This is Golfer Geeks’ 2025 Titleist T350 irons review.

Iโ€™m an avid golfer, 6ish handicap on my way to a 2 (been a 5.6), and frequent tester of golf clubs and equipment since 2015.

Summary: Ball. Go. Far.

The 2025 T350s are a lot like the 2023 T350s, but more.

  • Even better cosmetics – (They were already gorgeous)
  • Better sound and feel – approaching if not “player”-like -(2023s have that game improvement “click”)
  • LOADS of Distance & Forgiveness – Again, the 2023 T350s are long and forgiving. The 2025s more so.

The 2025s are a great set of game improvement irons.

Titleist does not give away irons and these are no exception.

If you’ve got the money, you’ll love what they do for your game.

In this review of the 2025 Titleist T350 irons, I discuss my experience with the clubs, unique features and benefits, as well as customer reviews and potential alternatives. 

2025 Titleist T350 Irons Review

2025 Titleist T350 irons in the bag

4.7 Overall Score

Score
Category
Score
Category
5
Bag Appeal
5+
Distance
4
Sound & Feel
5
Ball Flight
5
Forgiveness
4
Wallet Damage
5 = Among the best / 4 = Very Good / 3 = Average-Acceptable / 2 = Below Average / 1 = Poor / 0 = โ˜ ๏ธ

Best For

Beginners…High handicap…Mid handicaps.

Any golfer wanting max help with distance, forgiveness, and launch.

Considerations

Explosively long. Won’t be a huge transition coming from other game improvement irons, but there’ll be some.

Price – Titleist does premium pricing…always.

Verdict

I expected zero surprises from the 2025 Titleist T350s.

And that’s pretty much what I got…except for about half a club more distance out of already long clubs.

Good-enough swings get you all the distance you need thanks to all the tech and all the forgiveness and all the things.

Mess around and catch one? Your ball can actually get hurt – not really, but you know what I’m saying.

These things GO.

  • All the forgiveness you need.
  • More distance than you’ll never need.
  • Help with launch and great turf interaction.
  • Plus, much improved sound and feel. You’ll think you’re playing a set of refined low handicap irons.

These are what game improvement irons are supposed to be.

You’ll love them if you don’t mind parting with one month’s house note.

Where To Get Yours

Editor's Pick - Game Improvement
2025 Titleist T350 Irons
4.7
Pros:
  • Silly Long
  • All The Forgiveness
  • Gorgeous
  • Player-Level Sound & Feel
Cons:
  • Pricey
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Club Tester

About Jamie

  • Handicap: 6.5
  • Expertise: reviewing clubs since 2015
  • Right/Left-Handed: Right-handed
  • Typical ball flight: Mid-High Tight Draw
  • Golf ball used: Titleist ProV1

Set Tested

  • Set: 4 iron – PW
  • Iron Shaft: KBS Tour C-Taper 120 g
  • Shaft flex: Stiff flex

Overview & Why Consider Them

The player profile for these clubs according to titleist:

For players who want maximum distance and forgiveness on every strike, T350 features Titleistโ€™s most advanced iron technologies to optimize launch, speed, stability, and consistency across the face.(1)

Just like the original T350s, Titleist calls 2025 T350s their โ€œultimate game improvement ironโ€œ.

They’re designed to give you the most distance on more places on the club face thanks to “Max Impact Technology.”

Aggressive grooving in the mid and short irons promotes better spin control from any lie for better scoring.

You get higher trajectory thanks to high-density Tungsten placed low in the face to maximize stability and optimize CG. (Center of Gravity)

They have nearly identical design as the T250s to go with Titleist’s blended set strategy.

I think they’re the quintessential game improvement iron.

2025 Titleist T350 Iron Specs

ClubLengthLoftLie
Wedge35.5โ€ณ4864*
PW35.75โ€ณ43*64*
9-iron36โ€ณ38*64*
8-iron36.5โ€ณ33*63.5*
7-iron37โ€ณ29*63*
6-iron37.5โ€ณ26*62.5*
5-iron38โ€ณ23*62.0*
4-iron38.5โ€ณ20*61.5*

How we tested:

Rounds of golf – 2
Launch monitor – 1

7-Iron Launch Monitor Data (Average #s)

Note: These numbers are from hitting off my mat and into a net with premium balls at home.

For whatever reason, I usually hit the ball lower in these conditions.

The ball went plenty high for me on the course.

My 80 mph swings went 177ish with good contact.
My 84 mph swings went 187ish with good contact.

Club
Club Speed
Ball Speed
Carry Distance (yds)
Peak Height (ft)
7-iron
83
120
182
60

What Makes the 2025 T350s Different?

