Full Swing golf simulator review: tour pedigree, examined

Last updated June 11, 2026

Our verdict

0.0 / 5

Full Swing earns its tour association: the KIT launch monitor delivers radar-measured ball data in a beautifully built package, and the premium studio systems are genuine showpieces. Compare software ecosystems and total build cost against camera rivals before committing.

KIT $4,000 to $5,000; studios from $35,000 installed

What Full Swing is

Full Swing built its name on the enclosed studio simulators used by touring professionals, including the most famous practice basement in golf, and translated that pedigree into the KIT: a consumer radar launch monitor with a premium aluminum build and an integrated touchscreen display. The company sells across two worlds: the KIT for home practice setups and full studio systems with dual-tracking technology for five-figure dedicated rooms.

The KIT, tested

The KIT measures ball data by Doppler radar with strong accuracy outdoors and dependable indoor numbers given adequate ball flight, and the on-device screen showing your numbers at address is genuinely useful, removing the phone-glancing habit lesser units create. Sixteen data points cover everything an improving golfer tracks. The honest caveats: like all radar, it prefers depth (court it with 14 plus feet of room), and club data is leaner than camera rivals at the price.

Studio systems

Full Swing’s enclosed studios combine ball-tracking cameras with impact sensors in the screen itself, producing the most arcade-smooth experience in golf: you hit into the screen and the ball simply continues into the virtual world. For dedicated luxury rooms it remains a benchmark, with pricing to match (typically $35,000 plus installed). Our luxury golf simulators guide covers where it fits.

Software and ecosystem

Full Swing’s app and course content are polished, and iOS integration is first class. The ecosystem is more closed than the GSPro-friendly camera crowd, which matters if community course libraries are part of your dream; check the current compatibility list before buying.

Full Swing versus the field

Against the SkyTrak+ (our SkyTrak review): the KIT wins on build quality and display, SkyTrak+ wins on enclosure ecosystem and software openness. Against premium cameras in our Foresight Sports review: Foresight wins measured club data indoors; the KIT wins price and portability.

Pros and cons

Pros: radar accuracy with tour pedigree; superb build and integrated display; strong app experience; studio systems are genuine showpieces. Cons: wants room depth indoors; leaner club data than camera rivals; more closed ecosystem.

Frequently asked questions

Is the Full Swing KIT good for a home simulator?

Yes, in rooms with 14 plus feet of depth. In shorter rooms, camera-based units from our best home golf simulators rankings suit the physics better.

How much does a Full Swing simulator cost?

The KIT runs around $4,000 to $5,000; full studio systems start around $35,000 installed.

Does Full Swing work with GSPro?

Compatibility has been evolving; verify the current status for your intended software before purchase, since the ecosystem is more controlled than camera rivals.