Maxfli Tour X LS: The Lower-Spin Tour X Built For Ben Griffin Now Is Available To Everyone
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Maxfli Tour X LS: The Lower-Spin Tour X Built For Ben Griffin Now Is Available To Everyone

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Maxfli Tour X LS: The Lower-Spin Tour X Built For Ben Griffin Now Is Available To Everyone

Maxfli’s fourth Tour-model ball is a lower-spinning version of the Tour X, engineered to pull spin out of the long game without going soft

I’m honestly not sure whether it says more about where Maxfli is as a performance brand or where Ben Griffin is as a PGA Tour player. Either way, the upshot is the same. The company built a golf ball more or less around its marquee player and now that ball, the Maxfli Tour X LS, is available to the rest of us. That’s the tidy version, anyway. The reality, as it tends to be with golf balls, is a bit more nuanced.

Maxfli Tour X LS Golf ball

The Griffin of it all

Let’s deal with Griffin first because Maxfli very much wants you thinking about him.

Since signing with the brand in 2024, Griffin has climbed from roughly 92nd in the world to a career-best top 10. The breakout was 2025: three PGA Tour wins (the Zurich Classic team event alongside Andrew Novak, the Charles Schwab Challenge for his first solo title and the World Wide Technology Championship in the fall), a Ryder Cup captain’s pick and a Player of the Year nod. For context, those were Maxfli’s first Tour wins since 2003. The partnership has paid off for both sides.

This year has been streakier. Two thirds (Colonial and Doral) and a T14 at the PGA Championship say the talent is still very much there. A stack of missed cuts, including the Players and a T33 finish at the Masters, says a golf ball isn’t a magic bullet. Both things are true at once. The ball didn’t make Griffin a top-10 player and it isn’t why he’s missed cuts. It’s equipment. Good equipment, but still just a piece of a much larger puzzle.

Maxfli Tour X LS golf ball - core view

What’s actually different

On paper, the Tour X LS is a close cousin of the standard Tour X: four-layer dual-mantle construction with compression sitting right around 100. You’ll find the same 336-dimple pattern Maxfli runs on both the Tour X and the Tour S. In market terms, think of it as living in the same neighborhood as the Left Dashes and Triple Diamonds of the world, the tour balls built with distance in mind.

The difference that matters is right there in the name. LS is lower spin and the place you’re meant to notice it is the long game: driver, fairway woods, hybrids, longer irons. The stuff where extra spin quietly costs you yards and turns a small miss into a bigger one.

To achieve the lower spin profile, Maxfli increased the thickness of the inner mantle and paired it with a smaller, lower-compression core. To be clear, the softer core doesn’t mean a softer ball (at least not in this case). The Tour X LS is every bit as firm as the Tour X. It just arrives there differently, trading some core firmness for a firmer inner mantle.

The other quirk is flight. Maxfli says the LS launches a touch higher than the Tour X which is mildly counterintuitive given that when two balls share a dimple pattern, the higher-spinning one typically flies higher. With that, I wouldn’t bank on the gap being dramatic.

Maxfli Tour X LS cutaway

What about greenside spin?

Maxfli pegs greenside spin on par with the Tour X and that tracks. Spin on the short shots is driven mostly by the cover and the layer immediately beneath it, both of which carry over from the Tour X. So this is the part of the bag where the two balls should feel like twins. Which is to say, pretty good.

“Low spin” is relative

Now for a bit of fine print, I suppose. All of this low-spin talk is relative. We can reasonably assume the Tour X LS spins less than the Tour X on most shots. What we don’t know, and what matters to golf ball shoppers, is how much.

The LS category is wide. Some of these balls (Left Dash being the obvious example) spin dramatically less than their mainstream siblings and qualify as genuinely low spin against the entire market. Others are really mid-spin offerings that happen to spin a touch less than the rest of a given lineup, with the low-spin label doing some heavier lifting. Those are very different balls for very different players and the name on the side stamp won’t tell you which one you’re holding.

We’ll sort out where the Maxfli Tour X LS lands during next month’s ball test.

Maxfli Tour X LS closeup

Still the value play

With the Tour X LS, the Maxfli Tour lineup is now four deep: Tour, Tour S, Tour X, and the new X LS. And this is where I’ll keep banging the same drum. When you weigh what actually makes a ball lineup good (multiple models that genuinely serve different player types, quality, consistency and real on-course performance), Maxfli remains the best value in the premium/tour space. Three Tour wins on a $39.99 ball doesn’t exactly weaken the case.

