Need A New Wedge? Here’s What Our Wedge Testing Says Matters Most
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Need A New Wedge? Here’s What Our Wedge Testing Says Matters Most

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Need A New Wedge? Here’s What Our Wedge Testing Says Matters Most

If you’re shopping for a wedge in 2026, it’s easy to get distracted by one number.

Spin.

Every brand promises more of it and, even in our own test charts, the wedges with the highest rpm stand out first. But after digging through thousands of shots from our 2025 wedge test, one thing became clear.

The wedges that help you score are the ones that control distance, minimize dispersion and keep performing when moisture gets involved. Here are the three most important things to look for when buying a wedge.

1. Distance control and descent angle

Carry distance control is one of the clearest performance separators in our wedge test. It’s a major part of the Consistency Score which evaluates how reliably a wedge produces the same carry distance across full swings, 50-yard dry shots and 50-yard wet shots. If a wedge is long on one swing and short on the next, scoring becomes difficult no matter how much spin it produces.

The best-performing wedges, including the Mizuno Pro T-1, Mizuno Pro T-3 and TaylorMade MG5, kept their carry windows tight across all three scenarios. That consistency is a big reason they finished near the top in accuracy and consistency scoring.

When you test wedges, pay close attention to your 50-yard carry pattern. You want shots clustering tightly around your intended distance. Random “hot” shots or flyers are a sign the wedge will be harder to trust on the course.

2. Spin that survives moisture

This is where wedges either shine or fall apart in testing.

Almost every wedge loses some spin when moisture gets involved but the amount varies more than most golfers realize. Some wedges like the Cleveland RTZ gained spin but others lost nearly half their spin. That difference matters when you’re trying to hit a controlled wedge into a soft green at 8 a.m.

Top performers (high retention)

Poor performers (major spin loss):

A wedge like Orka OD starts with more than 6,700 rpm on dry 50-yard shots but drops to only 2,621 rpm in the wet. Meanwhile, Cleveland’s RTZ lineup maintained or slightly increased average spin during the wet test. If you play in wet conditions, this needs to be part of your buying decision.

3. Dispersion patterns

Most golfers think about dispersion with a driver, not a wedge, but our test shows it plays a major role in wedge performance. Accuracy is the highest-weighted category in the Most Wanted scoring model. It makes up 50 percent of the total score and that score comes directly from Strokes Gained calculations based on where the ball finished.

Across 13,680 test shots, the wedges that ranked the highest weren’t just the ones that spun the ball or controlled carry distances. They were the ones that kept patterns tight on full swings and 50-yard shots.

Spin alone doesn’t guarantee the ball will finish near the target.

As you’re testing wedges look for:

  • Shot patterns that stay centered
  • Minimal left/right movement on full and partial swings
  • A wedge that starts on your intended line consistently

Final thoughts

If you want the right wedge in 2026, here’s the cheat sheet:

  • Distance control first: Look for tight carry numbers, especially on 50-yard shots, and a descent angle steep enough to stop the ball quickly.
  • Wet-spin retention second: Wedges that maintain spin in wet conditions keep their distance control and flight window intact when it matters most.
  • Dispersion third: Spin and distance don’t matter if the ball doesn’t finish near the target. Choose a wedge that keeps shot patterns centered and minimizes left/right variance.

For You

For You

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Brittany Olizarowicz

Brittany Olizarowicz

Brittany Olizarowicz

Britt Olizarowicz is a scratch golfer, former teaching professional and one of MyGolfSpy’s leading voices on equipment testing and golf performance. She has spent more than 15 years working at private clubs in New York and Florida and now specializes in translating test data and swing mechanics into practical advice for everyday golfers. Britt began playing at age 7 and has never left the game. When she’s not writing, you’ll find her on the course, playing pickleball, cooking, running or out on the boat with her family.

Brittany Olizarowicz

Brittany Olizarowicz

Brittany Olizarowicz

Brittany Olizarowicz

Brittany Olizarowicz





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      Bob

      4 months ago

      This article maintains the concept of what do you want in a wedge. Buying name brands or what the pros play
      Maybe more harm than good.

      Reply

      Jay

      4 months ago

      Stupid read, isn’t that what you look for in every club.

      Reply

      CB

      4 months ago

      This is misleading and silly, as it just uses models that were part of the 2025 wedge test, but the short-coming there is that only NEW models for 2025 were included, which meant that Ping and Titleist (Vokey) were omitted. Now you’re publishing something that suggests that the clubs listed are class leaders, when we do not even know how true that is, since heavy hitters were not part of the comparison.

      Ping wedges are well known to work very well in wet conditions and them being excluded from the 2025 test for comparison to the new models was silly, but then using those results here to suggest that only the listed models are the best ones available to purchase, when Ping or Vokey could be equal or better, is annoying and unfair to those brands.

      For this piece it would have been smarter to use both 2025 and 2024 test results so that other brands/models were considered. Seems like common sense to me.

      Reply

      Mike

      4 months ago

      I agree, doesn’t make sense to leave the top selling wedge off the test/list.

      Reply

      Andrew the Great!

      4 months ago

      The models provided in this column are only examples to illustrate the phenomena, not club recommendations.

      In fact, when Brittany says “If you want the right wedge in 2026, here’s the cheat sheet:”, there’s not mention of ANY make or model of wedge in that cheat sheet. Just the ideal criteria to use when selecting a wedge, whether current models, older models, tested models, untested models, whatever.

      Reply

      CB

      4 months ago

      Well, I never accused anybody of making bad “recommendations”. I said the article was misleading. Including references to certain models only from the 2025 wedge test may suggest, to those who out of context don’t know better, that the listed models are the best ones.

      Also, you mention the “here’s the cheat sheet” statement from the article. That’s great, but it only points to the 2025 wedge test, which excluded some heavy hitter brands, which tested great the year before. My point was that that 2025 was also misleading. If you want to buy the best wedge in 2026, people need to consider results from not just the 2025 test but also the 2024 test. Brittany could have easily pointed that out and included an extra link.

      Max R

      4 months ago

      The link for “ If you want the right wedge in 2026” goes to 2025!

      Joe

      4 months ago

      Well said CB, Ping was the top wedge for performance in wet conditions and was not mentioned? Is the demand for expedience to get articles out limit your ability to conduct comprehensive research?

      Reply

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