Callaway Apex Ti Super Hybrid
Callaway โ Callaway Apex Ti Super Hybrid ยท By Andy ยท Feb 20, 2026
















A titanium-faced hybrid that blurs the line between fairway wood and iron with remarkable forgiveness.
The Big Picture
The Callaway Apex Ti Super Hybrid is the latest evolution of Callaway's popular Super Hybrid line, and it represents a meaningful step forward from its predecessor. The headline here is the brazed titanium face mated to a stainless steel body, a construction borrowed directly from Callaway's metalwood lineup. This is paired with the AI-designed Flash Face, Jailbreak Velocity Blades for structural stiffening, and a triaxial carbon crown that frees up weight for redistribution lower in the head. Up to 90 grams of tungsten weighting sits toward the perimeter for a combination of low CG and high MOI.
The result is a hybrid aimed squarely at mid-to-high handicap golfers who want fairway-wood-level forgiveness in a package that sits somewhere between a traditional hybrid and a small fairway wood. It is available in 2H through 5H (16 to 24 degrees), with the stock Mitsubishi MMT graphite shaft and Golf Pride Tour Velvet 360 grip.
At Address
The Apex Ti Super Hybrid head is noticeably larger than most traditional hybrids, though not quite as big as a full fairway wood. The matte black carbon crown looks clean and modern, with just a small Callaway chevron as a visual reference. It sits square to the ball and frames it confidently without feeling oversized.
Top-down address view showing clean crown with Callaway chevron
That said, the face at address appears slightly closed, which hints at the club's natural draw tendency. Players who prefer a more compact, tour-style hybrid shape may find the profile a bit too generous, but for the target audience, the generous footprint is exactly the point. It inspires confidence that you are going to get the ball airborne, which is half the battle for many golfers in this category.
Sound & Feel
Impact produces a muted, solid "whack" that sits closer to a game-improvement iron than a hollow fairway wood. There is nothing tinny or pingy here, which I appreciated. You can feel when you have caught the center of the face versus a mishit, but the difference in result is surprisingly small. The Jailbreak Velocity Blades stiffen the body so the face can do the flexing, and that translates into a sensation of effortless power on well-struck shots.
The one area worth noting is shaft feel. The stock Mitsubishi MMT has a Steelfiber-style profile that not everyone will love. It does the job, but if you are particular about shaft feedback, a fitting with an aftermarket option like a Tensei Blue could make a noticeable difference in how connected you feel to the clubhead.
Performance
Ball Speed & Distance
This is where the Apex Ti Super Hybrid earns its keep. The titanium face is genuinely hot. With a 100 mph club speed, I was seeing ball speeds around 127 mph and carry distances of 175 yards out of the 6-hybrid (27 degrees). Off the tee, the numbers climbed even higher, with total distances pushing past 210 yards from the lower-lofted options. That puts it comfortably in 5-wood territory for many players.
Close-up of clubface showing grooves and adjustable hosel
What stood out was the consistency. Ball speed held up remarkably well across the face, and low strikes in particular maintained more launch and speed than I typically see from hybrids. This is the Jailbreak technology doing its job, and it is one of those performance claims that actually delivered in testing.
Launch & Spin
The Apex Ti Super Hybrid launches high with low-to-mid spin, a combination that produces a powerful, penetrating ball flight with enough height to land softly. I was seeing spin rates around 1,500 rpm with peak heights in the 82-foot range on solid strikes. That is more than enough stopping power for approach shots into par 5s or long par 3s.
The stock shaft promotes a high launch with mid spin, which suits the target demographic well. Players with slower swing speeds should have no trouble getting this club airborne, and the high launch helps compensate for the low spin to keep the ball carrying rather than ballooning or falling out of the sky.
Dispersion & Shot Shape
Forgiveness is the headliner. This may be the most forgiving hybrid I have ever put in play. Toe strikes, thin strikes, even the occasional fat contact all produced playable results. The combination of the oversized head, low CG, and high MOI from the perimeter tungsten weighting means your misses stay in the fairway rather than in the trees.
Close-up sole showing Ti Fusion weight port and branding details
The natural shot shape is a draw. I could hit beautiful draws all day, but moving the ball left to right required conscious effort and some face manipulation at address. If you fight a hook, this club in its default setting may exacerbate that tendency. Opening the clubface helps, but the draw bias is baked into the design. For slicers and faders, though, this is a gift.
Weight adjustability options provide some ability to tune the bias, but do not expect it to transform a draw-biased club into a fade machine.
MSRP: $399.99
Verdict
The Callaway Apex Ti Super Hybrid delivers on its promise of driver-like technology in a hybrid package. The titanium face produces genuinely impressive ball speeds and distance, the forgiveness is outstanding, and the high launch makes it accessible to a wide range of swing speeds and skill levels. It is a legitimate long-iron or fairway-wood replacement that simplifies the top of the bag.
The draw bias will not suit every player, and the larger head shape may turn off those who prefer a tour aesthetic. The stock shaft is functional but uninspiring. These are minor knocks on a club that does its primary job, getting the ball high, far, and straight, better than nearly anything else in the category.
If you are a mid-to-high handicapper looking for a confidence-inspiring club to hit from the fairway, rough, or tee on tight holes, the Apex Ti Super Hybrid belongs on your shortlist.



