Film Your Golf Swing the Right Way: 5 Common Recording Mistakes That Hurt Analysis
Filming your golf swing is one of the fastest ways to improve, but only if the video actually shows what is happening. Poor camera setup can distort angles, hide key movements, and make it nearly impossible to track progress over time.
When golfers rely on video feedback inside the V1 GOLF App, clarity and consistency matter. Even small filming mistakes can lead to incorrect swing interpretations and wasted practice sessions. The good news is most filming issues are easy to fix once you know what to look for.
Here are five of the most common swing recording mistakes and how to correct them so every video you capture actually helps your game.
1. The Camera Is Not Aligned With the Target Line
If your camera is even slightly misaligned with your target line, your swing plane can appear steeper or flatter than it really is. This is one of the biggest reasons golfers misdiagnose their mechanics when reviewing video.
Fix: Before filming, identify your target line clearly. Place a club or alignment stick on the ground pointing toward the target and position your camera parallel to it. When your camera matches the target line, your swing angles will appear accurate inside the V1 GOLF App.
2. You Change Camera Position Every Session
If your camera location shifts from one practice session to the next, comparisons become unreliable. A swing that looks different might not actually be different. The camera angle simply changed.
Fix: Film from the same spot every time. Use visual reference points like a range mat edge, alignment stick, or a marked position on the ground. Consistent camera placement allows you to use V1’s side by side comparison tools with confidence and see true progress.
3. The Video Is Unstable or Moving
Movement in the camera during the swing makes it difficult to analyze the most important moment of all, impact. Even slight shaking can blur positions and make slow motion review less useful.
Fix: Make sure your phone is stable before every recording. Set it on level ground or a secure mount and take a short test clip first. A stable frame gives you clear checkpoints throughout the swing when reviewing video frame by frame. A phone holder tripod is an easy addition to your golf bag.
4. The Camera Height Is Incorrect
Camera height plays a major role in how posture, swing plane, and body angles appear. If the phone sits too high or too low, your positions can look distorted and misleading.
Fix: Position the camera roughly at hand height when standing at address. This provides the most accurate perspective for down the line and face on views. Always record a quick sample swing and review it before capturing your full session. If you have a tripod, mark the height so it’s the same each time you swing.
5. Your Swing Is Not Fully in Frame
If the club or follow through disappears out of the frame, you lose valuable information. An incomplete view makes it difficult to evaluate sequencing, extension, and finish position.
Fix: Step far enough away from the camera to capture your entire motion from takeaway to finish. Check that the clubhead stays visible at the top of the backswing and through the follow through. A complete swing view ensures nothing important is missed during analysis.
Turn Better Filming Into Better Feedback
High quality swing video is the foundation of effective analysis. When your camera angle is correct, your framing is consistent, and your swing is clearly visible, the feedback you receive becomes far more reliable.
That is where the V1 GOLF App becomes especially powerful. With accurate video, you can:
- Compare swings side by side over time
- Draw lines and measure positions precisely
- Share clips with coaches for detailed feedback
- Track real progress instead of guessing
Video analysis only works when the video itself is trustworthy. Taking a few extra seconds to set up your camera correctly can save hours of confusion later.
If you’re getting online lessons or a coach is reviewing your swing, filming your swing properly and consistently is even more critical!
Build a Simple Filming Routine
The best golfers make their filming setup automatic. They use the same angles, same height, and same process every time they practice. This consistency removes guesswork and turns video review into a dependable training tool.
If you want more productive practice sessions, start by improving how you record your swing. Clean, consistent video leads to clearer insights, better coaching feedback, and faster improvement.
The post Film Your Golf Swing the Right Way: 5 Common Recording Mistakes That Hurt Analysis appeared first on V1 Sports.

