Gear & Equipment
Golf Gloves for Kids: A Sizing and Fit Guide
A glove that's even slightly too big will bunch up and slip during the swing. Here's how to size one correctly, what it's made of, and when to replace it.
Competitive Play · Updated July 6, 2026
Why glove fit matters more than it looks like it should
A golf glove’s job is simple: keep the club secure in the lead hand through the swing without adding bulk that changes how the grip feels. A glove that’s too big bunches at the fingertips and palm, creating loose material that shifts during the swing and can actually cause more slipping than no glove at all. A glove that’s too small restricts finger movement and gets uncomfortable fast, which means a kid takes it off, defeating the purpose entirely.
Because kids’ hands grow continuously, glove fit is one of the more overlooked equipment checks. Parents will carefully size a full set of clubs and then hand a child last year’s glove without a second thought. Given how cheap gloves are relative to clubs, that’s the wrong place to economize; treat glove sizing with the same seriousness as club length, covered in our first golf clubs for kids guide.
How to measure and size a kid's glove
Glove sizes are typically labeled by a combination of a letter or size band (small, medium, large, or a specific youth size number) and sometimes a hand-width measurement in inches. To measure at home: wrap a soft tape measure around the palm of the child’s glove hand, just below the knuckles, excluding the thumb. That measurement in inches lines up against most manufacturers’ published size charts, which is a more reliable method than guessing from age or shirt size.
When trying a glove on in person, check three things. First, the fingertips should reach the very end of each finger slot without extra material bunched at the tip. Second, there should be no loose fabric across the back of the hand or in the palm when the hand is closed into a grip position. Third, the wrist closure (velcro strap on most junior gloves) should close with room to spare, since kids’ wrists are often slimmer relative to their palm size than an adult’s.
If a child falls between two sizes, size down rather than up. A snug glove that’s slightly tight breaks in and softens with use; a loose glove never tightens up on its own and just gets worse as the material stretches further with wear.
Materials: leather, synthetic, and hybrid
Junior gloves generally come in three material categories, and the tradeoffs are worth knowing before you buy:
- Full leather (typically cabretta or similar sheepskin leathers). Best feel and grip, breaks in to the hand’s shape over time, but wears faster and costs more. Given how quickly kids outgrow a glove anyway, the durability downside of leather matters less for juniors than for adults, since the glove is often outgrown before it wears out.
- Full synthetic. More durable, more weather-resistant (holds up better in humidity or light moisture), and less expensive, but generally offers a slightly less refined feel than leather. A sensible default for a young beginner who is hard on gear and growing fast.
- Hybrid (leather palm, synthetic backing, or similar mixed construction). Aims for a middle ground: better feel where the hand contacts the grip, more durability and often better breathability across the back of the hand. A reasonable all-around choice once a junior is playing regularly.
For a young beginner still building basic swing mechanics, material choice matters far less than correct sizing. Don’t overspend on premium leather for a five- or six-year-old who will be in a new size within a year regardless of material quality.
One glove or two?
Most golfers, junior and adult alike, wear a single glove on the lead hand (the left hand for a right-handed golfer, the right hand for a left-handed golfer), leaving the trail hand bare for better feel on the club during the swing and on the putting green. This is by far the most common setup and a fine default for nearly every junior.
Some golfers choose to wear two gloves, usually for a specific reason: extra grip security in hot, sweaty conditions, a preference some juniors develop as they play more competitively, or simply personal comfort. There’s no rule against it and no performance downside for a junior who prefers two, provided both are sized correctly. Let your junior experiment and settle on what feels right rather than assuming they need to match whatever a favorite pro wears.
How often to replace a kid's glove
Two separate clocks run on a junior glove: fit and condition, and either one can force a replacement first.
- Fit clock. Re-check sizing every few months for younger, faster-growing kids, since a growth spurt can outpace a glove well before it wears out. The same fingertip and palm-bunching check from the sizing section above works as a quick re-check; if the fingers no longer reach the tips or the palm is stretched taut, size up.
- Condition clock. Watch for thinning or shiny patches in the palm (the material has compressed and lost grip texture), small tears at the seams or between fingers, and a wrist closure that no longer holds snugly. Any of these mean the glove is no longer doing its job even if it still technically fits.
A junior golfer who plays and practices regularly will typically go through more gloves per year than an adult would, purely from a combination of growth and use. Budget for a few glove replacements a year rather than treating it as a one-time purchase, and avoid buying used gloves for exactly this reason; a glove that’s already broken in to someone else’s hand rarely fits or grips well for a new owner. See our used junior clubs guide for where used gear does and doesn’t make sense.
Keeping glove fit in the broader equipment picture
Gloves are one of the cheapest items in a junior’s bag, which makes correct sizing an easy win relative to the cost. Get this right and it removes one more variable between your junior and a solid, repeatable grip, alongside properly sized clubs and a putter fit to their height. For the full picture of what a junior needs as they move from casual play into more structured competition, see the parent hub and our junior golf cost guide for how gear spending fits alongside lessons and tournament fees over a season.
Frequently asked questions
- How do I know what size golf glove my child needs?
- Measure around the palm just below the knuckles, excluding the thumb, and compare that measurement to the manufacturer's size chart. When trying a glove on, the fingertips should reach the ends of the finger slots with no bunched material in the palm.
- Should my child wear one golf glove or two?
- One glove on the lead hand is standard and works for nearly every junior golfer. Two gloves are fine if a junior prefers the extra grip, especially in hot or sweaty conditions, but there's no performance requirement to wear more than one.
- Leather or synthetic golf glove for a kid?
- Synthetic is a practical default for young beginners since it's more durable and less expensive, and kids often outgrow a glove before it wears out anyway. Leather offers better feel and can make sense once a junior is playing more seriously and sizing is more stable.
- How often should a junior golfer get a new glove?
- Check fit every few months since kids' hands grow quickly, and separately watch for thinning palm material, torn seams, or a worn-out wrist closure. Expect to replace a junior's glove more often than an adult's, from a combination of growth and use.
- Is it okay to buy a used golf glove for a kid?
- Not recommended. Gloves break in to an individual hand's shape and sweat pattern, and they're inexpensive enough that buying new isn't a meaningful cost compared to the fit and grip you give up buying used.