Titleist GT3 Fairway Fairway Wood: Key Specs
- Category
- Tour
- Adjustable
- Yes
- Loft options
- 13.5 to 18 degrees
- Model year
- 2025
- MSRP
- $349
Wood Options & Stock Shafts
| Wood # | Loft | Shaft | Flex | Weight | Kick Point | Torque |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 3W | 13.5° | Mitsubishi Diamana D 60 | Stiff | 60g | Mid | 4.0° |
| 5W | 15.0° | Mitsubishi Diamana D 60 | Stiff | 60g | Mid | 4.0° |
| 7W | 18.0° | Mitsubishi Diamana D 60 | Stiff | 60g | Mid | 4.0° |
Tour Fairway Wood
The GT3 Fairway is Titleist's answer for the player who already shapes shots and just wants the fairway wood to keep up. It sits in the GT lineup as the smaller, lower-spinning, more workable option, the one you reach for when you'd rather flight it down and turn it both ways than launch it sky-high and hope. Compared to the GT2, the head is more compact and pear-shaped at address, which is exactly what a better player wants to see when there's a tight tee shot or a long approach off a hanging lie.
What sets the GT3 apart is the adjustable weight track on the sole. You can slide the CG to dial in your shot shape and trajectory, then fine-tune loft and lie through the SureFit hosel. Most fairway woods give you a hosel and call it a day. This one lets you actually move mass, so a player who fights a left miss or wants a touch more stability can set it up to match the rest of the bag.
This is a tour-category club, and it behaves like one. Spin runs lower, the face feels hot and fast off a steel high-strength insert, and the lightweight thermoform crown frees up weight to keep the center of gravity where low-spin players want it. It rewards a good strike more than it bails you out of a bad one, and that's the trade most low-handicap golfers are happy to make.
- Low to mid handicappers who strike fairway woods consistently and want lower spin off the deck and the tee
- Players who like to shape shots both ways and want a head that responds to a working swing
- Anyone who actually uses adjustability, since the sole weight track and SureFit hosel reward tinkering with setup
- Golfers chasing a flatter, more penetrating ball flight rather than maximum height and carry
Frequently Asked Questions
- What's the difference between the Titleist GT3 and GT2 fairway?
- The GT2 is the larger, more forgiving, higher-launching head built for easy carry and stability. The GT3 is more compact, lower spinning, and more workable, and it adds the moveable sole weight that the GT2 doesn't have. If you want help getting the ball up and a bigger margin on mishits, go GT2. If you strike it well and want to flight it down and control shape, the GT3 is the one.
- How does the adjustable weight on the GT3 fairway work?
- There's a weight that moves along a track on the sole. Shifting it changes where the center of gravity sits across the head, which biases the club toward a draw or a fade and lets you tune trajectory. It works alongside the SureFit hosel, which independently adjusts loft and lie, so you can set both the shot shape and the launch numbers.
- Is the GT3 fairway too much club for a mid handicapper?
- Not necessarily. A mid handicapper who makes solid contact and wants lower spin and shot control can play it well. The catch is forgiveness. The GT3 is less stable on off-center hits than the GT2, so if your strike wanders or you need help launching it, you'll likely score better with the GT2.
- What lofts does the Titleist GT3 fairway come in?
- It's offered across the usual fairway range from a strong 3-wood loft down through the 5 and 7 wood positions, and the SureFit hosel lets you adjust each head up or down from its stated loft. That means a single head covers a band of lofts, so you can fine-tune the exact number to fill a gap in your bag.
- Does the GT3 fairway spin less than the previous TSR3?
- It's built in the same lower-spin, tour-oriented spirit as the TSR3 it replaces, with the lightweight crown and low CG aimed at a flat, penetrating flight. The headline change is the moveable sole weight, which the TSR3 fairway didn't have, giving you more control over shot shape than the previous generation offered.
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