Titleist GT2 Fairway Fairway Wood: Key Specs
- Category
- Players Distance
- Adjustable
- Yes
- Loft options
- 13.5 to 21 degrees
- Model year
- 2025
- MSRP
- $349
Wood Options & Stock Shafts
| Wood # | Loft | Shaft | Flex | Weight | Kick Point | Torque |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 3W | 13.5° | Fujikura Ventus Blue 6 | Stiff | 65g | Mid | 4.4° |
| 5W | 15.0° | Fujikura Ventus Blue 6 | Stiff | 65g | Mid | 4.4° |
| 7W | 16.5° | Fujikura Ventus Blue 6 | Stiff | 65g | Mid | 4.4° |
| 9W | 18.0° | Fujikura Ventus Blue 6 | Stiff | 65g | Mid | 4.4° |
| 11W | 21.0° | Fujikura Ventus Blue 6 | Stiff | 65g | Mid | 4.4° |
Players Distance Fairway Wood
The Titleist GT2 Fairway is the volume pick in the 2025 GT lineup, positioned squarely between the tour-oriented GT3 and the max-forgiveness GT4. It replaced the TSR2 when Titleist relaunched under the GT name, and the transition came with real changes rather than a fresh coat of paint. Multi-material construction, a revised face profile, and the SureFit adjustable hosel make this a fundamentally updated club, not just a renamed one.
Most golfers shopping for a 3-wood or 5-wood end up here. The GT2 is designed to perform from the fairway, off tighter lies in the rough, and off the tee without asking you to choose between those situations. That versatility is the whole point. It won't launch as low or spin as little as the GT3, and it doesn't need to.
The SureFit hosel gives you 16 loft and lie combinations. That range matters more in a fairway wood than in a driver, because small trajectory adjustments directly affect how the ball behaves on the second shot. A half-degree change can move the ball window enough to work with your swing rather than against it.
- Mid-handicap players who need a single fairway wood that handles tee shots, tight fairway lies, and moderate rough without demanding perfect contact.
- Golfers who've hit tour fairways and found them unforgiving or hard to launch, but still want something that looks serious at address rather than a giant game improvement head.
- Anyone who wants to fine-tune trajectory and spin on their 3-wood or 5-wood using the adjustable hosel instead of swapping shafts or buying a different loft.
Frequently Asked Questions
- What's the difference between the Titleist GT2 and GT3 fairway wood?
- The GT3 is built for better players who want lower spin, a more compact head, and the ability to shape shots. The GT2 has a slightly larger head, a higher CG position relative to the GT3, and more forgiveness on off-center hits. If you're a single-digit handicap who prioritizes workability and trajectory control, the GT3 is worth looking at. Most other golfers will get better results from the GT2.
- Is the GT2 fairway wood easy to hit off the deck?
- Yes, and that's a deliberate design choice. The carbon composite crown lowers the center of gravity, which helps the club get under the ball from firm fairway lies and moderate rough. It's not a rescue club, but it's more forgiving from the turf than a compact tour fairway wood. Tight lies on dry fairways are where the low CG makes the most noticeable difference.
- How does the SureFit hosel work on the GT2 fairway?
- The SureFit hosel uses a sleeve-and-collar system that offers 16 loft and lie combinations. You can increase or decrease loft and also shift the face angle slightly to address a fade or draw tendency. Titleist includes a torque wrench with the club. Changes take less than a minute and the adjustment range is wide enough to cover meaningful trajectory differences rather than just cosmetic ones.
- What lofts does the Titleist GT2 fairway come in?
- The GT2 fairway is available in a 15-degree 3-wood and an 18-degree 5-wood at standard loft. The SureFit hosel adds roughly plus or minus one degree on top of those base lofts, so the effective range on a 3-wood runs from around 14 to 16 degrees depending on your setting.
- How does the GT2 compare to the TSR2 fairway it replaced?
- The GT2 is generally more forgiving on off-center hits than the TSR2 due to the revised face design and updated weight distribution. Ball speed on center contact is comparable, but the GT2 holds speed better across the face. The adjustable hosel was also on the TSR2, so that part of the experience is similar. Golfers who found the TSR2 slightly unforgiving on thin or heel contact tend to see an improvement with the GT2.
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