Directional Bias shows your average miss direction with a specific club — how far left or right your shots tend to land from your intended line. Knowing your bias turns your stats into something immediately usable on the course.
How it's measured
For driving clubs — Bias measures your average distance from the fairway centerline, accounting for the actual shape of the hole.
For irons and wedges — Bias measures the perpendicular distance from your target line to the pin.
In both cases, extreme mishits are filtered out so one wayward shot doesn't skew your number.
How to read it
A bias of 0 means you're landing on average on your target line. A right bias (for example, 2.8R) means your average miss is 2.8 yards right of your line. Left and right are from the golfer's perspective.
Driver / Iron Bias on the Performance tab
The Performance tab shows a summary row with your driver bias and iron bias side by side. Tap the row to see directional bias broken down by individual club.
If your 7-iron has a consistent right bias, aim slightly left of your target to account for it — that's turning data directly into better decisions on the course.