range of women's body proportions without requiring the precise sizing that tighter-cut brands demand, which makes it forgiving across the range of sizes offered (XS to 3X, matching Kinona and IBKUL at the top of the size range for a fraction of the price).
The practical performance is honest rather than exceptional: adequate moisture management, reasonable stretch for the swing, a collar that holds its shape through multiple washes. The construction quality in the $55–$70 tier doesn't approach the finishing standard of Kinona or Foray Golf, and the fabric feel lacks the premium hand of Lululemon's Swiftly Tech. But JoFit delivers genuinely good value — better than most competitors at this price point — and the women-specific pattern development is evident in the fit rather than absent as it is in many budget brands.
For the golfer on a budget who needs golf-appropriate clothing across a range of sizes, JoFit's value proposition and 3X size range is compelling. The brand carries their size range through skorts, shorts, and outerwear as well, which allows for a coordinated golf wardrobe at budget-accessible prices across all categories.
Pros
- Most inclusive size range (to 3X) at this price point
- Women-specific construction at budget pricing
- Coordinated line across tops, bottoms, and outerwear
- Forgiving fit across varied body proportions
Cons
- Construction quality below premium brands
- Fabric feel not premium
- Less durable over many washes than higher-tier options
10. Greg Norman Ladies Polo
Greg Norman's women's polo line represents the accessible retail tier — widely available at Golf Galaxy and major sporting goods chains, priced for the golfer who needs functional golf apparel without significant investment. The Play Dry moisture-wicking technology provides basic performance: sweat moves away from the skin and the fabric breathes adequately. It is not the performance ceiling of this guide, but it is functional, affordable, and available where many golfers shop.
The women's polo construction at Greg Norman has improved in recent seasons. The current generation uses a more women-specific cut than earlier versions, with a more appropriate collar scale and a hip-to-waist proportion that acknowledges women's body shapes rather than simply scaling down a unisex pattern. The size range extends to 2X through major retail channels. At $45 to $60, it is the most accessible price point in this guide for a polo that passes basic golf dress code requirements and performs its moisture-management function adequately.
The Greg Norman polo is the right answer to a specific question: "I've never golfed before and want to try it — what's the minimum I need to spend on a polo that will work?" The answer is $45 to $60 here, and it gets the job done. For the golfer who plays regularly and cares about the quality of their gear, any of the brands above represent meaningfully better investments. But access to the sport matters, and an affordable on-ramp to golf apparel is genuinely useful.
Pros
- Most accessible price in this guide
- Wide retail availability for easy purchase
- Improved women-specific construction in current generation
- Adequate performance for recreational play
Cons
- Performance well below premium competitors
- Size range tops at 2X in major retail
- Construction quality reflects value pricing
What "Women-Specific Construction" Actually Means
Women-specific construction in golf apparel is not about making the fabric pink or putting a floral pattern on the back panel. It refers to the structural decisions in pattern-making and garment engineering that account for the different proportions, movement patterns, and practical needs of women golfers. When a brand cuts corners on women-specific development, the result is a garment that fits poorly, restricts movement in the wrong places, and feels like it was designed for someone else.
The armhole is the first indicator. Women's shoulder structure is narrower relative to the chest and positioned differently than men's. A polo with a women-specific armhole placement provides unobstructed arm movement through the full arc of the golf swing. A polo where the armhole was simply scaled down from a men's pattern produces a different fit problem — often the armhole sits too far from the shoulder joint, creating bunching in the armpit during the backswing. You'll know this is happening because you feel the shirt lift during the swing rather than moving with you.
Hip-to-waist proportion is the most common fit issue in women's golf apparel. The human female body typically has a higher hip-to-waist ratio than the male body pattern that most athletic apparel is patterned from. A polo built on a women-specific block will provide adequate room through the hip without excess fabric at the waist. A polo built on a scaled-down men's block will either fit at the waist and be too tight through the hip, or fit at the hip and bag at the waist. The specific brands in this guide — particularly Kinona, Tail Activewear, and IBKUL — have invested in genuinely women-specific blocks for this reason.
Collar scale is a subtler but visible indicator. Women's necklines are proportionally different from men's, and a properly scaled women's collar lies flat against the neck without gaping, rolls without pressing uncomfortably into the neck, and maintains its shape through the swing. A collar developed from a men's pattern and scaled down often sits too wide on the neck, gaps at the front, or rolls forward rather than standing properly. Check the collar lie when trying polos — it tells you quickly whether the garment was developed with women's proportions in mind.
