Stableford Points Calculator
Calculate stableford points with our free tool. See your stats, compare against averages, and track progress over time.
Formula
Points = Sum of hole scores: Double Bogey+=0, Bogey=1, Par=2, Birdie=3, Eagle=4, Albatross=5
Standard Stableford assigns points based on the score relative to par on each hole. Higher totals win. Net Stableford adds handicap strokes, while Modified Stableford uses a different scale where par=0, birdie=2, eagle=5, bogey=-1, and double bogey=-3, rewarding aggressive play.
Worked Examples
Example 1: Mid-Handicap Club Competition
Problem: A golfer with an 18 course handicap shoots 90 on a par 72 with 0 eagles, 2 birdies, 7 pars, 6 bogeys, 2 double bogeys, and 1 triple bogey. Calculate Stableford points.
Solution: Eagles: 0 x 4 = 0 points\nBirdies: 2 x 3 = 6 points\nPars: 7 x 2 = 14 points\nBogeys: 6 x 1 = 6 points\nDouble Bogeys: 2 x 0 = 0 points\nTriple Bogey: 1 x 0 = 0 points\nGross Total = 26 points\nNet Total (with 18 HC) = 26 + 18 = 44 points\nModified Total = (2x2) + (7x0) + (6x-1) + (2x-3) + (1x-3) = 4 - 6 - 6 - 3 = -11
Result: Gross: 26 pts | Net: 44 pts | Modified: -11 | Rating: Average
Example 2: Low-Handicap Strong Round
Problem: A scratch golfer shoots 70 on par 72 with 1 eagle, 4 birdies, 10 pars, 3 bogeys, 0 doubles, 0 triples. Calculate points across all systems.
Solution: Eagles: 1 x 4 = 4 points\nBirdies: 4 x 3 = 12 points\nPars: 10 x 2 = 20 points\nBogeys: 3 x 1 = 3 points\nGross Total = 39 points\nNet Total (0 HC) = 39 points\nModified: (1x5) + (4x2) + (10x0) + (3x-1) = 5 + 8 - 3 = +10
Result: Gross: 39 pts | Net: 39 pts | Modified: +10 | Rating: Excellent
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the Stableford scoring system in golf?
The Stableford scoring system is a golf scoring format that awards points based on the number of strokes taken relative to par on each hole, rather than counting total strokes. Under standard Stableford, a double bogey or worse scores 0 points, a bogey scores 1 point, par scores 2 points, birdie scores 3 points, eagle scores 4 points, and an albatross scores 5 points. The highest point total wins, which is the opposite of stroke play where the lowest score wins. This system was invented by Dr. Frank Stableford in 1931 and was first used at Wallasey Golf Club in England. It encourages aggressive play because there is no additional penalty for a high score on any individual hole beyond receiving zero points.
How does the Stableford system handle handicaps?
In Stableford competitions, handicap strokes are distributed across holes based on the stroke index (handicap allocation) of each hole. If your course handicap is 18, you receive one stroke on every hole, effectively converting the point threshold. A net par on a stroke hole becomes a gross bogey, which scores 2 points instead of 1. If your course handicap is 24, you receive two strokes on the six hardest holes and one stroke on the remaining twelve. This distribution means higher handicap players benefit most from their extra strokes on the most difficult holes where they are most likely to make high scores. The net Stableford scoring makes the competition fair across different ability levels.
What is Modified Stableford and how does it differ from standard?
Modified Stableford is a variation used in professional events like the Barracuda Championship on the PGA Tour that assigns different point values emphasizing risk-reward play. Under Modified Stableford, an albatross scores 8 points, eagle scores 5 points, birdie scores 2 points, par scores 0 points, bogey scores negative 1 point, and double bogey or worse scores negative 3 points. The key difference is that par is worth zero rather than two points, and bogeys and doubles carry significant penalties. This format dramatically changes strategy because conservative par-making earns nothing while aggressive birdie hunting is heavily rewarded. It produces more exciting golf because players must attack to accumulate points.
What is a good Stableford score for different handicap levels?
A good Stableford score varies by format and handicap level, but general benchmarks help set expectations. In standard Stableford on a par 72 with full handicap, 36 points represents playing exactly to your handicap, which is the baseline target. Scores of 38 to 40 points indicate you played 2 to 4 strokes better than your handicap, which is considered very good. Scores above 40 points are exceptional and may trigger a handicap review. Scratch golfers playing gross Stableford would expect around 36 points (all pars). PGA Tour professionals in Modified Stableford events typically accumulate 15 to 25 points over four rounds. For casual golfers, consistently scoring 30 or more gross Stableford points indicates solid play relative to par.
Why does Stableford scoring encourage more aggressive play?
Stableford scoring encourages aggression because the downside risk on any hole is capped at zero points, while the upside reward for birdies and eagles is significant. In stroke play, a quadruple bogey adds four strokes to your total, which can devastate a round. In Stableford, that same quadruple bogey costs you only 2 points compared to a par, the same as the difference between a par and a double bogey. This asymmetry means golfers can attack difficult pin positions, go for par-5 greens in two, and play aggressively on reachable par 4s knowing that the worst outcome on any hole is simply zero points. The format essentially removes the catastrophic cost of disaster holes while preserving the full benefit of scoring holes.
How do you calculate Stableford points for a full round?
Calculating Stableford points for a full round involves assigning point values to your score on each hole relative to par, then summing all 18 holes. First, determine your net score on each hole by subtracting any handicap strokes you receive on that hole. Then apply the point scale: net double bogey or worse equals 0 points, net bogey equals 1 point, net par equals 2 points, net birdie equals 3 points, net eagle equals 4 points, and net albatross equals 5 points. Add up all hole points for your total. A common shortcut is to stop playing a hole once you can no longer score any points, which speeds up play. For example, after reaching net double bogey, pick up and record zero points for that hole.