Titleist T350 Irons
Titleist โ Titleist T350 Irons ยท By Troy ยท Dec 18, 2025












The biggest iron in Titleist's T-Series lineup proves that bigger can be better โ even for skeptics.
The Big Picture
The Titleist T350 is a game-improvement iron that sits at the top of the T-Series lineup in terms of size and forgiveness. It's a hollow-body design inspired by the tour-proven T200, scaled up for golfers who need more help than the rest of the T-Series offers. The head is packed with tungsten in the sole for higher ball flight, and Titleist's MAX Impact technology โ a power spot directly behind the sweet spot โ preserves ball speed across a wide area of the face.
Titleist T-Series iron family lineup with AMT shafts
A new, stronger forged face and improved tungsten brazing process allow engineers to position the center of gravity with more precision, giving you higher launch without sacrificing control in the scoring clubs. The T350 is aimed at mid-to-high handicappers, but its secret weapon is the way it convinced me โ someone who genuinely does not like big irons โ that the performance gains are worth the visual trade-offs.
At Address
Let's be upfront: the T350 is a big iron. The topline is thick, the blade length is long, and the sole is wide. These are not characteristics I typically gravitate toward. But as far as big irons go, Titleist has done a commendable job managing the proportions. The offset isn't excessive and it's reasonably well hidden. The topline has some camber to it, making it appear thinner than it measures. And while you can't disguise the blade length, it's hardly the most egregious in the category.
The T350s look and feel powerful behind the ball. The strong lofts contribute to that impression โ you stand over the ball expecting something to happen, and the confidence that inspires shouldn't be underestimated. I think Titleist has done a particularly good job disguising the offset so the iron retains a player's feel even at this size. It's a very different animal from the T100 or T150, but the family resemblance is still there.
Sound & Feel
Feel is a big part of the Titleist story for the T-Series, and the T350 represents a noticeable step up from the prior-generation T300. I had a chance to hit them side by side during fitting, and if you're a T300 player, you'll notice the improvement immediately. The new forged face produces the sound and feel of a smaller players' model, which is remarkable given the head size.
T350 iron face showing grooves and topline from front
That said, I'm not convinced you can ever truly replicate forged-iron feel with a hollow-body design. The T350 feels good for what it is โ and likely better than most in its class. Center strikes produce a solid, satisfying sensation, and you know when you've flushed one. Mishits feel better than they did with prior-generation stuff, though they still don't have the butter-soft quality of a T100 or T150. The sound doesn't quite match a TaylorMade P790 or PXG 0311 P, but it's competitive.
Performance
Ball Speed & Distance
This is where the T350 earns its place in the bag. My first shot was a rocket โ not the low, skipping trajectory I feared, but a high, towering flight that spun enough and flew for miles. Ball speeds with the 7-iron reached 130 mph, which is serious output for this category. Carry distances averaged around 200 yards with the 7-iron during monitor testing, which is frankly absurd for someone who doesn't typically play game-improvement irons.
The hollow construction gives engineers room to position weight optimally, and the MAX Impact technology preserves ball speed across the face. Even slight mishits retained impressive distance, which is exactly what the target player needs. The technology in this head is borrowed directly from the T200 used on tour, just scaled up to provide more help.
Launch & Spin
Despite the strongest lofts in the T-Series lineup, the T350 produced the highest ball flights of any model I tested with the same shaft. Peak heights exceeded 100 feet easily, and the ball came down steep โ exactly what you need to hold greens. Spin rates sat around 5,000 rpm with the 7-iron, which is on the lower side and was a concern for me initially, but the high launch compensated by creating steep descent angles.
The high-launch profile is a genuine advantage for players with moderate or slower swing speeds. You're getting flight and stopping power that you simply can't generate with a low-lofted players' iron, regardless of your swing mechanics. That said, the strong lofts may not suit average-speed players without some adjustment โ I'd recommend exploring the option of going a degree or two weak during fitting.
Dispersion & Shot Shape
Forgiveness is outstanding. The longer blade length keeps the face from closing down on quick-handed swings, which practically eliminated my big left miss. Shots that would normally find trouble stayed in play, and the overall dispersion pattern was tighter than I expected from an iron this size. The turf interaction is clean too โ the wide sole glides through rather than digging.
T350 Forged back cavity with Titleist branding close-up
The T350 has a slight draw bias that helps golfers who tend to leave the face open. It's not aggressive enough to worry better players, but it's a gentle nudge in the right direction for the target handicap range.
MSRP: $1,399 (steel shafts)
Verdict
The Titleist T350 surprised me. I went into the fitting convinced these would be a two-round courtesy play before going back to my gamers. Instead, they stayed in the bag. The combination of higher flight, more forgiveness, and genuinely impressive distance is difficult to argue with, even for someone who doesn't like big irons.
The weaknesses are inherent to the category. The sound and feel, while improved from the T300, don't match the pure sensation of Titleist's smaller models. The strong lofts require careful fitting to ensure adequate spin and stopping power. And the visual profile will always be a compromise for golfers who prefer compact heads.
But the T-Series lineup's greatest strength is how well these models blend into combo sets. A T350 5 and 4 iron paired with T200 mid-irons and T150 short irons gives you coverage across the entire bag without any jarring transitions. For the golfer who needs more help with the long irons but wants precision in the scoring clubs, that flexibility is invaluable.



