Your handicap is just a number that says how good you are at golf right now. In the Netherlands this number lives in the World Handicap System, the WHS, and it comes with a digital NGF pass. Let me explain the whole thing in plain words, the way I explain it to my students on the tee. It is simpler than the app makes it look.
What is the NGF pass and what do you get with it?
The NGF pass is your official golf ID in the Netherlands. Since 2024 it is fully digital — no plastic card anymore. It lives in the free GOLF.NL app and shows four things: your name, your current Handicap Index, your club, and your GSN (your Golf Service Number). If you have no smartphone, you can print it on demand.
You do not need to join a big club to get one. Independent registration exists too, from about €39 a year at Lingewaard Golf, €42.50 at Stichting Registratie Golf, or from €66.50 at ANWB Golf with some extra services. Each one gives you a real digital NGF pass and a valid WHS index. Prices update every January, so check before you sign.
Before all this, you first need your course permission. If that word is new to you, read my guide on [baanpermissie]({{% relref “/guides/netherlands-handicap/baanpermissie-explained.md” %}}) — that is step one, the pass comes after.
What is the WHS Handicap Index and how is it calculated?
Your Handicap Index is the average of your best 8 rounds from your last 20. Not all 20. Only the best 8. This is a kind thing, actually — it means one terrible day does not follow you around.
At the end of 2025 there were 404,778 registered golfers with a WHS index in the Netherlands, and the average handicap was 35.8. So if you are near 54 at the start, you are in the biggest group of all. That is completely normal.
The maximum index is 54.0 for men and women. There is no bottom limit — the strongest players carry a “+” index, which means they actually give strokes back to the course. You will not need to worry about that one for a while. Or maybe you will. I have seen students surprise themselves.
One golfer who writes about the WHS decided to submit every single score for a whole six-month season, good and bad, to see if he could trick the number down. His honest conclusion: it barely moved. Because only your best 8 count, padding your record with average rounds does almost nothing. The system is harder to fool than people think, and I like that about it.
What is a score differential and how does each round affect your index?
A score differential is what one round is “worth” after the course difficulty is removed. In Dutch the app calls it your dagresultaat, your daily result.
The formula looks scary but the idea is gentle. It takes your adjusted score, subtracts the Course Rating, and stretches it to a neutral difficulty using the Slope Rating:
(113 ÷ Slope Rating) × (adjusted gross score − Course Rating − PCC)
Course Rating is close to par and says how hard the course is for a top player. Slope Rating says how much harder it plays for a normal player like you and me — it runs from 55 to 155, and 113 is the neutral middle. Most Dutch courses sit above 113, which is good news for you: it means you receive a few more strokes than your plain index number.
The PCC is the Playing Conditions Calculation. Every night the NGF looks at all the qualifying scores on a course that day. If it was cold and windy and everyone struggled, it nudges your result a little easier (up to +3); on a perfect calm day it can go −1. This runs overnight, so your provisional new index shows straight away in the app, but the official one appears the next morning.
Here is a thing that confuses many people, and it happened to a golfer I read about: he played a lovely round, net under par, and woke up to find his index had gone up a fraction. He did not make a mistake. Two old weak scores had simply dropped out of his last 20, and his nice round was not quite nice enough to replace them in the best 8. The number reflects your average form, not your one shining day. When you understand that, it stops feeling unfair.
What is stableford and why do Dutch golfers use it?
Stableford is a points game instead of counting every stroke, and it is the format at almost every Dutch club competition. You score points per hole: par is 2 points, bogey 1, birdie 3, eagle 4. A double bogey or worse is simply 0 — and you pick up your ball and walk to the next tee.
Play exactly to your handicap and you finish on 36 points. Above 36 means you beat your handicap that day. Beginners love how forgiving it is: one disaster hole cannot wreck the whole card the way it does in stroke play. In competitions the WHS usually gives 95% of your course handicap as your stableford playing handicap.
A funny truth about Dutch and British club golfers — many are visibly disappointed with 38 or 39 points, even though 36 is already “playing to handicap”. For most amateurs, 36 has quietly become the floor, not the goal. It shows how deep the stableford habit runs here.
How do you submit a qualifying score in the Netherlands?
You submit through the GOLF.NL app, and you need a marker — a playing partner who watches your round and approves your card in the app within 48 hours. If nobody approves it in time, the NGF marks it non-qualifying. The course must have an official NGF course and slope rating; range sessions, simulators and unrated courses do not count.
The nice part for busy people: both real club competitions and friendly “general play” rounds count. So a quiet Wednesday evening nine holes can lower your index. A parent of small children once explained why this felt so fair to him — under the old system, if life only allowed midweek golf, your handicap sat frozen. Now every honest card counts. In 2025, nearly 2 million qualifying rounds were registered in the Netherlands, up more than 17% on the year before. People are playing, and counting it.
To get your very first index you need just one qualifying score of 36 stableford points over 18 holes (or 19 over 9). That single card sets you at 54.0 and you are officially on the ladder. From there, my guide on [handicap 54 and how to lower it]({{% relref “/guides/netherlands-handicap/handicap-54-and-how-to-lower-it.md” %}}) shows the next steps.
Handicap Index, course handicap, playing handicap — what is the difference?
Three names, three jobs:
- Your Handicap Index is your portable number — the same everywhere in the world.
- Your course handicap (baanhandicap) is that index adjusted for the exact course and tee you play today, using its slope rating. This is your real stroke allowance for the round.
- Your playing handicap (spelhandicap) is the course handicap after any competition percentage, like the 95% for stableford.
The app does all this maths for you. You only tap your tee, and it tells you your strokes. If you want to see how it works by hand, try my Course Handicap calculator — type in the slope, rating and par and it does the sum for you.
Can you use your Dutch NGF handicap abroad?
Yes, everywhere the WHS is used, which is almost all of golf now. Show your GOLF.NL screen at any WHS course’s reception and you are welcome to play. Take a screenshot before you travel, in case you have no internet at the club. And it works both ways: rounds you play abroad on rated courses can go straight into your app and count toward your Dutch index — that has been possible since 2015.
An expat golfer described the happy surprise of arriving in the Netherlands and finding her home handicap was accepted right away, no re-test needed. She just showed her app and teed off as a guest. Golf really is one big country in this sense.
If all of this makes you want to get your first proper handicap, I would love to help you earn it the calm way, one small step at a time. Come play a lesson with me at Chi Chi Golf in Utrecht or Golfschool Hoenderdaal in Driebergen — you can see the [pricing]({{% relref “/pricing” %}}) and pick a time. Bring your questions about scoring; I promise the app stops being scary once you have made a few birdie 3s of your own.