PXG Is Coming To PGA TOUR Superstore
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PXG Is Coming To PGA TOUR Superstore

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PXG Is Coming To PGA TOUR Superstore

In a move that’s equal parts strategic and obvious, PXG clubs are heading to the country’s biggest golf retailer.

PXG and PGA TOUR Superstore have announced a retail partnership that will bring PXG clubs, bags, balls and hats to select PGATSS locations starting today, with a full nationwide rollout expected by the end of the year.

If your first reaction is “huh, that’s new,” you’re not wrong. If your second reaction is, “Wait, doesn’t everyone sell their clubs at PGA TOUR Superstore?”, you’re also not wrong.

PXG’s retail distribution history has been, let’s call it, fluid. The company has worked with major custom fitting chains, then pulled back, then dipped a toe back in, then pulled back again. There was never an obvious long-term strategy so much as there was a vibe. PXG did things when it felt like doing them and stopped when it didn’t. That’s not necessarily a criticism. It’s just how the brand operated under founder Bob Parsons, who has never been accused of running things by committee.

With that, there’s been a shift in PXG’s day-to-day leadership, and this partnership feels like it may reflect that. It’s a more deliberate, more conventional move than we’ve typically seen from the brand. Whether that’s a good thing depends on how you feel about conventional but from a pure business standpoint, it’s hard to argue with the logic.

The logic being: if you want to sell more golf clubs, sell them where golfers are already shopping for golf clubs.

Fish where the fish are. It’s not exactly a groundbreaking strategy, but it doesn’t need to be.

What makes this partnership work on paper is that both brands lean heavily on custom fitting. PXG has always emphasized the fitted experience over off-the-rack sales. It’s the reason they built their own brick-and-mortar stores in the first place. PGA TOUR Superstore, meanwhile, has invested significantly in its fitting infrastructure and would much rather sell you a custom-fitted club than something off the shelf. Fitted clubs from this partnership will still be built by hand to each player’s specs, which is how PXG has always done it.

So, even if both brands are more than content to sell you whatever you want from their online storefronts, on the fitting front, the alignment makes sense. And for golfers who’ve been curious about PXG but didn’t want to seek out a standalone PXG store or go through the DTC process, this lowers the barrier considerably. Walk into a PGATSS, hit some balls, get fitted (or don’t), walk out with an order (or don’t). At least you can try PXG clubs while you’re there.

Is this a seismic shift in the golf equipment landscape? No. It’s a brand that wants to grow its market share putting its products in a place where people buy golf equipment. But sometimes the obvious move is the right one.

Have your say

It seems almost odd to ask but have you ever hit a PXG club? Does availability at PGA TOUR Superstore make it more likely that you will?

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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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      Scott

      3 months ago

      It definitely makes sense. I took advantage of PXG’s August contests in 2023 and 2024, where you would go into one of their stores and compare your driver or irons to theirs, if yours won they would pay you $100. It was a fun experience but it looked to me as though the store was hungry for business. If PXG want’s to sell more stuff they really needed to do this.

      Reply

      IndustryScratch

      3 months ago

      This is really interesting to me as someone who worked at PXG and was a top producer there. At HQ, it was almost a mantra that “we’d never be in a big box retailer,” at least from what Mr. P communicated.

      From a market share standpoint, though, this move makes a lot of sense. Getting into more locations and giving golfers easier, low-risk access to the product is a logical step toward broader adoption.

      That said, it also reflects how much PXG has shifted away from its original emphasis on elite fitting. The gap between a PXG fitter experience and something like PGATSS has narrowed, which makes this transition more feasible—but not without tradeoffs.

      My concern is the downstream impact on PXG fitters. They may end up absorbing the fallout from PGATSS fittings—returns, service issues, and potentially a meaningful loss of sales within their territories.

      It’s clearly a move toward making PXG more mainstream. At the same time, it wouldn’t be surprising if this kind of expansion also positions the company for a future private equity play as the brand’s perceived value grows.

      Reply

      MGoBlue100

      3 months ago

      I’ve got a PXG 0211 XF Driver that I LOVE! It’s getting older now, but I really don’t see an urgent need to change it out. Also have a 3W that moves in and out of the bag with a Bridgestone 3 Hybrid (that I obtained in an MGS club test. It’s REAL, kids; you KEEP them!) I’ll be very interested to see what happens with the dedicated PXG locations, and how PXG & PGATSS negotiate that partnership.

      Reply

      Fake

      3 months ago

      Maybe I’m being naive, but I think that this can only help the consumer to have more options at their fingertips. But I am wondering if a fitter make a comparable amount selling a PXG club, and do they have incentive to give them a fair look? I’ve never hit a PXG club, so I don’t have a bias. Just my own curiosity.

      Reply

      Fake

      3 months ago

      I am correcting myself. Apparently PGA fitters do not make commission.

      Reply

      Scott

      3 months ago

      I have heard the same regarding commissions. However, one fitter told me he got a free driver from a company if he sold 10 of their drivers

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