The headline: Better cosmetics, dramatically improved sound and feel, and more distance from already-long clubs.

If you’ve got the 2023 T350s, you’re familiar with game improvement performance wrapped in better-than-expected looks. The 2025s build on that foundation without changing the formula.

Cosmetics Got Even Better

The 2023 T350s looked surprisingly good for a max game improvement iron. The 2025s? Even cleaner.

Titleist re-engineered the construction with high-strength steel (face and body) to slim down the profile while maintaining all that forgiveness tech inside. The result is a head that looks slightly sharper and less bulky from address.

Not player iron compactโ€”these are still game improvement sizedโ€”but noticeably sleeker than the previous generation.

Sound & Feel: The Biggest Upgrade

This is where the 2025s separate themselves most from the 2023s.

The 2023 T350s had that distinct game improvement “click” at impact. Not offensive, but you knew what you were hitting.

The 2025s sound and feel completely differentโ€”muted, solid, almost refined. It’s approaching player iron territory (maybe not quite there, but close enough that you’d need to think about it).

That’s a huge step forward. You get all the tech and forgiveness without that clicky feedback that screams “game improvement.”

Distance & Forgiveness: More of Both

The 2023 T350s were already long and forgiving. Stupidly long, actually.

The 2025s go further.

How? New forged L-Face Design with multi-zone taperโ€”Titleist’s fancy way of saying the face flexes differently across its entire surface to generate faster ball speeds, especially on low-face strikes (where most of us miss).

Improved Max Impact Technology means more consistent carry distance and tighter dispersion, even when you don’t flush it.

Split High-Density Tungsten placement optimizes CG for higher launch and maximum stability throughout the set.

Bottom line: If the 2023 T350s sent it 5-10 yards farther than your old irons, expect another half-club from the 2025s.

Aggressive Grooves in Scoring Irons

New for 2025: more aggressive grooves in the mid and short irons for better spin control from any lie.

This matters when you’re hitting approach shots from the rough or less-than-perfect lies. The grooves bite better, giving you more predictable spin for scoring.

Nearly Identical to T250s for Blended Sets

If you’re thinking about mixing T350s with T250s (Titleist’s blended set strategy), the design language is intentionally similar.

Makes transitioning between the two models seamlessโ€”both visually at address and in terms of ball flight characteristics.

What Didn’t Change

Titleist kept what worked:

  • Same hollow-body construction philosophy
  • Still the “ultimate game improvement iron” designation
  • Price pointโ€”these aren’t cheap (never were)

Worth the Upgrade from 2023 T350s?

If you’re playing 2023 T350s and happy? Probably not necessary.

But that sound and feel upgrade is legit. If that matters to you (and you’ve got the cash), the 2025s are noticeably better in that department.

If you’re playing anything older than 2023? Absolutely worth testing these.

My Experience with the 2025 T350s

2025 Titleist T350 Irons 4 - PW

I’ve played one round and had one session on my mat and launch monitor.

I feel I know these clubs already and have my opinion set. (That’s what I want when testing clubs. Play them until I get that sense I know them and can form a strong opinion.)

I took them to the course the morning after I got them in. (I got them in the night before)

As per usual, it was an early tee time – 7:40 – which meant no warm up for me.

So, I expect it to take a few holes before my swing feels any kind of good.

I lived up to that expectation by and large

It was a cool morning – low 60s. On the second hole – a long par 5, I drove it in the fairway, but only about 250ish yards.

I pulled the 9-iron, by accident – thinking it was the 6 – and proceeded to flush it exactly on my line (155 yds, I believe), but about 30ish yards short of where I wanted to be.

That left me 175ish to a front right pin.

So, I pulled the 7-iron and aimed for the right side of the green – the green is fronted by water from the angle I was coming from.

Anyway, I started the ball about 10 yards right of my line and hit a 20ish yard draw right over the pin and the ball settled in the middle of the green.

The contact wasn’t great, but good enough thanks to that forgiving T350 7-iron.

I hit any number of unremarkable shots for the rest of the front nine ( I hadn’t played in about a month and had some rust to shake off. But, I was all around the green and was only a couple over par), except for the tee shot on the 9th hole.

There’s water on the right side of the fairway starting about 250ish yards and it goes all the way past the green.

So, I pulled the T350 4-iron (3-iron loft) figuring I’d hit it 220 – 240 yards.

There was a one to two club wind behind us.

My one thought was “don’t go right”, and I didn’t.

I aimed for the left center of the fairway and nailed said 4-iron with a slight pull and ended up just in the left rough 277 yards from where I started.

Now, I expected that shot to go a ways, but that’s slightly ridiculous. (I wedged up to the left side of the green and got up and down for par)

The next whole was a short dog-leg left par 4 and called for only an iron.

