Titleist GT2 Hybrid Hybrid: Key Specs
- Category
- Players Distance
- Adjustable
- No
- Loft options
- 17 to 24 degrees
- Model year
- 2025
- MSRP
- $329.99
Hybrid Options & Stock Shafts
| Hybrid # | Loft | Shaft | Flex | Weight | Kick Point | Swing Weight |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2H | 17.0° | - | - | - | - | - |
| 3H | 19.0° | - | - | - | - | - |
| 4H | 21.0° | - | - | - | - | - |
| 5H | 24.0° | - | - | - | - | - |
Players Distance Hybrid
The GT2 hybrid is Titleist's answer for golfers who want a long iron replacement that actually gets the ball in the air. It sits in the middle of the GT hybrid family, more forgiving than the GT3 and easier to launch than anything aimed at low handicappers. If you've ever thinned a 3-iron across the green or come up 15 yards short with a long iron that just wouldn't climb, this is the club built to fix that.
Titleist redesigned the face and body for the GT generation, and the GT2 leans into stability. The head is a touch larger than a tour-style hybrid, which makes it sit confidently behind the ball and helps on off-center hits. You get real distance, but the bigger story is consistency. Strikes off the toe or low on the face hold their speed better than they used to.
This is a club for the player who wants results without fuss. It launches high, lands soft enough to stop on a green, and works equally well off the tee on tight par 4s or out of a decent lie in the rough. It won't shape shots like a blade-style hybrid, and it isn't trying to.
- Mid and higher handicappers who struggle to launch long irons or older hybrids high enough to hold a green
- Players replacing 3, 4, or 5 irons who want forgiveness without giving up distance
- Golfers with moderate swing speeds who need help getting the ball up quickly off the deck
- Anyone who wants a reliable go-to club off the tee on tight or shorter par 4s
Frequently Asked Questions
- What's the difference between the GT2 and GT3 hybrid?
- The GT2 is the more forgiving of the two. It has a slightly larger head, launches higher, and is more stable on off-center hits. The GT3 is geared toward better players who want a more compact shape and a bit more workability. If you value forgiveness and easy launch over shot-shaping, the GT2 is the one.
- What loft GT2 hybrid should I get to replace my long irons?
- Match the loft to the iron you're swapping out. A common setup is an 18 degree GT2 to replace a 2 or 3 iron, or a 21 degree to cover the 4 iron gap. The best move is to check your current long iron carry distances and pick the loft that fills the yardage hole, ideally with a fitting.
- Is the GT2 hybrid good for high handicappers?
- Yes. High launch, deep weighting, and a forgiving face make it one of the easier hybrids to hit well. It gets the ball airborne without a perfect strike, which is exactly what most higher handicappers need from a long iron replacement.
- Can I hit the GT2 hybrid off the tee?
- It's one of its best uses. On tight par 4s or longer par 3s where a driver or fairway wood is too much, the GT2 gives you a controllable, high-launching tee shot that's easy to keep in play.
- Does the GT2 hybrid work well out of the rough?
- It does. The sole is shaped to slide through turf instead of digging, so it handles moderate rough and tight lies better than a long iron. From deep rough nothing is automatic, but for typical lies it cuts through cleanly.
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