Best Smart Ring for Golf UK 2026
Smart rings for golf don't track your swing or give yardages, but they won't catch on your grip and they nail recovery. The best picks for 2026.

Golfers have a specific gripe with wearables: a watch can catch or distract during the swing, and many players simply do not like wearing one to play. A smart ring sidesteps that, sitting unobtrusively on the finger. But it is worth being clear about what a ring can and cannot do for your golf before you buy.
This guide explains where a ring helps a golfer, where a dedicated golf device is still essential, and which rings are the best fit.
Can a smart ring track your golf game?
Not in the golf-specific sense. Smart rings have no GPS rangefinder, so they cannot give you yardages to the green or map a hole, and they have no swing sensors, so they cannot analyse your tempo, plane or club data. For course management and swing work you still need a golf GPS watch, a handheld rangefinder or a launch monitor.
What a ring can do during a round is track the general activity of walking the course, your step count and your heart rate, all as background metrics rather than golf analytics. Its real strength sits away from the course, in recovery.
Why golfers still benefit from a smart ring
Two reasons stand out. First, comfort: a ring does not interfere with your grip the way a wrist device can, so you can wear it through a full round without thinking about it. Walking 18 holes is also genuine exercise, and the ring captures that activity automatically.
Second, and more valuable, is recovery. Golf rewards consistency, focus and steady nerves, all of which suffer when you are under-slept or fatigued. A ring worn overnight tracks sleep, resting heart rate and heart-rate variability, giving you a read on whether you are turning up to a competition rested. That overnight recovery layer is something a golf watch, which you take off at night, simply does not provide.
Which smart ring is best for golfers?
Because the job is comfort during the round and recovery between rounds, prioritise sleep insight, battery life and running cost rather than any golf-specific feature. All of the rings below cover sleep, heart rate, HRV and activity.
- Best recovery insight - Oura Ring 5
- from £399 + £5.99/mo membership; the most refined sleep and readiness data for turning up rested
- Best value - RingConn Gen 3
- around £299, no subscription; reliable recovery tracking and long battery, nothing extra to run
- Best battery - Ultrahuman Ring Pro
- around £419, no core subscription; up to 15-day battery for golfers who hate charging
- Best for Samsung users - Samsung Galaxy Ring
- around £399, no subscription; tidy Samsung Health integration if you carry a Galaxy phone
Oura Ring 5: best for turning up rested
The Oura Ring 5 has the most credible recovery and sleep analytics of any ring, which is exactly what helps before a competitive round or an early tee time. The trade-off is the membership at around £5.99 a month, covered in our subscription cost comparison. If recovery insight is your priority, it is the strongest pick.
RingConn Gen 3 and Ultrahuman Ring Pro: best subscription-free picks
If you would rather not pay monthly, the RingConn Gen 3 delivers dependable sleep and recovery tracking with no recurring fee, and the Ultrahuman Ring Pro adds class-leading battery life of up to 15 days, handy if you only want to charge occasionally. Both pair naturally with a dedicated golf GPS device for the on-course data a ring cannot provide.
Should a golfer use a ring instead of a golf watch?
No, use them together. Keep a golf GPS watch or rangefinder for yardages and course data, and let the ring handle comfort during the round and recovery overnight. That split plays to each device's strengths: the golf device tells you how to play the hole, and the ring tells you whether your body is ready to play at all.
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