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Titleist

Titleist T350 Irons

Game Improvement2025$1099🥈 MyGolfSpy🥈 Golf Digest

The T350 is Titleist's answer for players who want distance and forgiveness without buying into a chunky, cavity-backed shovel. It sits at the game-improvement end of the T-Series, below the T150 and T200 blades, and it's built around a hollow body with a forged face. That construction lets Titleist stretch the lofts and speed up the face while keeping the head looking reasonable at address.

The 7-iron comes in at 29 degrees, which is strong, and the set runs down to a 43-degree pitching wedge. Those numbers tell you the intent. This is a set that wants to add ball speed and carry, especially in the long irons where most mid and high handicappers lose the most distance. Tungsten in the toe and sole pushes the center of gravity low and stable, so mishits hold their line better than you'd expect from a club this fast.

Where the T350 earns its keep is the long-iron end. A 5-iron at 22 degrees launches high and lands soft enough to actually hold a green, which is the whole point of a distance iron that most players can't say. It won't spin like a blade and it won't check on a firm green the way a T150 does, but that's not who it's for.

Titleist T350 Irons: Key Specs

Category
Game Improvement
Set makeup
5-iron to PW
7-iron loft
29 degrees
Loft range
22 to 43 degrees
Model year
2025
MSRP
$1099

Loft Specifications

5i6i7i8i9iPW
22.0°25.0°29.0°33.0°38.0°43.0°

Stock steel shaft. Lofts are approximate and subject to manufacturing tolerances.

Technology

ForgedHollow BodyFace InsertTungsten WeightingHigh Launch

Industry Recognition

MyGolfSpy

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Golf Digest

Hot List Silver — solid game improvement option

About the Titleist T350

The hollow-body shell with a forged L-face is the engine here. The face flexes at impact for more ball speed, and Titleist packs high-density tungsten into the head to keep the center of gravity low without making the top line look bloated. A polymer core fills the cavity to keep the sound and feel from going hollow and tinny, which is a common problem with this style of iron. The lofts get stronger as you go up through the set, and the tungsten load shifts to match, so the long irons launch high while the short irons stay controllable. Titleist also progressively blends the offset and blade length through the set, giving you more help in the 5 and 6 iron and a cleaner, more compact look by the time you reach the 9 and PW.

Loft Analysis

The Titleist T350's 7-iron is lofted at 29° - moderately strong - slightly stronger than traditional lofts. For a golfer with an 85-95 mph swing speed, this projects to a 7-iron carry of approximately 154-164 yards. The 5-iron (22°) to 7-iron gap of 7° is well-gapped, which may create overlapping distance windows with similarly lofted fairway woods or hybrids. The pitching wedge at 43° provides a conventional loft window that pairs cleanly with a 50-52° gap wedge.

Who Should Play the Titleist T350?

  • Mid to high handicappers who lose the most distance and height in their long irons and want that gap closed
  • Players moving out of a bulkier super-game-improvement iron who want more speed but a cleaner shape at address
  • Golfers with moderate swing speed who need help getting a 5 or 6 iron airborne and landing soft
  • Anyone building a combo set who wants T350 in the long irons and a bladed T-Series model in the scoring clubs

Other Years

2023

Frequently Asked Questions

Is the Titleist T350 a game improvement iron?

Yes. In the T-Series lineup the T350 is the most forgiving and the longest, sitting below the T200, T150, and T100. It uses a hollow body, a forged face, and tungsten weighting to add speed and forgiveness, and the 7-iron loft of 29 degrees puts it firmly in game-improvement territory.

How strong are the T350 lofts?

Strong. The 5-iron is 22 degrees, the 7-iron is 29, and the pitching wedge is 43. Those are jacked lofts built for distance, so plan your gapping into your wedges accordingly. Many players pair the T350 with a matching gap wedge to avoid a hole between the PW and their sand wedge.

How does the T350 compare to the T200?

The T200 is more compact, a touch stronger in feel, and aimed at better ball strikers who still want some help. The T350 is larger, more forgiving, and launches higher, especially in the long irons. If you consistently flush it, look at the T200. If you want max help and carry, the T350 is the better fit, and the two blend well in a combo set.

Does the T350 feel hollow or clicky?

No. The cavity is filled with a polymer core that dampens the impact sound and firms up the feel, so it doesn't have the hollow, tinny click that plagues a lot of fast distance irons. It feels solid for a club built this hot, though it won't match the soft, buttery feedback of a forged blade like the T150.

Who should not buy the T350?

Low handicappers and better players who want workability and spin control will find it launches too high and spins too little. If you shape shots and need the ball to check on firm greens, look at the T150 or T100. The T350 trades that precision for speed, forgiveness, and height.

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