Mizuno
Mizuno T25 Wedge
The Mizuno T25 in Tour Grind is a forged wedge built for players who want to shape shots rather than just point and swing. It runs the full scoring range, from a 46 degree that fills the gap after your iron set to a 60 degree lob wedge, with extra options at 54 and 56 so you can dial in the bounce that matches your turf and your swing. This is a shotmaker's tool, not a game-improvement crutch.
Mizuno forges these, and you feel it the moment you make contact. Forged carbon steel gives you that soft, buttery response on half shots and pitches, the kind of feedback that tells you exactly where the ball came off the face. Progressive lofts mean the design shifts as you move through the set, so the pitching and gap wedges behave a little differently than the sand and lob wedges. That matters more than it sounds. Your 50 and your 58 ask different things from a wedge, and this set is built with that in mind.
The Tour Grind sole is the headline. It has enough relief in the heel and toe to let you open the face wide, drop the leading edge low, and slide under the ball on tight lies or firm sand. If you like to play flop shots, hit the ball high and soft, and work the face around the green, this grind rewards you. If you tend to swing shallow and sweep, it may take some getting used to.
Mizuno T25 Wedge: Key Specs
- Category
- Tour Grind
- Loft range
- 46 to 60 degrees
- Loft/grind options
- 10
- Model year
- 2025
- MSRP
- $149.99
Available Variants
| Loft | Bounce | Grind | Finish |
|---|---|---|---|
| 46° | 8° | C | Chrome |
| 48° | 8° | C | Chrome |
| 50° | 8° | C | Chrome |
| 52° | 9° | C | Chrome |
| 54° | 10° | C | Chrome |
| 54° | 14° | X | Chrome |
| 56° | 10° | C | Chrome |
| 56° | 14° | X | Chrome |
| 58° | 8° | C | Chrome |
| 60° | 8° | C | Chrome |
Loft and bounce are nominal values. Actual specifications may vary.
Technology
About the Mizuno T25
The forged construction is the core of what makes this wedge feel the way it does. Mizuno mills and forges these heads so the face is precise and the feel stays soft through impact, which is what better players chase when they are trying to control spin and trajectory on partial shots. You get honest feedback, and honest feedback is how you learn to trust a wedge. The Tour Grind sole carries a moderate to low bounce with meaningful heel and toe relief. That combination is aimed at firmer conditions and players with a steeper, more precise angle of attack. Open the face and the sole sits low so the leading edge stays close to the turf. The progressive loft setup ties it together, matching the head shape and grind character to each loft across the 46 to 60 range so the gap wedges feel like scoring irons and the high-lofted wedges feel like precision tools around the green.
Who Should Play the Mizuno T25?
- ✓Mid to low handicap players with a steeper swing who take clean divots and want a sole that works on firm turf.
- ✓Anyone who likes to open the face for flops, lobs, and delicate shots around the green.
- ✓Feel players who want soft forged feedback on partial wedge shots to control spin and distance.
- ✓Golfers filling out a full wedge setup who want matched options at 54 and 56 to fine-tune bounce.
- ✓Players who prefer versatility over maximum forgiveness and are willing to trade a little help for control.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the Tour Grind on the Mizuno T25 best for?
It suits players who open the face and play shots on firmer turf and tighter lies. The heel and toe relief lets the sole sit low when the face is open, so the leading edge stays close to the ground for flops and delicate pitches. It works best with a steeper, more precise angle of attack. If you sweep the ball or play mostly soft, fluffy lies, a wider sole grind may serve you better.
Why are there two 54 and two 56 degree options?
The duplicate lofts give you a choice of bounce or grind at the two most-used wedge lofts. Sand and approach wedges see the widest variety of shots, so having more than one setup at 54 and 56 lets you match the wedge to your turf conditions and how much you like to open the face. Pick the higher-bounce version for softer turf and steeper swings, and the lower-bounce version for firm conditions and shallower contact.
Are the Mizuno T25 wedges forged?
Yes. Mizuno forges these heads, which is why they feel soft and responsive at impact. That forged feel is most noticeable on half and three-quarter shots, where you want feedback about exactly how the ball came off the face. It is one of the main reasons better players gravitate toward Mizuno wedges.
What lofts does the T25 come in and how should I gap them?
The set runs from 46 to 60 degrees: 46, 48, 50, 52, 54, 56, 58, and 60, with extra bounce or grind choices at 54 and 56. Most players do well with four to five degree gaps, so a common setup is 50, 54, 58 or 48, 52, 56, 60 depending on where your pitching wedge loft lands. Match the top wedge to your iron set so you do not leave a big yardage gap after the pitching wedge.
Is the T25 Tour Grind a good choice for a mid handicapper?
It can be, but it asks something in return. This is a shotmaker's wedge, so it rewards a fairly consistent, slightly steeper strike and a player who wants to work the ball around the green. A mid handicapper with decent contact who wants to develop short game touch will enjoy it. If your strike is inconsistent or you want maximum forgiveness, a wider-soled wedge is the safer pick.
Ratings & Reviews
No ratings yet. Sign in to rate this club.
More Mizuno Wedges
Find the right loft for your bag
Use the gap finder to see which loft combination fits your current set.
Open Gap Finder →