The tees were to far left to cut off the dog leg and it would require a rope hook to try to squeeze out more distance and be playable.

I figured the run out straight ahead until I hit trouble was 240ish yards.

I pulled that 4-iron again and gave it a go.

Nailed it with a medium-low baby draw. This time, the wind was out of the right.

I ended up 260 yards, going just slightly through the fairway into the light rough. (Wedge on the green and two putt)

As with the front 9, my iron play was spotty, but serviceable on the back 9.

I relied a LOT on the T350s to work their magic for me and keep me playable.

They did, time and again.

Bottom line. Superb game improvement irons that can be played by rank beginners up to pretty good low handicaps – if you don’t mind looking at large clubheads.

How do the T350s perform?

2025 Titleist T350 Iron Set
Category
Grade
Looks
5
Sound/Feel
4
Distance
5.5
Forgiveness
5
Flight/Playability
5
Value
4

Bag Appeal: (5) Gorgeous. Club heads are game improvement size but the cosmetics are the same as Titleist’s 2025 player line of clubs.

Sound/ Feel: (4.5) Gone is the clicky game improvement sound and feel and welcome is the new player-like muted and solid feel and sound at impact.

Distance: (5+) Long…very long.

Forgiveness: (5) Very. You’ve got plenty room to play with these. They’re easily among the most forgiving irons you can buy.

Flight / Playability: (5) Like the 2023s, high and straight is the default flight. I flighted them and shaped them pretty much as I pleased. (Something for when your game matures a bit)

Value: (4) ~$214/club โ€“ About as expensive as it gets.

Who are the T350s for?

2025 Titleist T350 Irons In Golf Bag

Low handicaps: (No) They’re not “for” you, but you can play them if you don’t care about being seen with oversize clubheads.

I scored well with them, but they wouldn’t be my first choice because of the size.
Mid handicaps: (Yep) Again, your only hesitation would be not wanting to be seen with oversize clubs.
High handicaps: (Yes) Run, don’t walk to test these.

Potential Alternatives

Callaway Apex Ai300 Irons – Superb in every way. Not quite as hot as the T350s, but go plenty far.

Get yours here.

2023 Titleist T350s – Great performers and about $14 less per club.

Get yours here.

Cobra DS Adapt – The sleeper game improvement irons of 2025 (and now 2026). Great performance and superb sound and feel. All at a steal of a price.

Get your’s here.

An Editor's Favorite
Still Great
Best Value
Primary Rating:
4.8
Primary Rating:
4.8
Primary Rating:
4.8
~$200/club
~$200/ club
~$114/club
Pros:
  • Superb Sound & Feel
  • Plenty Distance & Forgiveness
  • Easy Launch & High Trajectory
Pros:
  • Launch the ball High & Straight
  • Forgiving & Long
  • Beautiful Clubs
Pros:
  • Superb Feel & Sound
  • Easy launch - High Trajectory
  • Great through the turf
  • Healthy Distance & Forgiveness
Cons:
  • Nada
Cons:
  • Pricey
Cons:
  • Nada - they hit their mark
An Editor's Favorite
Primary Rating:
4.8
~$200/club
Pros:
  • Superb Sound & Feel
  • Plenty Distance & Forgiveness
  • Easy Launch & High Trajectory
Cons:
  • Nada
Still Great
Primary Rating:
4.8
~$200/ club
Pros:
  • Launch the ball High & Straight
  • Forgiving & Long
  • Beautiful Clubs
Cons:
  • Pricey
Best Value
Primary Rating:
4.8
~$114/club
Pros:
  • Superb Feel & Sound
  • Easy launch - High Trajectory
  • Great through the turf
  • Healthy Distance & Forgiveness
Cons:
  • Nada - they hit their mark

Final Verdict

The 2025 T350 irons are the poster boy for max game improvement irons.

  • Generous clubheads that look especially hittable.
  • Fat topline and sole show perimeter weighting is working for you, plus they’ll glide through the turf when you catch it a little fat.
  • Flat out long and plenty forgiving.
  • Easy launch.

Titleist doesn’t know how to make a bad iron. These irons perform. You just need to decide if you like the way they look and feel.

Only one way to know…

My #1 suggestion is to get your hands on them before you buy. Either at your local golf store or take advantage of Global Golfโ€™s Utry trial program. I use it and recommend it.  

Thanks for checking out our 2025 Titleist T350 irons review and let us know how they work for you.

Editor's Pick - Game Improvement
2025 Titleist T350 Irons
4.7
Pros:
  • Silly Long
  • All The Forgiveness
  • Gorgeous
  • Player-Level Sound & Feel
Cons:
  • Pricey
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