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Chipping golf tips 6 Jul 2026 11 min read

How to Stop Chip Shots Quickly: The Setup Fix for Softer Landings

Piers Ward coaches Steve through a chipping setup beside a bunker with CAN'T STOP IT text and shot-trace graphics.

If your chip shots come out low, skid forward, and finish well past the hole, the answer is not always to hit a bigger flop shot. Most golfers need a more reliable middle option: a chip that launches a little higher, lands softer, and still has enough strike to stop.

That middle shot comes from matching the setup to the flight you want. You need enough loft and height, but you also need clean contact. If you only chase height, the strike often gets worse. If you only chase spin, the ball can still come out low and run.

Quick Answer

To stop chip shots quickly, build a softer mid-flight chip. Move the ball slightly farther forward to add height, then organize your torso so you can still strike the ball and use the bounce. A useful feel is lead shoulder lower, trail shoulder higher without leaning back into a flop-shot pattern. From there, flare the lead foot, clip the grass, and train a clear landing spot.

https://youtu.be/5zsojtdexp0

Why Your Chip Shots Roll Too Far

Steve gestures toward a soft chipping flight window while Piers Ward listens beside the bunker.
Steve and Piers Ward discuss the higher landing window needed to stop chip shots quicker.

A low chip can look like the safe option. It feels controlled, it often comes out with a bit of grab, and it avoids the fear of sliding the club underneath the ball.

The problem appears when the pin is tight, the first bounce is running away from you, or you do not have much green to work with. Then the same low runner lands, takes the first bounce forward, and leaves you 10, 15, or 20 feet past the hole.

That does not mean the low chip is wrong. It means it cannot be your only stock shot. If your short game depends on one low runner and one high-risk flop, it helps to remember there is more than one way to chip the golf ball.

The shot you are looking for sits in the middle. It is not a full flop. It is not a hard, low spinner. It is a higher, softer chip that gives you more landing angle and a tighter first bounce.

The Middle Chip Shot You Are Missing

Most golfers who struggle with this problem have two windows:

  • A low shot that runs out.
  • A high shot that feels like a last-resort hero shot.

Those shots can both work, but they need the right lie, the right slope, and enough room. When you are short-sided or playing to a pin on a green that runs away, you need something more predictable.

The middle shot should feel simple. Ball position gives you height. Setup and body tilt protect the strike. The landing spot gives you distance control.

That is the point of the change: do not replace a low runner with a risky flop. Build a repeatable middle window.

Check Strike Before You Change Technique

Steve and Piers Ward watch a red shot-trace arc toward the flag during a chipping lesson.
Steve and Piers Ward review the flight window for a softer chip shot into the green.

Before you change your chipping setup, check what the strike is already doing.

A chip can be struck from the middle of the face and still finish too far past the hole. That is a flight problem. But if the club is hitting the ground behind the ball, that becomes a strike problem as well.

Ground-before-ball contact is especially costly on this shot. It might pop the ball up a fraction, but it usually takes away the spin and control you were trying to create. For a deeper contact check, pair this article with MMG’s guide to cleaner chip-shot contact.

Use this quick test:

  1. Make three practice swings and notice where the club brushes the grass.
  2. Put the ball slightly ahead of that low point.
  3. If the club would hit the turf first, do not just move the ball forward and hope.
  4. Fix the setup so the strike can still happen after the ball moves forward.

That last step is the part most golfers miss.

Protect These Three Chipping Foundations

Piers Ward reviews Steve's chipping setup beside a phone analysis view on the practice green.
Piers Ward checks Steve’s setup while a phone analysis view displays the chipping motion.

If you already do some things well around the greens, do not throw them away just to create more height.

There are three movements that can cause trouble in chipping:

  • Moving back through the strike.
  • Dropping down too much.
  • Moving closer toward the ball.

The better pattern is to work toward the target, up, and around the corner. That does not mean you stand up or pull away from the shot. It means your body keeps moving through so the club can brush the ground in a predictable place.

If you fight heavy strikes, thin strikes, or a club that gets stuck, those patterns often overlap with common chipping mistakes. Protect the good pieces first, then adjust the setup for the shot you want.

The Setup Fix For Higher, Softer Chip Shots

Steve rehearses a ball-forward chipping setup while Piers Ward watches near the green.
Steve works on the setup change for a higher softer chip shot with Piers Ward nearby.

The main setup change is simple: move the ball a little farther forward.

That gives the club more chance to use its loft. But if you only move the ball forward while your upper body leans back, you can quickly turn the shot into a flip or a heavy strike.

