Spike Golf has carved out a clear identity in the modern golf accessories market. Instead of trying to be everything to everyone, the brand focuses on the items golfers actually use week after week, especially bamboo golf tees, towels, ball markers, bundles and a growing lifestyle range. For UK golfers researching practical accessories rather than headline club launches, that makes Spike Golf an interesting brand to understand.
The appeal is straightforward. Golfers want products that are useful, easy to carry and easy to buy again when they run low. Spike Golf leans into that part of the market with a product mix built around everyday golf essentials, while also giving the range a stronger visual identity than generic accessories. That balance of practicality and personality is a big reason why the brand stands out.
Contents
- What is Spike Golf?
- Why bamboo golf tees matter
- The main Spike Golf product categories
- How to choose the right Spike Golf products
- How Spike Golf fits into indoor golf and practice
- Final buying takeaway
Spike Golf UK guide covering bamboo golf tees, towels and golf accessories. Image credit: Spike Golf
This article forms part of the Outtabounds Spike Golf Series.
What is Spike Golf?
Spike Golf is a UK accessories brand centred on the small pieces of equipment golfers use all the time. The official Spike Golf site groups its offer around bamboo golf tees, castle golf tees, towels, gloves, hats, ball markers, bundles, subscriptions and t-shirts, rather than trying to compete directly in the club market. That positioning matters because many golfers are not looking for another driver headline. They are looking for products that solve everyday annoyances and feel good to use.
The brand messaging is also clear. Bamboo golf tees sit at the heart of the range and the wider pitch is built around moving away from plastic tees. Around that core product, Spike Golf has added related items that support a full round, such as pocket ball cleaner towels, larger bag towels, magnetic markers and glove and tee bundles. From a buying point of view, this creates a tidy ecosystem rather than a random list of accessories.
For golfers who like to test equipment methodically, that kind of ecosystem is useful. At Outtabounds, the conversation around golf gear often links back to how products support better practice and easier decision making. That is why pages like Indoor Golf Simulators and Our Technology are useful companions to a brand series like this one.
Why bamboo golf tees matter
Golf tees are a small purchase, but they are also a repeat purchase. If a golfer plays regularly, practises often or likes carrying different tee lengths for different clubs, the choice of tee becomes more important than it first appears. Spike Golf places bamboo tees at the centre of the brand because tees are one of the most disposable items in golf and one of the easiest areas where golfers can switch away from plastic.
That does not automatically mean every golfer should buy the same tee. The key practical question is how the tee behaves on the course. Spike Golf regular bamboo tees are positioned around common club use cases, with longer tees for driver, medium tees for fairway woods and hybrids, and shorter tees for irons or low bullets into the wind. The brand also offers castle tees for players who prefer a preset height and a more repeatable setup routine.
For UK golfers, this matters because conditions change constantly. One weekend might be dry and firm, the next soft and windy. Accessories that reduce small setup decisions can genuinely make the round easier. Equally, golfers who prefer flexibility may still prefer a standard tee they can push higher or lower. The point is not that one style is universally superior. The point is that Spike Golf has built a range that covers both preferences.
Spike Golf bamboo golf tees and castle tee options for different clubs. Image credit: Spike Golf
The main Spike Golf product categories
Once you move beyond the headline bamboo tee message, Spike Golf starts to look like a broader accessories brand. Towels are a good example. The range includes compact ball cleaner towels that can stay in a pocket and larger bag towels that clip onto the bag. That split reflects how golfers actually use towels during a round, especially in muddy or wet UK conditions where a clean ball and dry grips can make a bigger difference than people sometimes admit.
Markers and small accessories sit in a similar category. Many golfers want something simple and durable, but they also want accessories that look like a deliberate choice rather than an afterthought. Spike Golf ball markers use a more branded, lifestyle-led aesthetic than plain generic markers, which makes them appealing for golfers who enjoy a bag setup with a bit more personality.
