Best Golf Gloves 2026
Cabretta leather, all-weather and rain grip — the complete guide for British conditions, with Prime Day pricing notes.
The golf glove is the most underrated piece of equipment most golfers own. A worn, ill-fitting glove contributes to grip pressure that moves through the chain of the swing in ways that are difficult to identify and easy to attribute elsewhere. A correctly fitted, fresh glove removes that variable. It is also, usefully, the cheapest equipment purchase that makes a genuine difference to how the club feels in the hand.
For British golfers, there is a second consideration that does not apply in most of the markets that dominate golf equipment marketing: rain. A standard cabretta leather glove in wet weather is worse than no glove at all. Every UK golfer should carry a pair of rain gloves — ideally already on the bag before the first grey cloud appears on the 6th hole.
Best Premium Golf Gloves
TGG Recommendation
“The finest feel of any glove available at retail — the Pure Touch Limited uses selected Cabretta sheepskin that produces feedback at address and through impact that cheaper gloves cannot replicate.”
FootJoy’s Pure Touch Limited uses a single piece of Cabretta leather across the palm and fingers rather than the patched construction used in most gloves, producing a consistency of feel that is immediately apparent on the first chip shot. The fit is precise enough that the glove does not move during the swing — the common failure of cheaper alternatives that causes the inconsistency most golfers attribute to their grip technique. The trade-off: durability is lower than a synthetic or hybrid glove. Replace it when the palm leather begins to thin.
🟡 Prime Day: gloves are among the strongest Prime Day golf categories — stock up when prices drop, as performance does not degrade with storage.
“Titleist’s Players glove matches FootJoy at the premium level — a clean, precise fit and Cabretta leather that communicates what the club is doing to the hand.”
The Titleist Players uses an AAA Cabretta leather that softens correctly with use while retaining its shape through a full round. The Lycra inserts between the fingers allow the glove to move with the hand rather than against it, reducing the bunching that cheaper gloves develop at the knuckle line. For golfers who prefer their glove to come from the same brand as their ball — and there is a rational case for that consistency — the Titleist Players is the correct choice.
Best All-Weather Golf Gloves
Best Value
“The WeatherSof is the glove most UK golfers should keep on the bag as a standard — it handles the variable conditions of a British round better than pure Cabretta leather, at a price that makes replacing it straightforward.”
The WeatherSof’s synthetic-and-leather construction produces a glove that performs adequately in dry conditions and considerably better than pure leather in light moisture. The fit is less precise than the Pure Touch, but for a golfer who plays in variable conditions and wants a glove that does not require replacement every three or four rounds, the WeatherSof is the most practical choice on the market. Available in multi-packs that reduce per-unit cost to a level where replacing at the first sign of wear becomes easy to justify.
Best Rain Golf Gloves
Essential UK Purchase
“The golf glove you reach for on the third wet hole of an October round — the RainGrip actively improves grip when wet, which is the opposite of what leather gloves do.”
The RainGrip uses a microfibre material that generates more grip when wet than dry — an engineering achievement that sounds implausible until you use it for the first time in a Scottish shower. The pair format is essential: playing with a rain glove on only the lead hand creates inconsistency. Both hands should grip identically in wet conditions. The RainGrip pair is the single most practical accessory purchase available to a British golfer and the one most likely to improve scores on the majority of autumn and winter rounds.
🟡 Prime Day: the RainGrip pair frequently appears in Prime Day bundles — the best value golf glove purchase of the year when it does.
“The Srixon all-weather pair is the best alternative to the FootJoy RainGrip — competitive grip in wet conditions at a slightly lower price point.”
Srixon’s all-weather construction uses a synthetic that handles moisture better than leather without the specialist material of the RainGrip. For golfers who want a rain glove pair at a lower entry price, the Srixon provides the essential function — better grip in wet than any standard leather glove — at an accessible price point. The fit is slightly less precise than the FootJoy, which matters less in rain when you are focused on the shot rather than the feel of the grip.
Glove Fit — The One Thing Most Golfers Get Wrong
A golf glove should fit like a second skin. There should be no excess material at the fingertips — if the glove extends beyond the end of your fingers, it is too large and will cause grip movement during the swing. The Velcro closure should fasten comfortably without pulling the glove tight across the back of the hand. When you make a fist, the glove should not feel restrictive. Try it in the shop before purchasing online — glove sizing varies meaningfully between manufacturers and even between product lines within the same brand.
