EPISODE · Mar 21, 2026 · 21 MIN
#534 Red and Yellow Penalty Area
from Golf 247.eu: The Global Platform for Innovative Technologies and Teaching Concepts. · host Golf247.eu
This Podcast explains the key differences between red and yellow penalty areas in golf and the relief options available to players.Both types of penalty areas allow you to play the ball as it lies, even from water. You may also take relief with a one-stroke penalty using either stroke-and-distance or back-on-the-line relief.The main difference is that red penalty areas offer an additional option: lateral relief. This allows you to drop the ball within two club lengths from the point where it last crossed into the penalty area, no closer to the hole.In a yellow penalty area, lateral relief is not allowed. Your only options are:Stroke and distance: return to the previous spot and play againBack-on-the-line relief: use the crossing point, align it with the flag, and move back as far as you wantBack-on-the-line relief is based on the point where the ball last crossed into the penalty area, not where it lies. From that point, you create a straight line to the flag and move backward. Once you choose your drop spot, it becomes your reference point. You can then drop within one club length around it.For lateral relief in a red penalty area, the reference point is simply where the ball crossed the edge. From there, you measure two club lengths to define your drop area.The rules also define how the reference point behaves after a shot:If your ball stays in the penalty area after a shot, the reference point does not change. It remains the original crossing point.If the ball leaves the penalty area and then re-enters, a new reference point is created at the location where it crossed back in.If you attempt a shot and fail to escape the penalty area, you still have all original relief options. You can:Drop again within the penalty area using stroke and distanceUse back-on-the-line (or lateral in red areas) from the original reference pointReturn to the previous position outside the penalty area with an additional penalty strokeUnderstanding these rules allows golfers to make better strategic decisions and avoid unnecessary penalties.📺 The Explainerwww.Golf247.eu
What this episode covers
This Podcast explains the key differences between red and yellow penalty areas in golf and the relief options available to players.Both types of penalty areas allow you to play the ball as it lies, even from water. You may also take relief with a one-stroke penalty using either stroke-and-distance or back-on-the-line relief.The main difference is that red penalty areas offer an additional option: lateral relief. This allows you to drop the ball within two club lengths from the point where it last crossed into the penalty area, no closer to the hole.In a yellow penalty area, lateral relief is not allowed. Your only options are:Stroke and distance: return to the previous spot and play againBack-on-the-line relief: use the crossing point, align it with the flag, and move back as far as you wantBack-on-the-line relief is based on the point where the ball last crossed into the penalty area, not where it lies. From that point, you create a straight line to the flag and move backward. Once you choose your drop spot, it becomes your reference point. You can then drop within one club length around it.For lateral relief in a red penalty area, the reference point is simply where the ball crossed the edge. From there, you measure two club lengths to define your drop area.The rules also define how the reference point behaves after a shot:If your ball stays in the penalty area after a shot, the reference point does not change. It remains the original crossing point.If the ball leaves the penalty area and then re-enters, a new reference point is created at the location where it crossed back in.If you attempt a shot and fail to escape the penalty area, you still have all original relief options. You can:Drop again within the penalty area using stroke and distanceUse back-on-the-line (or lateral in red areas) from the original reference pointReturn to the previous position outside the penalty area with an additional penalty strokeUnderstanding these rules allows golfers to make better strategic decisions and avoid unnecessary penalties.📺 The Explainerwww.Golf247.eu
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#534 Red and Yellow Penalty Area
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