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Best Golf Apparel From March 2026: The Latest Footwear & Clothing Releases You Should Know About


March is the month golf stops thinking about spring and starts living it. The Players Championship brings the PGA Tour’s unofficial fifth major to Sawgrass, the Masters is just round the corner, and the brands that have been building toward this moment all start landing at once. Here are the standout new golf releases in the best golf apparel from March 2026 – the drops worth knowing about before April arrives.


Our Roundup of the Best Golf Apparel From March 2026


March delivered some of the strongest new golf shoes of 2026 so far, with genuine competition across spiked, spikeless, and performance categories.

The VP4 is Nike’s performance spiked shoe for 2026 and one of the stronger releases of the spring season. The headline feature is the all-new Fly Wing – a structural element connecting the midsole to the upper on the lateral side that gives golfers something to push off against through the downswing. Cushlon foam midsole, nine-spike outsole, Dynamic Fit lacing system, and a genuine improvement in fit and shape over the Victory Pro 3.

Six colorways at launch cover everything from the understated Light Khaki/Filbert/Black to the bolder White/Black/Malachite. Wide fit available on select colorways.

The shoe Scottie Scheffler helped develop with Nike over two years. We reviewed it in full – read our Nike Victory Pro 4 review here.

Why not check out our Brand Hub for everything Nike?

The Players NRG Limited Edition

Worth a separate mention: Nike also dropped a limited edition VP4 NRG colorway timed to The Players Championship. White/Gold with a gator-esque collar material – a nod to the alligators that famously patrol the TPC Sawgrass par threes – plus 3D water droplets and trophy gold accents throughout. The same performance construction underneath, with a finish that makes it unmistakably event-specific.


The most technically interesting shoe launch of the month. True Linkswear has become the first golf shoe brand to use Pebax superfoam – a material borrowed from elite running footwear – in the Antigravity’s midsole. The result is a spikeless shoe that claims to deliver meaningful energy return across 18 holes while remaining lighter than comparable premium spikeless options. For golfers who walk and want running shoe comfort without sacrificing course performance, this is the one to watch. Full coverage here.


UA‘s most performance-focused spiked shoe of 2026 uses their Clone adaptive upper – a construction that wraps and molds to the foot rather than sitting rigidly around it. The result is a secure, athletic fit that holds up through the swing without the break-in period traditional leather construction requires. Six-spike outsole, UA Flow midsole, and a silhouette that leans modern without crossing into lifestyle territory. Full review here.


Adidas refreshed three lines for 2026 and the result is one of the strongest mid-range footwear ranges in golf right now. The MC70 ($150) brings full-grain leather heritage styling with LightStrike and Boost dual-foam cushioning. The Adipower 26 ($140) revives a name dormant since 2019 with a new Repetitor midsole and Geofit heel pods – athletic silhouette, performance credentials. The S2G refreshes adidas’s accessible sneaker-style spikeless option for players who want course-to-street versatility. Full breakdown here.

J.Lindeberg’s spring mid layer lineup for women covers the transitional conditions that define March and April golf. The Janice ($145), Susanna ($145), Cindy ($155), and Adiola ($155) sit at different points on the spectrum from technical performance to elevated everyday wear, but all share the brand’s characteristic attention to fabric and silhouette. Viktor Hovland’s brand knows how to build a mid layer, and these carry that knowledge across to the women’s range with strong results. Full roundup here.

The calendar hits Augusta in a fortnight and the brands have been getting their Masters golf apparel out early. Three capsule collections stood out in March – each taking a slightly different approach to one of golf’s most distinctive weeks.

Callaway leaned into the botanical palette that defines Masters week – azalea pink, pimento red, and the distinctive chev micro print across a polo range that feels course-ready without being costume-like. The Patrons Welcome collection is understated enough to wear past Masters week but specific enough in its references to make the moment clear. Available here now.


Levelwear took the experiential approach – pimento sandwiches, Georgia peaches, azalea cocktails – translating the iconic details of Augusta week into print and palette across polos, tees, hoodies, and accessories. The Ainsley Polo at $80 and Richmond T-Shirt at $25 are the accessible entry points. The Luxe Signature Hoodie at $110 is the piece worth wearing for the back nine on Sunday. Shop the collection. We covered Levelwear’s broader spring collection here.


30904 is the zip code for Augusta, Georgia. Puma didn’t need to say anything else. The collection runs in Luso Green and Warm White across polos ($95), tees ($55), quarter-zips ($110), hoodies ($115), shorts ($78), caps ($35-$38), and a Suede G spikeless shoe ($130) – framed around the watch party experience for those of us not holding a patron’s badge. Which is almost everyone. Shop the 30904 collection. We covered Puma’s full spring 2026 range here.


Closing Thoughts: What March 2026 Is Telling Us

Three things stand out from this month’s releases. First, the footwear market is genuinely competitive right now – the gap between mid-range and premium has narrowed considerably, and golfers at the $140-$200 price point have more strong options than at any point in recent memory.

Second, the Masters capsule game has matured – Callaway, Levelwear, and Puma all found distinct angles on the same moment rather than producing versions of the same collection.

Third, spring golf clothing is still very much relevant for the US market in March, which is a reminder that the season opener varies enormously by region.

April brings the Masters itself, more spring/summer collections landing in earnest, and the footwear stories that didn’t quite make it into March. We’ll be covering it all.


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