The matching feel is the important part:

  • Keep the face and stance open if that already helps you.
  • Move the ball slightly forward for height.
  • Feel the shoulders more level, or even lead shoulder lower and trail shoulder higher.
  • Let the club release without driving the handle too far forward.
  • Clip the grass instead of digging.

That shoulder feel may sound backwards. Many golfers think they need to lean back to launch the ball higher. In reality, leaning back often forces the hands forward late, takes loft off the club, and makes strike less predictable.

If this feels new, rehearse it before hitting shots. Slide the lead hand down the lead leg, feel the shoulders organize, put the hand back on the club, and make a few grass-clipping swings. It is a useful way to connect the static chipping setup changes to the motion you need.

If you want help matching your practice to the right fault, use the Swing Coach link below:

Why Leaning Left Can Still Cause Problems

Golfers often hear “get your weight left” for chipping. That can be useful, but it can also be misunderstood.

If you push the hips toward the target and leave the upper body tilted back, you may technically feel left-sided while the chest is still leaning away from the shot. From there, the handle often drives forward, the club loses loft, and the ball comes out low again.

The better feel for many players is hips slightly back, shoulders more forward. That puts the upper body in a place where the club can strike the ball, use loft, and produce enough spin.

This is why the fix is not just “add spin.” You create stopping power through a blend of launch, strike, land angle, and spin. If you want a companion piece specifically on wedge spin, use MMG’s guide to more spin with your wedges, but keep the priority here on the whole flight window.

Add Lead Foot Flare For A Better Exit

Piers Ward demonstrates lead foot flare while Steve sets up to a chip shot near the green.
Piers Ward demonstrates the lead-foot and body-angle checkpoint for a softer chipping setup.

Once the ball position and shoulder feel make sense, add one more setup checkpoint: flare the lead foot.

That lead foot flare helps the body open and move through. It can also help the club work up and around after impact instead of getting stuck down, back, or too close to the ball.

Try this setup:

  • Lead foot flared toward the target.
  • Stance slightly open.
  • Ball a little forward of your old low-runner position.
  • Chest and shoulders feeling more level.
  • Soft hands, then brush the grass.

You should still feel athletic. If the setup becomes so mechanical that you cannot land the ball where you want, step back and simplify it. The setup is there to free the strike, not to make the shot stiff.

Finish By Training The Landing Spot

When the setup improves, the ball should start launching through a better window. It should land softer, stay closer to pin high, and give you more control over the first bounce.

That is when you go back to playing golf.

Pick a landing spot. Picture the ball landing there, checking a little, then releasing. If you are playing chip shots under pressure, that landing picture matters just as much as the mechanics.

Use this practice structure:

  1. Hit five shots with no target, only rehearsing the setup.
  2. Hit five shots to a landing towel or spot.
  3. Hit five shots changing the landing spot but keeping the same flight window.
  4. Finish with random targets so the technique has to blend into feel.

The goal is not to make every chip stop dead. The goal is to create a shot that does not always come out low, does not always run past, and does not require a perfect lie to be useful.

Steve and Piers Ward stand beside a red shot-trace arc showing a higher soft chip toward the flag.
Steve and Piers Ward review the soft-landing trajectory after the chipping setup change.

Soft-Landing Chip Checklist

Run through this checklist before you practise:

  • Is the ball too far back for the shot you want?
  • Is your upper body leaning away while you try to add height?
  • Can you move the ball slightly forward without losing strike?
  • Can you feel the shoulders more level?
  • Can you flare the lead foot so the body can work through?
  • Can you brush the grass in the same place before adding the ball?
  • Can you pick a landing spot instead of only thinking about spin?

If the answer is yes, you are much closer to the shot you need: height from the setup, strike from the body, and control from the landing window.

For more structured help with what to practise next, use Swing Coach here:

FAQs

Why do my chip shots roll too far?

Your chip shots usually roll too far because they launch too low, land too shallow, or do not have enough strike and spin for the green speed and slope. A low runner can be useful, but it becomes risky when you do not have much green to work with.

How do I get chip shots to stop quicker?

Create a better middle flight. Move the ball slightly forward for height, organize the torso so you can still strike it cleanly, and train a landing spot. Do not rely only on hitting down harder.

Should chip shots be played with the ball forward or back?

It depends on the shot. A low running chip is often played farther back. A softer mid-flight chip can work better with the ball slightly forward, provided your torso and low point still support clean contact.

Do I need more spin or more height to stop chip shots?

Usually you need both working together. More spin helps, but height and landing angle are just as important when the green is running away or the pin is tight.

Should I open my lead foot when chipping?

Opening or flaring the lead foot can help your body move through the shot and work around the corner. It is especially useful if you tend to get stuck, drop down, or move closer to the ball through impact.