The 6 Most Surprising Golf Balls From The 2025 MyGolfSpy Ball Test
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The 6 Most Surprising Golf Balls From The 2025 MyGolfSpy Ball Test

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The 6 Most Surprising Golf Balls From The 2025 MyGolfSpy Ball Test

Coming out of our recent ball test, we found that many of the usual suspects performed exactly as expected. Pro V1 and Pro V1x delivered the performance we’ve come to know over several generations of testing. Most ionomer balls fell into predictable patterns. Chrome Soft performed like Chrome Soft.

That’s not bad, it’s just, well … predictable. The balls on this list aren’t necessarily the best we tested but they are some of the more interesting ones—six balls that made us take notice because they defied conventional wisdom, solved problems in unexpected ways or simply performed better than we anticipated.

Mizuno Pro S

Mizuno isn’t a dominant force in the ball market but its offerings are steadily improving without resorting to making carbon copies of more popular balls.

Because of that, Pro S showed as arguably the most unique offering in the test. For the most part, it held its own off the tee. What stood out more, however, was what happened down the bag. Pro S was among the highest-spinning balls we tested on full wedge shots while still managing to keep launch and spin at playable levels with the irons.

At lower speeds, we saw added spin with the driver and higher-launching irons. One could argue that Mizuno has stumbled into a recipe that helps slower players get the ball up in the air without giving up too much elsewhere.

While it makes plenty of sense, it’s not a recipe that we see very often, which may be reason enough to give the Mizuno Pro S a try.

PXG Xtreme Tour and Xtreme Tour X

There’s not one thing I can point to as the reason to consider PXG’s Xtreme Tour or Tour X. Both are well-balanced offerings with well-differentiated performance characteristics. Both are long off the tee, while the X tends to spin a bit more on full shots with irons and wedges.

As with others on the list, we didn’t see anything in the ball flight to give us pause.

Truth be told, we saw encouraging signs with the original but there were some early quality issues that made us apprehensive. According to PXG, they’ve pushed its factory to tighten up quality control and ultimately produce a better product.

Our test results suggest that not only is it working for PXG but likely working to the benefit of the next ball on this list that happens to be made at the same factory.

Kirkland Performance+

Whether you want to call it the Performance+ 3.5 or the one in the box with the red stripe, it doesn’t matter much. The point is that the newest Kirkland is fundamentally a better golf ball.

Previous iterations of Kirkland’s 3-piece balls were spinny … excessively spinny … and, quite frankly, made any comparisons to the Pro V1 laughable.

This new version offers much more balanced performance and plays much better to the middle part of the fitting bell curve. The new model is longer off the tee and has brought significant spin reduction through the rest of the bag.

If there’s a knock, it’s that Costco may have sacrificed a bit too much greenside spin where the Performance+ has moved from top of the table in previous tests to near the bottom.

It’s still not a Pro V1, but if your golf ball budget is less than $25, I don’t see a sensible way you can do better.

Callaway Chrome Tour Triple Diamond

We had every expectation that Chrome Tour Triple Diamond was going to be fast and long. That makes sense given how Callaway defined the competitive set (a direct Pro V1x Left Dash competitor) and what we’ve seen in the past from Callaway’s Chrome Soft X (now Chrome Tour X). In that respect, Triple Diamond absolutely delivered—especially at high speed where, by the numbers, it was the longest ball in the test.

That said, what surprised us were the spin rates. By no reasonable measure can we say Triple Diamond spins as much as Chrome Tour X, but it does spin appreciably more off the irons than Left Dash. I’ve come to think of it as Left Dash for golfers who need a bit more spin.

Perhaps more compellingly, there were no observable flight issues during testing and, frankly, like Chrome Tour X, Triple Diamond looks to be another Callaway offering the market isn’t giving the credit it deserves.

Titleist Tour Soft

In every test, there’s one ball that raises eyebrows to the extent that we’re pretty sure it’s going to make readers think we did something wrong.

Thanks, Tour Soft.

For what it’s worth, Titleist has been telling anyone that would listen that Tour Soft is the best ionomer ball on the market and, tee to almost the green, our testing supports their case.

At roughly 90 compression, Tour Soft perhaps isn’t as soft as its name implies, but that’s no small part of the reason it more than held its own for distance off the tee while offering plenty of stopping power (high flight, good spin rates) into the green.

Full disclosure: like every other ionomer ball we tested, Tour Soft’s spin rates dropped dramatically on our 35-yard “greenside” shots but, otherwise, one could argue that the only thing separating Tour Soft from Pro V1 is the cover.

I’d be hard-pressed to recommend that many of you should pay $40 for an ionomer ball but if you’re inclined to do so, there’s nothing better in the category.

Bridgestone TOUR B RX

As we’ve said, from one generation of golf balls to the next, things can change dramatically. While it’s hard to say exactly what’s happening with Bridgestone’s TOUR B RX, the samples we measured on our gauges were appreciably firmer than prior generations—jumping from 75 to 90 compression (give or take).

That would certainly explain why RX was longer and faster this time around and, not for nothing, if our test is indicative of the direction Bridgestone is taking with RX, I kinda like it. It creates more separation between RX and RXS while giving Bridgestone something more akin to a direct Pro V1 competitor. Even if Matt Kuchar’s dad may not love it, a faster RX is a better RX.

The takeaway

What strikes me about this collection of balls is that each represents a different approach to solving golfer problems. PXG prioritized quality improvements. Kirkland found better balance. Callaway created a niche product that actually works (while not being the same as its competitors). Titleist proved ionomer balls don’t have to suck. Bridgestone made a necessary evolution, and Mizuno made perhaps the most interesting ball in the test.

