How to Adjust Loft and Lie on a Golf Club

What You'll Need


Before You Bend — Know What You're Working With

Bendable materials and approximate safe ranges:

  • Forged carbon steel (1020, 1025, 8620): up to 3°+ — softest, most forgiving
  • 304 stainless steel: 5–7° — exceptionally bendable
  • 431 stainless steel: ±2° max — most common cast iron material
  • 17-4 stainless steel: ±1–2° — harder casting, requires more leverage
  • Cast iron / brittle alloys: do not bend — molecular structure can fracture

Never bend:

  • Modern drivers and fairway woods — adjust through the hosel sleeve instead
  • Adjustable-hosel hybrids and irons — use the manufacturer's settings
  • Putters with face-balanced inserts unless the manufacturer approves

When in doubt, check the manufacturer's published bending tolerances before clamping anything.


Step 1 — Measure the Current Specs

Clamp the head in the bending machine with the shaft seated in the cradle. Read the existing loft and lie off the gauge. Write them down — you'll need a baseline.

Step 2 — Bend the Lie Angle

Lie effects (right-handed):

  • Too upright (toe up at address) → ball pulls left
  • Too flat (heel up at address) → ball pushes right
  1. Slide the brass bending bar over the hosel, snug against the head.
  2. Apply slow, steady pressure in the direction you need:
    • More upright: push the bar up
    • Flatter: push the bar down
  3. Release, re-read the gauge, and adjust again if needed. Bend in small increments (1° at a time).

Step 3 — Bend the Loft

Loft side effects you need to plan for:

  • Strengthening loft (less loft) → increases offset, reduces bounce
  • Weakening loft (more loft) → decreases offset, increases bounce

The 2° rule applies to loft adjustments specifically — beyond that, the sole angle changes enough to affect turf interaction.

  1. Reposition the bending bar for vertical leverage.
  2. Bend toward or away from the face plane to weaken or strengthen.
  3. Re-measure. Cross-check the lie reading — bending loft can shift lie slightly.

Step 4 — Validate the Fit

For lie angle, the gauge tells you the spec — the lie board tells you whether it works for the player.

  1. Apply impact tape to the sole.
  2. Have the player hit shots off a lie board.
  3. Toe-down marks = too flat. Heel-down marks = too upright. Center marks = just right.

Important Notes

  • Match across the set. Lie angles should progress consistently from long irons to wedges (typically 0.5° upright per club shorter). Avoid random variance through the set.
  • Re-bending fatigues the metal. Every bend adds stress to the hosel — clubs that have been bent multiple times are more likely to crack on the next pass.
  • Modern face-insert wedges can have published bend limits as tight as ±1°. Always check.
  • PING irons use a color-coded dot system instead of fixed-angle bends. Verify before clamping.