An Apple Watch on the course can replace a handheld GPS unit, a scorecard and a yardage book all at once, but only if you pair it with the right app. The best Apple Watch golf app gives you accurate distances at a glance, keeps score without breaking your rhythm, and ideally tracks your shots so you can see where your game is leaking strokes. The catch is that the experience varies enormously between apps, and the free tiers and subscriptions are not always easy to untangle.
After weighing the features that matter most on the wrist, three apps stand out in 2026: Golfshot, Hole19 and 18Birdies. Each takes a slightly different approach, so the best one for you depends on whether you care most about standalone independence from your phone, on-wrist course maps, or smart club advice.
Golfshot: the best standalone wrist experience
Golfshot has long been the app to beat for golfers who want their watch to do the heavy lifting. Its biggest strength is that the Apple Watch app works without your phone in your pocket, delivering GPS distances, scoring and shot tracking directly on your wrist. For anyone who likes to leave the phone in the cart or the bag, that independence is genuinely useful.
The standout feature is automatic shot tracking. Paired with the Apple Watch, Golfshot can detect each shot you take and log it for a hole-by-hole flyover review afterwards, which turns a casual round into usable data without any manual tapping. The core GPS and scoring features are free, while the Pro tier, which unlocks the advanced tracking and analysis, runs in the region of $70 to $90 a year. If you want the watch itself to be your caddy and statistician, Golfshot is the most complete option. It is a good example of how far the platform has come, something we explore more broadly in our roundup of the best health apps for Apple Watch in 2026.
Hole19: the best course maps on your wrist
Where Golfshot focuses on tracking, Hole19’s headline strength is visual. It puts full-colour, high-detail flyover maps of each hole directly on the Apple Watch screen, so you can study the layout and plan your strategy without reaching for your phone. For course management, being able to glance at a strategic map of the hole on your wrist is a real advantage.
Hole19 also has one of the most generous free tiers in the category. Without paying anything, you get accurate GPS distances to the front, centre and back of the green across a database of more than 40,000 courses, plus a full digital scorecard. That makes it an excellent starting point for golfers who simply want reliable yardages and scoring, with the option to pay for deeper statistics and shot tracking later if they catch the data bug.
18Birdies: the smartest digital caddy
18Birdies rounds out the trio with the most advisory approach. Its most impressive feature is a comprehensive Digital Caddy that does more than report raw distance: it factors in wind speed, elevation, temperature and even rain to suggest the right club, taking some of the guesswork out of your decision. For golfers who want help thinking their way around the course rather than just numbers, that guidance is the draw.
The app has a capable free version, while its premium tier, at around $100 a year, unlocks the full suite of caddy advice, strategy tools and detailed analytics. It is also one of the more community-minded apps, with games, challenges and social features that some players love and others happily ignore. If you want your watch to feel like it is offering genuine advice, 18Birdies is the most opinionated of the three.
A note on Arccos and sensor-based tracking
It is worth mentioning Arccos for the data-obsessed. As the official game tracker of the PGA Tour, it offers the most rigorous automatic shot tracking of any system, but it works differently from the apps above. Arccos relies on small Smart Sensors that screw into the grip of each club, sold separately, and the service itself costs around $155 a year. With the sensors fitted, your Apple Watch can detect every shot automatically with no phone required. It is powerful, but the upfront hardware cost and ongoing subscription make it overkill for the casual player. Most golfers will get everything they need from one of the three main apps.
Which Apple Watch golf app should you choose?
If you want the watch to operate independently and track your shots automatically, Golfshot is the strongest all-rounder. If detailed on-wrist course maps and a brilliant free tier appeal most, Hole19 is the pick. And if you want smart, condition-aware club advice from a digital caddy, 18Birdies leads the way. The good news is that the free versions of all three cover GPS distances and scoring well enough for most weekend golfers, so you can try each on a round or two before deciding whether any of them is worth a subscription. Whichever you choose, your Apple Watch becomes a far more useful companion the moment you load one of them up. For more on getting the most from the hardware itself, see our look at whether the Apple Watch is worth it in 2026.
Featured image: chickenbunny on Pexels.