That’s my take. As always, you be you. Tell us in the comments where you think the LS slots in and whether it’s already in your bag.

Maxfli Tour X LS golf ball - Maxfli Logo closeup

Pricing and availability

The Maxfli Tour X LS is available now at $39.99 per dozen although Maxfli balls have a habit of selling for less, especially in bulk. The current promo offers two dozen for $70 or four dozen for $119.96.

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Tony Covey

Tony Covey

Tony Covey

Tony is the Editor of MyGolfSpy where his job is to bring fresh and innovative content to the site. In addition to his editorial responsibilities, he was instrumental in developing MyGolfSpy's data-driven testing methodologies and continues to sift through our data to find the insights that can help improve your game. Tony believes that golfers deserve to know what's real and what's not, and that means MyGolfSpy's equipment coverage must extend beyond the so-called facts as dictated by the same companies that created them. Most of all Tony believes in performance over hype and #PowerToThePlayer.

Tony Covey

Tony Covey

Tony Covey

Tony Covey

Tony Covey





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      David Lewis

      3 minutes ago

      Since signing with Maxfli 🤣

      Reply

      Shawn

      2 days ago

      How long until a yellow version is released?

      Reply

      Mike Taxter

      2 days ago

      I’ve been using several different balls the last 60 days. Two different brands I received from MGS in a forum test, ProV1, Clear.
      I’ve been gaming Maxfli Tour for the last 4 years thanks to MGS. I put my wife into the Tour S.
      Today I played a four ball match with my tried and true Maxfli Tours. They performed well and I don’t know why I would play any other….I do have 4 dozen Clear brand balls. The only reason I have these is that I know the guy that originally brought them to market and the “greens” are built like ProV1X with V1 compression. It is a good ball but the value proposition was terribly flawed and the inventory was sold to Sub 70 mfor a song.

      Reply

      TD

      2 days ago

      For Maxfli, that has such a small percentage of the golf ball market, why create and now have to support 4 “tour” level balls? It just adds cost. If the “X” and “LS” are that similar, they should’ve have just applied the changes to the “X”, slightly modified the side stamp (to distinguish it from the previous “X”), and said they improved the “X”.

      Reply

      graham patterson

      2 days ago

      I wish they’d start selling them outside of north America. I’m Scottish and used to play maxfli back in day. Now however it’s impossible unless you get on a flight!

      Reply

      Phil

      2 days ago

      I’ve been playing Maxfli balls for the last 3 years, albeit with limited rounds (thanks toddlers). I started with the Tour X based on swing speed, but found them entirely too spinny off the tee; to be sure, there were some mechanic issues with my own swing, but I never had a ballooning ball flight with the 2021 Pro V1s. Last year, I switched over the the standard Tour and it’s been much better, ball flight more akin to those Pro V1s, no ballooning off the tee, and one hop-stop on the greens from distance.

      I’ll be very interested to see how these balls turn out in testing.

      Reply

      Harris

      2 days ago

      Just wish they would release the same three line pre-printed on the ball. I love Tour X with three lines!

      Reply

      Ernie NOT Els

      2 days ago

      I was big on Vice a few years back and I still have a substantial inventory I am going through. I tried the Maxfli Tour X back when they had just been introduced by Dick’s. I liked the ball but it was a little to firm/hard for me. Nonetheless, it preformed very well. I just bought two dozen of the newer 2026 model X and I’m hoping it may replace the Vice Pro Plus I’ve kind of soured on.

      Reply

      Fake

      1 day ago

      I used the Vice Pro for a long time. I liked it, and the different colors were fun, too. Somewhere along the way, whether it was me or them, it just stopped feeling like the same ball. If there is a better value than Maxfli, I will take a look, but for now I don’t see myself changing.

      Reply

      Big moose

      2 days ago

      Tried the tour x but it’s compression rating is too high for my swing speed so I tried the tour and you can’t beat the performance for that price point. The only thing that happened to me was I cracked one last week and tried to get a hold of maxfli but both numbers were out of service so I called Dicks and they sent me a dozen for 16.00, I was really happy with that. Customer service is not dead.

      Reply

      Ryan

      2 days ago

      Will Maxfli ever go retro and do a run with the old school logo from the early 90’s/80’s. I was an HT – 100 player back in my AGJA days. I think it would be a huge boost if they brought back the old school packaging and graphics on the ball.

      Reply

      Pat Arizona

      2 days ago

      Name 3 other golf balls with the letters “LS” on them? I’ll bet you can’t because they don’t exist.