The back hem length matters specifically for golf. The follow-through of the golf swing involves significant torso rotation and hip extension. A polo with inadequate back hem length — typically a problem when a standard-length women's athletic polo is worn for golf rather than gym or casual use — will pull out of a skort or shorts waistband during the follow-through. Golf-specific women's polos (Tail, Kinona, IBKUL, EP Pro) extend the back hem 1.5-2 inches longer than the front hem specifically to address this. Lululemon and lifestyle-crossover brands do not always include this consideration.
Inclusive Sizing: Who Goes Beyond XL
The women's golf apparel market has historically been one of the worst sectors for inclusive sizing — a legacy of the sport's country-club demographics and the industry's sample-size development culture. This is changing, partly because women's golf participation has grown substantially across demographic groups and partly because brands that have invested in extended sizing have found loyal customers. But the progress is uneven, and knowing which brands have genuinely committed to inclusive sizing versus which ones have extended their range on paper matters.
The practical distinction is between brands that size to 3X with the same design investment as their standard sizes, and brands that size to XL or 2X and call it a diverse range. In this guide, Kinona, IBKUL, Nike, and JoFit extend to 3X across most styles — a size range that accommodates a meaningfully broader portion of women golfers than the 2X ceiling of many competitors.
Extended sizing done right means more than adding fabric to a standard pattern. It means re-proportioning the garment for the different body proportions at larger sizes: adjusting the collar circumference, re-positioning the armhole to reflect the different shoulder width relative to chest size at 2X and 3X, adjusting the hip proportion relative to the waist, and extending the hem length to maintain the coverage that smaller sizes provide. Brands that invest in this development work (Kinona, IBKUL) produce garments that genuinely fit well at extended sizes. Brands that simply grade up from a standard pattern (many value brands) produce garments that fit progressively less well as the size increases.
The practical recommendation: if you shop in extended sizes, buy from brands that explicitly mention plus-size or extended-size pattern development in their brand story, or from brands with a track record of extended sizing (Kinona, IBKUL, Nike, JoFit). Try the specific style you want to buy before committing to several pieces, and verify that the brand's return policy allows returns in case the fit doesn't work. The investment in women-specific extended sizing is ongoing development work — it's worth directing your purchases toward brands that have done it.
Dress Code Compliance: What Private Clubs Allow for Women
Women's golf dress codes are genuinely different from men's dress codes at most private clubs — and the difference is largely more permissive for women. Where men are typically required to wear a collared polo or mock-neck, women at most clubs can wear sleeveless tops (with or without a collar), and the definition of "appropriate" bottoms includes skorts, golf skirts, and shorts at lengths that would not be permitted for men. Understanding where the real lines are drawn — and where you have more freedom than you might assume — helps in building a functional golf wardrobe without over-constraining your choices.
The consistent requirements across virtually all private clubs for women: no denim, no athletic shorts that are not golf-specific, no sleeveless athletic tanks or crop tops, and no shorts or skirts above mid-thigh (with most clubs specifying a minimum length of 14-16 inches from the waistband, roughly mid-thigh). Within those constraints, the variation in what's permitted is substantial — some clubs allow form-fitting performance tops, others prefer a more relaxed fit. Some allow bold patterns, some prefer conservative solid colors.
The sleeveless question is the most common one for women golfers navigating new clubs. At most private courses in the US, sleeveless tops with a collar are permitted for women in both the pro shop and the 19th hole. At some more traditional clubs — East Coast old-money clubs, historical Scottish-link-style establishments — sleeves are preferred or required for women as well. The rule of thumb: if you're playing a club for the first time, call the pro shop and ask specifically about women's sleeveless tops. It takes two minutes and prevents the awkward correction at the first tee.
Skort vs. skirt: skorts (shorts with an attached skirt panel) are universally accepted as golf attire at private clubs. Traditional golf skirts without shorts underneath are also broadly accepted. Athletic short-shorts or tennis-style skirts that are significantly shorter than 14 inches from the waistband will draw correction at most traditional private clubs. The practical choice for women building a club-appropriate wardrobe: skorts in 15-17 inch lengths cover every club's dress requirements while providing the practical comfort of shorts underneath.
