How to export your Trackman data (it's easier than you think)

Trackman captures a huge amount of data every session. For a long time, actually getting it out was either painful or impossible. Here's how to do it properly.

Trackman launch monitor at a golf simulator bay

Trackman is one of the best launch monitors on the market. It captures ball speed, spin rate, launch angle, club path, face angle — more data per shot than most golfers know what to do with. The problem has always been that once you walk out of the bay, that data more or less stays there.

There's no easy official export. No long-term progress tracking built in. No way to compare last month's sessions against this month's, or to see how your 6-iron is actually performing across a hundred shots rather than just the ten you hit today. The data exists. It's just locked away.

SwingSync fixes that. Here's how to connect your Trackman account and start getting something useful out of all that data.

Step 1: Download SwingSync

SwingSync is free and available for Mac and Windows. Grab it from the homepage — no credit card, no subscription, no catch. Install it and create a free account.

Step 2: Connect your Trackman account

Once you're set up, open the SwingSync dashboard and select Trackman from the list of supported simulators. You'll be prompted to enter your Trackman credentials to link your account. SwingSync never sees those credentials — they're encrypted and stored securely on your account, not accessible to us.

Once authorised, SwingSync will begin pulling in your historical session data. How long this takes depends on how much you've got — but you'll see your sessions appearing in the app as they come in.

Step 3: Export a session as CSV

Navigate to any Trackman session in SwingSync and open the Shot Table tab. In the top right you'll find the Export Session button. Click it, save the CSV wherever you like, and you're done.

That file opens in Excel, Google Sheets, or any data tool you prefer. Every shot, every metric, ready to work with however you want.

But honestly, the export is just the start

Getting your data into a spreadsheet is useful. But what SwingSync actually does with that data is more interesting than any CSV.

Every shot is automatically cleaned, classified, and enriched — missing spin values filled in, outlier readings corrected, each ball flight given a proper name (Baby Draw, Push Fade, whatever it is). From there you get progress tracking across sessions, club-by-club dispersion charts, miss pattern breakdowns, streak tracking, and benchmarks against tour averages. All of it updated automatically every time you hit balls.

If you've been using Trackman seriously and wondering why there's no good way to actually understand what you're looking at over time — this is what that looks like.

Questions or feedback? Drop us a line.

Ready to get more from your Trackman data?

Download SwingSync free and connect your account in minutes.