      Reply

      Jason

      2 days ago

      I recently moved to the Tour S as from the Tour X because the X was checking up too much around the greens. I was coming up short on many shots. The Tour S performs well for me everywhere except short chips, where it runs out a bit too much. So this new Tour LS might just be the ticket. Will def give them a shot when my S’s run out.

      Every Maxfli ball I’ve played I’ve been happy with the performance. I’m happy they continue to put out good products. I’m a Maxfli homer now :)

      Reply

      BH

      2 days ago

      Bought a few to possibly replace my normal Tour X. Can’t tell a huge difference between the two. Maybe a few yards longer off the tee but everything else is about the same for me.

      Reply

      Jason Phelps

      2 days ago

      Already in the bag! I was playing the Tour X, it’s not dramatic, but where I notice the difference is coming into the green with low irons and wedges. I get stop and spin, but less zip back. Very helpful into the wind, on a back-to-front slopped green!!

      Reply

      Bob

      2 days ago

      I played the maxfly tour s when it was $34.99. then you started banging the drum for the Max fly balls when they were in your ball test. As soon as that happened they Jack the price up to $39.99 and I got ticked off and went elsewhere

      Reply

      Fake

      2 days ago

      Where did you go?

      Reply

      Mike

      2 days ago

      That’s still $15-18 less than most of the other premium ball brands, right?

      Reply

      Aidan

      2 days ago

      Where exactly could you go that has premium performance for 34.99?

      Reply

      Fake

      2 days ago

      I guess the closest price point would be Vice, but even they started creeping up. I used to play the Vice Pro, but the Tour X is a better fit for me.

      Mark R

      2 days ago

      Maxfli has the best value in tour golf balls, hands down. And MGS readers know it. $120 for 4-dozen tour balls, with free personalization/logo is an amazing deal. I play the Tour-X and it’s every bit as good as a ProV1x.

      Reply

      Kevin C

      2 days ago

      I’ll shoot the same score with the Tour and Tour X and even the Tour S although I have to watch that one around the greens a bit. I think it makes sense they are releasing an LS version but it’s really probably not the ball for my very average swing speed. I usually buy a 4 dozen combo of the Tour or Tour X to get the best price and I’ll continue with that. Anyone using ProV1 or similar and hating the price should at least try one of the Maxfli Tour balls.

      Reply

      Chris Gent

      2 days ago

      I bought a dozen of the Tour X LS after being exclusivy an OG (2018?) Left Dash player for the last 6 weeks…my plan was to alternate them with the Pro V1x Left Dash to test them head to head, but I have really liked the feel and simulator performance of the LS. They’ll get a stern test this week – 2 rounds at my parents’ country club that is tight (100 year old trees everywhere) and has slick and fast bent grass greens.

      Reply

      TomR

      2 days ago

      I am also a Left Dash player, I am intrigued. I also bought some of the Left Dots earlier in the year with the limited run because I was also curious about those. The Left Dot performs better around the greens than the dash. If the LS X is comparable, I definitely will try them.

      Reply

      Skraeling

      2 days ago

      Tour x is a great ball, I miss playing the Chromesoft X LS’s though as they were discontinued to make room for the chrome tours (and also jacked the price up).

      So went to the maxfli and now they are offering an LS one? ooooo boy. Heres hoping they sell it in yellow.

      Reply

      GMac

      2 days ago

      No yellow. Just like Left Dash. Guess if one plays yellow it’s assumed you don’t have the game to play a low spin ball.

      Reply

      Skraeling

      1 day ago

      Yet callaway did offer one in yellow. Pity :\

      I just find the yellow ones easier to see and focus on for whatever reason.

      Max

      2 days ago

      this is exactly me. My stash of Chrome Soft X LS’s is almost gone. This news is music to my ears.

      Reply

      Skraeling

      1 day ago

      Ive hung on to my last few of those for a special occasion what that occasion is, no idea yet, probably why I still have a few haha.

      ProjectX

      2 days ago

      Blah Blah Blah…”next month’s ball test”. Now you got my attention!

      Reply

      Fake

      2 days ago

      I play the Tour X, and it’s a great ball for me, personally. With their lineup and price, I would encourage anyone to at least try them. Also, some of the stores sell sleeves now, which gives you the chance to try them out for a little less money.

      Reply

      Duffer1

      2 days ago

      Good release. Maxfli balls are indeed a hidden treasure. My only issue if you play yellow, the paint is not durable, but that was about a year ago, so maybe fixed by now. You won’t regret these.

      Reply

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