TaylorMade Qi10 Rescue Hybrid
TaylorMade โ TaylorMade Qi10 Rescue Hybrid ยท By Troy ยท Feb 4, 2026









TaylorMade's hybrid dynasty continues with a club that balances distance and accuracy better than almost anything else in the category.
The Big Picture
TaylorMade has been making some of the best hybrids in golf for years. That is not hyperbole -- their rescue clubs consistently rank at or near the top of independent distance and accuracy testing, and the Qi10 Rescue does nothing to disrupt that trend. In fact, it finished second overall in head-to-head hybrid testing for 2024, thanks to a rare combination of being both one of the longest and one of the most accurate hybrids available.
The Qi10 Rescue sits in the middle of a three-model family. The Qi10 Max is the ultra-forgiving, shallow-faced option built for moderate swing speeds. The Qi10 Tour is a narrow-body, iron-replacement design for better players who want low launch and workability. The standard Qi10 Rescue reviewed here occupies the sweet spot: a mid-width profile that delivers distance, manageable spin, and enough forgiveness to make long irons obsolete for the vast majority of golfers.
Under the hood, TaylorMade has leaned on a few key technologies. The enlarged carbon crown -- bigger than previous generations -- pulls weight out of the top of the head and repositions it low and deep to lower the center of gravity for easier launch. The 450SS face uses a Split Weight Design with internal heel-toe weighting that adds stability and promotes faster ball speeds across the entire hitting area. Down below, the V Steel sole improves turf interaction from a variety of lies, while the Thru-Slot Speed Pocket preserves ball speed on low-face strikes. It is a refined package that builds on what worked in the Stealth 2 Rescue and takes it a step further.
One detail I appreciate is the range of loft options. TaylorMade offers the Qi10 Rescue in configurations all the way down to a 7-hybrid, which means golfers who prefer the ease of a hybrid over a long iron can replace clubs deep into the bag. If you go that route, I would strongly recommend a proper fitting session to nail down your yardage gaps -- you may not need the same number of hybrids as the irons they replace.
At Address
The Qi10 Rescue presents a clean, dark profile at address. The carbon crown is smooth and uncluttered, giving the clubhead a modern, stealthy appearance that avoids any visual noise. The mid-width body shape -- wider than the Tour but more compact than the Max -- strikes a nice balance between confidence-inspiring size and the look of a club you can actually work the ball with.
Top-down view of Qi10 hybrid at address position
TaylorMade carried over the laser-etched alignment stripes across the top of the face from the Stealth line. It is a subtle feature that some players will use religiously and others will barely notice, but even if you do not consciously use the face to align to your target, the stripes are completely unobtrusive. Worth noting: no competitor currently offers this feature on their hybrids.
The 11.4mm face depth sits in a comfortable middle ground. It is deep enough to handle tee shots without feeling cramped, but shallow enough that the club does not look like a miniature fairway wood. For golfers who sweep hybrids off the turf rather than hitting down aggressively and taking divots, this profile will feel natural.
Sound & Feel
Impact sound on the Qi10 Rescue is clean and strong without being boisterous. TaylorMade put real engineering effort into the acoustics this generation, and it shows. The sound sits in a register that is distinctly hybrid -- brighter and shorter than a fairway wood, but without the thin metallic ping that plagues some competitors. Center strikes produce a satisfying, confident crack that tells you the ball is going exactly where you intended.
There is enough acoustic distinction between pure strikes and mishits to give you useful feedback without making off-center contact feel punishing. The carbon crown contributes to the overall dampening, keeping the sound profile from veering into harshness at any point on the face.
Performance
Ball Speed & Distance
Distance is where the Qi10 Rescue makes its strongest case. In testing, this hybrid consistently ranked among the longest in its class, finishing second in distance among all 2024 hybrids tested in controlled conditions. TaylorMade has long had a reputation for producing the longest hybrids in golf, and the Qi10 does not relinquish that crown.
