Smarter Golf Starts With Better Motion
Wet sand changes how your club interacts with the ground and it requires a different approach compared to a standard greenside bunker shot. Instead of exploding through soft sand the club meets a former surface which affects height, spin and distance. This guide from Spine Align Golf walks you through the best technique to escape wet bunkers with confidence and control.
Wet sand usually calls for less bounce and less loft. A lower bounce wedge helps prevent the club from skipping off the surface and striking the ball thin.
A strong setup is essential for clean contact and predictable ball flight. Since you want the club to strike the ball cleanly rather than splash through sand, your stance and ball position need to change slightly from a standard bunker shot.
Wet sand becomes packed and heavy which removes the typical cushion beneath the ball. This firmer base causes the club to bounce differently and makes it harder to create loft using a traditional open face bunker technique. Adjusting your setup and strike allows you to use the firmness of the sand to your advantage rather than letting it work against you.
Unlike a normal bunker shot where you aim to enter the sand first, here the goal is to contact the ball cleanly with a slightly descending strike. This approach prevents the club from bouncing early and ensures reliable distance.
Ball flight from wet sand tends to be lower because you are striking the ball directly. Learn how to work with this lower trajectory rather than fighting it.
Avoiding these mistakes builds consistency and removes the fear many golfers feel when facing compacted sand.
Wet sand requires a simple but important shift in technique. By choosing the right wedge keeping the clubface square and striking the ball cleanly you can turn a difficult lie into a controlled escape. Practice this method to develop confidence in any bunker condition. For more guidance explore our article on How to Hit a Bunker Shot from Firm Sand or download the Spine Align App to track your alignment and swing patterns. You can also learn more advanced short game techniques inside the Spine Align Golf Academy.
Bunker Shots