Then there are bundles, subscriptions and apparel. Bundles make sense for golfers who want to restock essentials or buy a practical gift. Subscription options are aimed at repeat-use items such as tees. Apparel, caps and gloves extend the brand beyond the round itself and create a more recognisable look around the wider Spike Golf identity.
| Category | What it covers | Why golfers buy it | Commercial takeaway |
|---|---|---|---|
| Regular bamboo tees | 70mm, 54mm and 32mm options | Flexibility across driver, woods, hybrids and irons | Best for golfers who want one brand across several tee heights |
| Castle tees | Preset tee heights in several sizes | Consistency and easier setup, especially on winter mats | Best for golfers who value repeatability over adjustability |
| Towels | Bag towels and pocket ball cleaner towels | Cleaner ball, cleaner clubface and easier wet-weather golf | Best for golfers who play year round in UK conditions |
| Markers and accessories | Magnetic markers and add-on essentials | Small upgrades that make a bag feel more considered | Best for golfers who like practical accessories with personality |
| Bundles and subscriptions | Mixed-product packs and regular deliveries | Convenience, gifting and easier restocking | Best for regular players who burn through tees or buy gifts |
How to choose the right Spike Golf products
The easiest mistake is trying to decide whether the entire brand is good or bad in one sweep. Accessories are more useful when you break them down by job. Ask first whether you are solving a tee problem, a towel problem, a gifting problem or a convenience problem. A golfer who rarely loses tees but constantly arrives at the green with a muddy ball has a very different need from a golfer who wants a monthly restock of tees and a fresh glove.
Next, think about playing habits. A golfer who plays through winter and still turns up in poor weather may get more value from a pocket ball cleaner towel, a bag towel and a winter-friendly castle tee option than from apparel. A golfer who enjoys a bold bag aesthetic and likes small add-ons may care more about markers, cap choices and bundle combinations. A newer golfer may simply want one bundle that covers the main essentials without any overthinking.
It is also sensible to think about where golf fits into your wider practice routine. If you split your time between the course and indoor practice, accessories that keep your setup organised become more important. That is where pages like How to Build a Golf Simulator in the UK and Golf Simulator Garden Rooms become relevant, because they show how golfers increasingly connect outdoor play, structured practice and home setup decisions.
Spike Golf towels and accessories for year round golf in the UK. Image credit: Spike Golf
How Spike Golf fits into indoor golf and practice
At first glance, Spike Golf is a brand about on-course essentials rather than simulator technology. That is true, but it does not mean the brand sits outside the indoor golf conversation. Indoor golfers still think about feel, routine, convenience and how their kit supports a better practice session. Towels, gloves, caps and simple accessories all play a part in that wider setup, especially for golfers who move between outdoor rounds and simulator sessions.
At Outtabounds, the practical side of golf equipment matters. Golfers often come in to book a session at Outtabounds before spending heavily on bigger equipment decisions, and that same mindset carries into accessories. The best accessories are not always the flashiest. They are the ones that make the round or practice session smoother, cleaner and more repeatable.
If you are planning a more permanent indoor setup, the brand research here can sit alongside higher-ticket guides such as Impact Screens and Golf Enclosures. Those pages obviously address a different part of the market, but together they show how modern golfers think in systems. A setup is rarely just clubs or just technology. It is everything that supports how you practise and play.
Explore the Full Spike Golf Series
- Spike Golf UK: The Complete Guide to Bamboo Golf Tees, Towels and Accessories
- Are Spike Golf Bamboo Golf Tees a Smart Choice for UK Golfers?
- Spike Golf Castle Tees Explained: Sizes, Heights and Who They Suit
- Spike Golf Towels Explained: Bag Towels vs Ball Cleaner Towels
- Best Spike Golf Bundles for Golf Gifts and Everyday Use
- Spike Golf Ball Markers and Accessories: What Golfers Should Look For
- Spike Golf Subscription Boxes Explained: Who Are They Best For?
- How to Choose the Right Spike Golf Tee Height and Tee Size
- Spike Golf Apparel, Gloves and Caps: What to Know Before You Buy
Final buying takeaway
Spike Golf is best understood as an accessories brand with a clear centre of gravity. Bamboo tees lead the story, but the wider range matters because it helps golfers build a more complete, more practical bag setup. For some golfers that will mean mixed tee packs and subscriptions. For others it will mean towels, markers or a gift bundle that takes the guesswork out of buying.
If you are buying in the UK, the smartest approach is to start with the products that solve the most frequent problem in your own game. Once you do that, the Spike Golf range becomes much easier to navigate. The rest of this series breaks those choices down in more detail so you can decide which part of the range actually suits the way you play.