Honma TW767 Hybrid Hybrid: Key Specs
- Category
- Players Distance
- Adjustable
- No
- Model year
- 2025
- MSRP
- $349.99
Hybrid Options & Stock Shafts
No variant data available.
Players Distance Hybrid
Honma built the TW767 hybrid for the golfer who wants a long iron replacement that still looks like it belongs in a player's bag. The head is compact. The topline is on the thinner side for a hybrid, and at address it sits closer to a driving iron than a chunky rescue club. That shape tells you who Honma had in mind: mid and lower handicappers who want to hit specific shots, not just point and hope.
This is a Players Distance hybrid, which means it splits the difference between two jobs. It carries the ball a long way and helps off tight lies and bad turf, but it doesn't bury the workability you'd expect from a club this clean. You can hold it against a left pin, take something off it, or flight it down into the wind. The 2025 model keeps Honma's reputation for tight build tolerances and a soft, solid feel at impact that a lot of bigger-brand hybrids never quite match.
What it isn't is a game-improvement bailout club. The smaller footprint asks for a reasonably consistent strike. Center it and you get penetrating, controllable flight. Miss it low on the face and you'll feel and see the result more than you would with a larger, more forgiving hybrid.
- You play to a mid or low handicap and want a long iron replacement that still looks compact at address.
- Your long irons leak right or come up short, and you want a club that launches easier without ballooning.
- You value a soft, solid feel and tight build quality enough to pay a premium for Honma's craftsmanship.
- You hit the ball reasonably consistently and don't need the extra forgiveness of an oversized hybrid head.
- You want to flight shots down, work them both ways, and control distance into firmer greens.
Frequently Asked Questions
- Is the Honma TW767 hybrid adjustable?
- No. The loft and lie are set at the factory with a fixed hosel. That keeps the head lighter and the center of gravity consistent, but it means you can't tweak the settings yourself, so getting fit for the right loft and shaft up front matters.
- Who should play the TW767 hybrid?
- Mid to low handicappers who want a long iron replacement with a clean, compact look. It launches easier than a long iron and helps off tight lies, but the smaller head rewards a fairly consistent strike rather than bailing out big mishits.
- How does the TW767 compare to a game-improvement hybrid?
- The TW767 has a smaller, shallower head with a thinner topline and less offset, so it flies lower and is more workable. A game-improvement hybrid gives you a larger face and more forgiveness on off-center hits, but it usually launches higher and is harder to flight down or shape on command.
- What loft should I get in the TW767 hybrid?
- Pick the loft based on the long iron you're replacing and the gap you're trying to fill at the top of your set. Because the hosel is fixed, a fitting session to dial in loft, shaft, and launch is the smart move before you buy.
- Does the TW767 hybrid feel as soft as Honma's reputation suggests?
- Yes. Center strikes feel soft and solid, which is one of the main reasons players reach for Honma over bigger-name hybrids. The trade-off is that a low-face miss gives you clearer feedback through the hands than a more forgiving club would.
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