Twist Face clubface detail showing grooves and hosel
The Split Weight Design does real work here. By positioning heavyweight mass forward in the head while maintaining a mid-width body shape, TaylorMade keeps spin rates controlled without sacrificing stability. The result is a hybrid that launches high enough to carry trouble and land softly, but does not balloon in the wind or waste energy on excessive spin. The forward CG projection compared to the Qi10 Max means you get a flatter, more penetrating ball flight that rolls out efficiently on landing.
The 450SS face with its internal heel-toe weighting promotes consistent ball speed even on shots struck away from center. The Thru-Slot Speed Pocket adds another layer of speed preservation on low-face strikes -- the kind of mishit that typically costs you 10 or more yards with a long iron.
Launch & Spin
The Qi10 Rescue is a high-launch hybrid, but the moderate spin profile keeps the flight from getting away from you. This is a club that gets airborne easily thanks to the low CG created by the carbon crown, yet the forward weight positioning prevents the ball from climbing too steeply or spinning excessively.
The stock Fujikura Ventus TR Blue HB shaft is available in three weight classes -- 50g in A-flex, 60g in regular, and 70g in stiff -- giving fitters a solid range to match the shaft to your swing speed and transition. The mid-launch profile of the Ventus TR Blue pairs well with the head design, producing a strong, efficient flight that maximizes carry without ballooning.
For golfers replacing a 3 or 4-iron, expect to see launch angles several degrees higher than those irons would produce, with spin rates that are slightly elevated but still well within the range that promotes distance rather than fighting it. The net effect is a club that flies higher, lands softer, and carries further than the iron it replaces -- which is the entire point of a hybrid.
Dispersion & Shot Shape
Accuracy was the other headline result from testing, where the Qi10 Rescue again finished near the top of its class. The combination of the mid-width body creating high MOI and the internal heel-toe weighting adding stability produces a club that keeps shots in play with impressive consistency.
Sole view on grass showing Qi10 Rescue branding and Speed Pocket
That said, forgiveness in the strictest sense -- meaning the consistency of ball speed, spin, and carry distance on off-center strikes -- rated slightly below average. This is the trade-off with the standard Qi10: it prioritizes distance and accuracy over raw mishit protection. If you need the most forgiving hybrid possible regardless of other performance attributes, the Qi10 Max is the better option. But for golfers with reasonably consistent contact, the standard Qi10 delivers a tighter overall shot pattern than most of the competition.
The Twist Face technology, carried down from TaylorMade's driver lineup, adds corrective spin on off-center hits. High-toe and low-heel misses -- two of the most common mishit patterns -- get a subtle spin adjustment that nudges the ball back toward the target line. It is not a dramatic correction, but it turns a miss that might have found the rough into one that stays on the edge of the fairway.
Verdict
The TaylorMade Qi10 Rescue Hybrid is one of the best all-around hybrids available. It delivers near-best-in-class distance and accuracy in a mid-width package that suits the widest range of golfers. The carbon crown lowers the CG for easy launch, the Split Weight Design promotes fast ball speeds across the face, and the V Steel sole handles a variety of turf conditions without fuss.
Strengths: exceptional distance, top-tier accuracy, versatile mid-width body that works off the tee, fairway, and rough, wide range of loft options for deep iron replacement, clean aesthetics and satisfying sound.
Weaknesses: forgiveness on mishits, while adequate, is not best-in-class -- golfers with inconsistent contact may benefit from the Qi10 Max instead. The standard model lacks the adjustable hosel found on the Qi10 Tour, so what you see at setup is what you get in terms of loft and face angle.
This is the hybrid I would recommend to most golfers. Unless you have the speed and ball-striking to take advantage of the Tour, or you specifically need the maximum forgiveness of the Max, the standard Qi10 Rescue is the right call. It does everything well, with distance and accuracy that put it firmly among the best hybrids of 2024.



