If you’re looking to play a cheap sport, golf probably isn’t at the top of your list. Golf can be frustratingly expensive, so here are nine hacks to practice and play golf on the cheap and save some dough.

Find Some Open Space

Golf newcomers might have the misconception that they have to practice their golf swing at a golf facility. Not true. You just need an appropriate amount of open space to accommodate your practice. If you live in a rural area, you can take full shots as long as you don't pose a risk to bystanders.

If you live in a city or suburban area, find a small area where you can practice chipping with golf balls, or work on your full swing without balls.

The key when practicing in an open space is to always have a target. A common item like a basket or an umbrella is always a helpful target when working on distance and accuracy.

Golf Course Facilities

Find a local public golf course that has a good, and most importantly, free practice facility. Golf courses usually don’t charge to use their practice greens, chipping areas, and bunkers. This is a great way to spend unlimited time honing your short-game skills. All it costs is your time and a sleeve of golf balls that you already own.

Bonus tip: Golfers are notorious for leaving range balls behind before they head to the first tee. If you don’t want to pay to use the driving range, hang around and you’ll likely snag some free range balls to get some full-swing work in.

Driving Range Facilities

If you feel like your best way to practice is at the driving range, we recommend heading to a non-golf course driving range. Perhaps there’s a local “mom and pop” facility near you.

These driving ranges are more likely to offer a punch card or loyalty program where you can earn free golf balls the more you go. Rarely do public golf courses offer a loyalty program for using their facilities, and they’re likely more expensive per bucket as well. An off-course driving range is your best bet for affordable full-swing practice.

Free Golf Apps

There are plenty of free golf apps available that not only give great tips, but also allow you to record video of your swing and analyze it. Most of these apps have upgraded versions for a small fee, but as far as freebies go, we recommend checking out these to help your practice with a purpose:

Free Practice Videos

If you've identified a key flaw you want to address in your golf swing, there are plenty of resources offering free tips and help with your golf swing.

In lieu of spending money on golf lessons, this can be a great route to better understanding the golf swing and common faults.

While YouTube has endless golf instruction videos, we can’t help but recommend our video library for some free lessons from top professionals in every area of your game.