None of the above represents anything entirely revolutionary but sometimes the most interesting developments happen at the margins. Sometimes the surprise isn’t what a ball does differently—it’s that it does exactly what it’s supposed to do, just better than you expected it would.

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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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      Gary

      9 months ago

      Tony which Mizuno had the wide discrepancy in distance, the X or S? I saw you guys mention the occasional difference with Mizuno. Also did the full wedge test reveal any balls that scuffed off the wedge? I found my Vokey SM10 roughed up some of the Mizuno X.

      Reply

      Dave

      9 months ago

      Where did the Snell line up fall?

      Reply

      Matt

      9 months ago

      According to the Q&A from the initial ball test article, “We had hoped to include Snell balls in this test. However, the company is in the process of rolling out updated models. Updated 2.0 and 4.0 aren’t available yet and we weren’t able to source the 3.0 the same way we sourced the other balls in this test. We fully expect to include Snell in our 2026 test.”

      Reply

      Brian

      9 months ago

      I want to see a dot distribution chart for the top 20 golf balls.. a description of the robot golf ball hit machine set at 100 mph …spin rates and launch numbers..

      Reply

      Alan Luthi

      9 months ago

      What is the compression of The Titleist Tour soft? I have seen it listed online in the mid 60’s and your chart says 88. Mygolfspy said the 2022 model’s average compression was 67.
      Can someone clarify the compression for me?
      Thanks,
      Alan

      Reply

      Alan

      9 months ago

      This is the reply I just got from Titleist but I do believe a ball going from 67 to 88 compression in one year is significant:
      I’m so sorry, we do not post the compression ratings as our R&D team has done extensive researching showing you no longer need a specific swing speed to compress the ball. It’s now about what height (launch) and long game spin (spin rates) that you need to optimize your ball flight to give you maximum distance and control. The Tour Soft promotes a mid to low ball flight and low long game spin (very similar flight to the Pro V1). All our balls are great for all speeds of swings!

      Reply

      Jack

      9 months ago

      PXG golf balls are manufactured in Vietnam at the SM Parker factory.

      Reply

      Fake

      9 months ago

      I’ve heard it said that they are the same as Kirklands.

      Reply

      Gerry Wolf

      9 months ago

      Do you guys ever include the OnCore ball line up? I play Vero 1’s and really like them. Performance is top notch and greenside spin is great. But I never see them in your reviews. Can’t beat the price either.

      Reply

      Jerry

      9 months ago

      I would really like to see a chart which shows the performance of each ball in 2024 as compared to 2025. I am trying to figure out how some balls were rated so high in 2024 and not so in 2025 – were the other balls improved or were particular balls better in 2024?

      Reply

      Mark

      9 months ago

      Foremost

      Reply

      Jim Cooley

      9 months ago

      The tour soft on titleist.com is 65 compression not 90 in your article

      Reply

      Tony Covey

      9 months ago

      I can’t speak to what’s on the Titleist site. What I can tell you is that we measured a random sampling of a dozen balls (in house using our compression gauge) from those used in the test. The Tour Soft had an average compression of 88 (which I described as “roughly 90” in the post). Individual balls ranged from 84 on the soft end to 92 on the firm end.

      Reply

      Ken

      9 months ago

      I in your tests seems you only test whiteballs, does the colour of ball change the result, I use only yellow balls

      Reply

      Tom Corathers

      9 months ago

      DITO!

      Also, why are you not reevaluating the updated Snell 3.0 balls. The ones with no line above or below the model name?

      Reply

      Scott

      9 months ago

      I see no reason why you shouldn’t name the factory that each ball is made at. That has as much to do, if not more, than the name on the golf ball for performance.

      Reply

      League Golfer

      9 months ago

      I 100% agree. Please tell us the name of the factory and the country where that factory is located. Inquiring readers want to know and journalists should inform to the best of their abilities to tell the full information and story.

      Reply

      Alan Scalzi

      9 months ago

      They should also tell us what type of club they are using! Game improvement or players distance irons ect. As they do change they the ball flight.

      mg

      9 months ago

      Golf lost its last journalist when Dan Jenkins past away. Writers today are paid to write what they are told or sold.

      bort

      9 months ago

      If you know what factory the balls come from you’ll be able to find what DTC company sells an identical ball for less money. There’s a reason the only test the most overpriced brands with the most public mind share.

      Reply

      Tony Covey

      9 months ago

      The factory obviously has some impact on the performance, but most anyone making a serious golf ball can make it do almost anything from a performance standpoint. The factory is much more important when it comes to quality and consistency. As I’ve said countless times, nearly anyone can make a ball that performs similarly to a Pro V1, but most factories struggle to make them all to nearly identical specs.

      Having said that, here you go:

      Mizuno: Feng Tay, Vietnam
      PXG: SM Parker, Vietnam
      Kirkland: SM Parker, Vietnam
      Chrome Tour Triple Diamond: Callaway, Chicopee, MA
      Titleist Tour Soft: Titleist Ball Plant 2, North Dartmouth, MA
      Bridgestone TOUR B RX: Bridgestone, Covington, GA

      Reply

      Scott

      9 months ago

      Just went down to Costco. The white Kirkland ball is made in Vietnam. The YELLOW ball is made in China. Inquiring minds want that one tested. I’ll BET it’s not as good.

      Bud

      9 months ago

      We look for balls in Upstate NY during winter…19,000 last year.
      We find a top flites next to a Pro V next to a Slazenger in the woods!

      Reply

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