All 10 Women's Golf Brands Compared
| Brand / Polo | Price | Max Size | Construction | Best For | Rating |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kinona Sport Polo | $88–$110 | 3X | Women-founded, women-specific | Bold style + performance | 4.8 |
| Lululemon Swiftly Tech | $78–$98 | 20 (Align to 3X) | Athletic lifestyle crossover | Performance + lifestyle | 4.8 |
| Tail Activewear Polo | $75–$95 | 2X | Golf-specific construction | Golf-specific design | 4.7 |
| Foray Golf Collection | $85–$120 | 2X | Women-founded editorial fashion | Style-forward premium | 4.7 |
| IBKUL Performance Polo | $65–$80 | 3X | Cooling + UPF technology | Sun protection + heat | 4.6 |
| Nike Dri-FIT Victory Women's | $50–$65 | 3X | Women-specific Nike patterning | Best value + sizing | 4.6 |
| EP Pro Performance Polo | $70–$90 | 2X | Traditional club construction | Formal club play | 4.5 |
| Sofibella Tennis-to-Golf | $60–$80 | 2X | Crossover tennis/golf pattern | Dual-sport players | 4.4 |
| JoFit Limeade Polo | $55–$70 | 3X | Women-specific budget | Budget + inclusive sizing | 4.4 |
| Greg Norman Ladies Polo | $45–$60 | 2X | Retail value tier | Accessible first purchase | 4.3 |
Frequently Asked Questions
Do golf courses have different dress codes for women?
Yes — most private golf clubs have dress codes that apply differently to women than men. Women are typically permitted to wear sleeveless tops (with a collar), golf skirts, and skorts that men wouldn't be permitted to wear. The consistent requirements are similar: no denim, no crop tops, no athletic-only clothing not designed for golf, and no shorts or skirts above mid-thigh. Public courses typically have more relaxed requirements, often just "no jeans and appropriate athletic footwear." If you're playing a private club for the first time, call ahead and ask about their women's dress code specifically.
Can women wear sleeveless tops at private clubs?
At most private clubs in the US, yes — sleeveless tops with a collar are accepted for women at both the course and in the clubhouse. At some traditional clubs, particularly older East Coast establishments or clubs modeled on British club traditions, sleeves are preferred or required for women as well. The safest practice for a first visit to any private club is a quick call to the pro shop before your round. Ask specifically about sleeveless tops for women — the pro shop staff will give you a direct answer and won't be put off by the question.
What's the best women's golf brand for plus sizes?
For the best combination of plus-size range, genuine extended-size construction quality, and brand investment in inclusive sizing: Kinona (to 3X with women-specific development), IBKUL (to 3X with built-in UPF technology), and JoFit (to 3X at an accessible price point) are the strongest recommendations. Nike extends to 3X with wide retail availability for easy returns. For budget-accessible entry, JoFit at $55–$70 to 3X is the most compelling value. For premium quality with genuine women-specific construction at extended sizes, Kinona's investment in plus-size pattern development is unmatched in the golf-specific apparel category.
Are women's golf polos cut differently than men's?
They should be — and the brands in this guide that do it right are specifically committed to women-specific pattern development. Properly constructed women's golf polos have a higher hip-to-waist ratio in the pattern to accommodate women's body proportions, a different armhole placement for women's shoulder structure, a scaled collar appropriate for women's necklines, and typically a longer back hem to stay tucked through the follow-through. Unfortunately, not every brand labeled "women's" has done this development work — some brands simply scale down a men's pattern and add feminine colorways. The clear indicator of genuine women's construction is how the polo fits at the armhole and hip: if it bags at the waist or pulls at the hip, it's probably not truly women-specific.
Can I wear a skort at all golf courses?
Yes — skorts are universally accepted golf attire at private and public clubs. They satisfy the "appropriate golf apparel" requirement at every course type that has a dress code, from the most traditional private club to the most relaxed public course. The length matters: most private clubs specify a minimum of 14–16 inches from the waistband, roughly mid-thigh. Skorts in the 15–17 inch range are the safest for club play. Very short skorts that fall more than 4–5 inches above the knee may not comply with traditional private club dress codes. When in doubt, measure from the waistband to the hem and compare with the club's specified minimum length.
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Women's Golf Style Guide
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