Avoid All Golf Ball Brands, Except These 7

Photo of Aaron Webber
By Aaron Webber Published
This post may contain links from our sponsors and affiliates, and Flywheel Publishing may receive compensation for actions taken through them.
Avoid All Golf Ball Brands, Except These 7

© ER Productions Limited / DigitalVision via Getty Images

Golf is wasteful, from the ridiculous amounts of water used to keep courses green in the middle of deserts to the emissions from lawnmowers and golf carts, and even golf balls themselves. Today, golf balls are made from synthetic rubber, virgin plastics, petroleum, heavy metals, ionomer, surlyn, and urethane. These materials take hundreds (even thousands) of years to break down, and 420 million are lost or abandoned into the environment each year.

Here are some sustainable, and more eco-friendly options.

#1 Biodegradable Golf Balls

Golfer putting golf ball on the green golf, lens flare on sun set evening time.
sattahipbeach / Shutterstock.com

Golfing.

  • Best For: Best Distance, Biodegradable
  • Price: Starting at $54.99

Biodegradable Golf Balls have the perfect brand name for its exceptional product. These golf balls are water soluble and are great for golfers with yachts, boats, water property, golf around ranges near bodies of water, or on a cruise. Regular golf balls are extremely damaging to marine life, and harm ocean ecosystems. These golf balls are made out of only two materials: corn starch, and Polyvinyl Alcohol (PVA). PVA is the substance that coats medications and even some candies.  According to its website, these golf balls are not for, “evil people who want to destroy the world, professional golf users, and boring people.”

#2 Dixon Golf

robertcicchetti / iStock via Getty Images

Golfing.

  • Best For: Premium Performance, Eco-Friendly
  • Price: Starting at $24.99

Dixon Golf is an eco-friendly golf brand that prides itself on providing high-performance, high-quality golf balls that also don’t harm the planet. It offers 4 different varieties: Earth, Wind, Fire, and Spirit. All models conform to R&A Rules and are USGA compliant. The best part is that each ball is for a different kind of golfer. Whether you like a soft compression with a medium trajectory (Spirit), or if you have a swing speed of over 100 MPH and like a firm compression (Fire), you’ll find a model that is right for you.

#3 Albus Golf

kevron2001 / iStock via Getty Images

Golfing.

  • Best For: 100% Biodegradable
  • Price: $58.00/24 pack

Albus Golf does something that other biodegradable golf balls do- feed fish! Its Ecobioball contains fish food in its core and dissolves in water. It’s a single-use golf ball meant to be played close to marine environments. It is 100% safe for marine life and is Biodegradable Certified.

#4 Clean Green

ranplett / iStock via Getty Images

Golfing.

  • Best For: Recycled Materials
  • Price: Various

This Texas-based company sources lost golf balls from all over the country and ships them to its warehouse to be cleaned, sorted according to quality, and shipped out. It guarantees that your order will ship within 24 hours, and any order over $59 ships free. You can shop according to your preferred quality (mint, near mint, good, and range), brand (14 different ones), colors, and quantity. For even more fun, you can get your mix customized with monograms, faces, pets, and custom logos.

#5 Found Golf Balls

Andy Lyons / Getty Images

Golfing.

  • Best For: Bulk
  • Price: Starting at $20

Found Golf Balls takes the “Reuse,” in “reduce, reuse, recycle,” especially seriously. It provides used golf balls that don’t compromise performance. Some golfers want to utilize biodegradable balls but aren’t satisfied with the quality. Found Golf Balls completely rectify this issue. You can find your favorite brands like Wilson, Titleist, Callaway, Cut, Honma, Kirkland, MG, and Nike among many others. At Found Golf Balls, you purchase by the dozen, and can even make your own mix.

#6 Tomorrow Golf

torwai / Getty Images

Golfing.

  • Best For: 100% Recycled Core
  • Price: €29.40/pack of 12

Tomorrow Golf is on a mission to bring the golfing industry into the modern world. With its use of recycled rubber cores recovered from damaged golf balls, bamboo apparel, and plastic-free packaging, it takes its mission seriously. On top of that, it uses carbon-neutral shipping through a partnership with the Shopify Sustainability Fund. Its products are not only good for the planet, but good for people, too. Rather than being produced in Southeast Asia, all products are made exclusively in Europe and adhere to production laws and regulations.

#7 Zero Friction

MOAimages / Getty Images

Golf ball.

  • Best For: Low Friction
  • Price: $21.99/12 pack

Zero Friction isn’t exclusively a sustainable golf brand, but it does offer its ECO Z Renewable Performance Golf Balls. These balls are made from environmentally friendly materials and still have outstanding performance. It comes in recycled packaging, and a percentage of the sale of these special golf balls is donated to One Tree Planted. Each pack also comes with a turf tee, which doubles as a divot tool.

Photo of Aaron Webber
About the Author Aaron Webber →

Aaron Webber is a veteran of the marketing, advertising, and publishing worlds. With over 15 years as a professional writer and editor, he has led branding and marketing initiatives for hundreds of companies ranging from local Chicago restaurants to international microchip manufacturers and banks. Aaron has launched new brands, managed corporate rebranding campaigns, and managed teams of writers in the education and branding agency industries. His experience extends to radio spots, mailers, websites, keynote presentations, TED talks, financial prospecti, launch decks, social media, and much more.

He is now a full-time freelance writer, editor, and branding consultant. Most of his work is spent ghost-writing for corporate executives, long-form articles, and advising smaller agencies on client projects.

Aaron’s work has been featured on INC.com and The Huffington Post. He has written for Fortune 100 companies and world-class brands. His extensive experience in C-suite ghostwriting has launched the personal branding initiatives of dozens of executives. He is a published fiction writer with publishing credits in science fiction, horror, and historical fiction.

Aaron graduated from Brigham Young University with a bachelor’s degree in macroeconomics, and is the owner and primary contributor of The Lost Explorers Club on www.lostexplorersclub.com. He spends his free time teaching breathwork and hosting healing ceremonies in his home.

Featured Reads

Our top personal finance-related articles today. Your wallet will thank you later.

Continue Reading

Top Gaining Stocks

CBOE Vol: 1,568,143
PSKY Vol: 12,285,993
STX Vol: 7,378,346
ORCL Vol: 26,317,675
DDOG Vol: 6,247,779

Top Losing Stocks

LKQ
LKQ Vol: 4,367,433
CLX Vol: 13,260,523
SYK Vol: 4,519,455
MHK Vol: 1,859,865
AMGN Vol: 3,818,618