The air shot in golf. It’s one of those urban legends that never seems to die. Being able to declare your ball lost is another. Once again, you can’t.
There are players out there who will tell you an air shot doesn’t count – that you can just brush off the embarrassment and move on without a stain on your scorecard.
That’s not helped by some frankly confusing information on the internet that will give you some very contradictory explanations. Just google it, but some are worryingly wrong.
I think you can see which way I’m leaning with this. But, for anyone who is still wavering, here’s how it’s explained in the Rules of Golf…

Air shot in golf: What do the Rules of Golf say?
A stroke is defined in the Rules as the “forward movement of the club made to strike the ball”.
If you start the downswing with a club, and you intend to hit the ball, it counts as a stroke whether you rip it down the fairway or you swing and miss.
Is the ball in play when you’ve whiffed one?
There can be some confusion around this and it revolves around what you believe “in play” to mean. You think it’s when you’ve HIT the ball, right?
But the definitions say a ball first becomes in play on a hole “when the player makes a stroke at it from inside the teeing area”.
Rule 6.2b (5) also says that whether a ball is teed, or on the ground, when starting a hole – or if you’re playing again from the teeing area under a Rule – “the ball is not in play until the player makes a stroke at it”.













