Sunday Golf sits in a fast-growing part of the equipment market where lighter bags, simpler setups and shorter-format golf are becoming more relevant to how many players actually play. Instead of treating smaller carry bags as a niche side category, the brand builds its range around practical use cases such as par 3 golf, walking rounds, half sets and more casual practice-led golf.
That approach makes the brand especially interesting for UK golfers. Many players want equipment that is easier to carry, quicker to pack and better suited to after-work rounds, range sessions and mixed practice routines. The bag decision is no longer only about maximum storage. It is also about how the bag fits the golf you most often play.
The Sunday Golf series brings those questions together in one place. The articles below look at the main models, compare the key categories, explain where smaller bags make sense and help you decide whether the brand fits your own routine and buying priorities.
At Outtabounds, golf equipment research sits alongside indoor golf, simulator planning, practice technology and fitting-led decision making. This series is designed to connect Sunday Golf bag research with that wider picture in a practical, useful way.
Sunday Golf UK: Complete Guide to Bags, Models and Buying Decisions
A UK-focused guide to Sunday Golf bags, including the brand’s lightweight bag categories, core models and the buying decisions that matter most.
Best Sunday Golf Bags for UK Golfers: Which Model Suits Your Game?
Compare the main Sunday Golf bags and see which model is most likely to suit par 3 rounds, regular walking golf, trolley use or a half-set setup.
Sunday Golf Loma vs Loma XL: Which Carry Bag Should You Choose?
Understand the real differences between the Loma and Loma XL so you can choose the right lightweight Sunday Golf bag for quick rounds, practice and travel.
Sunday Golf El Camino vs Ryder: Which Stand Bag Fits Your Golf?
A practical comparison of the El Camino and Ryder, including size, use case, storage and which type of golfer each bag suits best.
Sunday Golf Ranger vs Big Rig: Premium Stand Bag or Cart Bag?
Compare the Ranger and Big Rig to decide whether you need a premium stand bag feel or the larger storage and structure of a cart bag.
Are Sunday Golf Bags Worth It for UK Golfers?
A balanced UK guide to where Sunday Golf bags offer real value, who will enjoy them most and when a more traditional bag may still be the better buy.
Best Sunday Golf Bag for Par 3 Courses, Twilight Golf and Range Practice
Find the right Sunday Golf bag for shorter rounds, after-work golf and practice sessions where a lighter, simpler setup makes more sense.
How Many Clubs Should You Carry in a Sunday Golf Bag?
Learn how to build a sensible Sunday Golf setup, from minimal par 3 bags to larger stand bags, without carrying clubs you do not really need.
Sunday Golf vs Traditional Golf Bags: When a Smaller Setup Makes Sense
See when a Sunday Golf bag is the smarter choice than a traditional carry or cart bag, and when a full-size setup is still the better option.
If you are researching Sunday Golf bags and related equipment, these Outtabounds pages may also be useful:
These pages help connect equipment research with indoor golf, simulator planning, practice technology and the wider buying decisions many golfers now make before investing in their setup.
How Sunday Golf fits modern golf practice
Sunday Golf bags are especially relevant for golfers who split their time between full rounds, short-format golf, range practice and indoor training. A lighter carry setup can make those shorter sessions easier to start and easier to repeat, which is often what helps equipment feel worthwhile over time.
That broader practice context is one reason the brand fits naturally within Outtabounds. Golfers who are researching smaller carry bags are often the same golfers thinking about simulator rooms, garden-room practice spaces, launch monitor use and how to make golf more convenient around work and family life.
If you are comparing Sunday Golf bags as part of a wider equipment or practice setup, it can help to connect the bag choice with how you train, how often you walk and whether your golf is becoming more modular. The more clearly you understand your real use case, the easier it becomes to choose the right model.
To explore more equipment, practice technology and golf content, visit Outtabounds.