Best golf hitting mats for your simulator
The mat is the most underrated buy in a home sim: it's what your body and your ball data feel on every single swing. Here's what actually matters — and picks by budget.
Most people spend weeks comparing launch monitors, then grab whatever mat is cheapest. Backwards. You'll hit hundreds of balls a week off that mat, and a bad one does two things: it punishes your wrists and elbows (thin turf over hard floor), and it lies to you (bouncy surfaces turn fat shots into "good" ones your launch monitor happily records). A good mat costs a fraction of a launch monitor and outlasts everything else in the bay.
Prices are indicative 2026 ranges (USD) — check current pricing before buying.
What actually matters in a hitting mat
- Forgiveness (joint safety). The #1 spec. You want turf + padding that lets the club glide through a slightly fat strike instead of bouncing the clubhead into the ball — or the shock into your elbows. This is the difference between mats you can practice on daily and mats you tolerate.
- Honest feedback. Premium mats let you feel a fat shot (the club decelerates) without hurting you. Ultra-bouncy budget turf hides it — you'll groove a flaw the course will expose.
- Thickness. Roughly 1.5–2 in for quality mats. Also remember it raises you closer to the ceiling — if your room is borderline on height, factor the mat in (see ceiling height).
- Size vs your room. A full-stance 4×7 ft mat needs width. With stance room you're at ~10 ft of practical minimum room width — check your space with the calculator before you order.
- Durability of the strike zone. Cheap mats wear a bald spot exactly where you hit within months. Replaceable-insert designs fix this: you swap a $30–60 strip, not the whole mat.
The picks, by budget
| Pick | Typical price | Why this one | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Fiberbuilt Flight Deck / Grass Series best joint protection |
$250–$700 | The benchmark for forgiving turf — Fiberbuilt's grass-like fibers absorb fat strikes instead of bouncing them. The pick if you practice daily or have any wrist/elbow history. | Check price → |
| TrueStrike Single / Academy most realistic feel |
$500–$650 | Gel-filled divot section that mimics fairway turf — you feel a heavy strike the way you would on grass, without the joint abuse. A favourite in serious home bays. | Compare → |
| SIGPRO Softy 4'×7' best all-round for sim bays |
$450–$600 | Full-stance mat sized for simulator enclosures, soft strike zone, popular pairing with SIG builds. Big enough for both-handed play if your room allows it. | Check SIGPRO → |
| Carl's Place HotShot value full-stance |
$200–$450 | Solid mid-price full-stance option from a simulator-first shop — pairs naturally with a Carl's enclosure and screen build. | Build it → |
| Budget strip + stance mat starter (~with caveats) |
$100–$180 | A basic tri-turf or strip mat gets you hitting on day one. Caveat: over concrete, add a forgiving insert under the strike zone or plan to upgrade — your wrists will tell you when. | See options → |
Full-stance mat vs hitting strip
A full-stance mat (you and the ball on one surface, e.g. 4×7 ft) feels the most like a real lie and won't shift under you — it's the default for a permanent bay. A hitting strip (small insert, you stand on separate stance turf or floor) is cheaper, easy to replace when worn, and lets you fine-tune height — a good route in a garage where you're building the floor yourself (see the garage setup guide). If you're tight on width, a strip setup can also shave a few inches off the footprint.
Don't let the mat sabotage your data
Launch monitors read the ball, not your intentions. A dead-bouncy mat that rescues fat strikes means your "carry" numbers are quietly optimistic — then the course tells you the truth. If you're buying a $2,000+ launch monitor, pairing it with a $100 mat is measuring espresso with a bathroom scale. Balanced builds by budget: under $2,000 · under $5,000.
Will it fit? Check before you order
A 4×7 mat in a 10-ft-wide room works; in a 9-ft room it's tight; add an enclosure and it may not. Enter your real measurements and get a verdict plus a build that fits — mat included:
FAQ
- What thickness should a golf hitting mat be?
- Quality mats run roughly 1.5–2 in thick — that cushioning protects your wrists and elbows on downward strikes. Thin half-inch mats over concrete transfer the shock into your joints; fine for occasional chips, rough for daily irons.
- Can I use a cheap golf mat on concrete?
- You can start there, but put something forgiving under the hitting area (a thicker strip insert or foam base). Concrete + thin mat is the classic recipe for sore wrists and bouncy fat shots. If you practice several times a week, the mat is the upgrade you'll feel most.
- What size hitting mat do I need for a simulator?
- Full-stance mats around 4×7 ft fit most single-player rooms; 5×5 ft works tighter spaces. Check it against room width — mat plus comfortable stance is why ~10 ft is the practical width floor for a sim bay.
Related
What a full build costs · Garage setup · Under $2,000 · Impact screen size · Room-fit calculator