The Best Titleist Golf Balls 2025 (Based On 2025 Ball Test Data)
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The Best Titleist Golf Balls 2025 (Based On 2025 Ball Test Data)

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The Best Titleist Golf Balls 2025 (Based On 2025 Ball Test Data)

The 2025 MyGolfSpy Ball Test shows how every model in the Titleist lineup truly performs. Some models lived up to their reputations. Others surprised us. If you’re trying to figure out which Titleist ball is right for your game, here’s the data-driven breakdown.

Titleist Pro V1x (Best overall golf ball 2025)

Pro V1x delivered the most complete tee-to-green performance of any ball in the test. It paired fast ball speed, useful spin and a higher flight window, giving golfers better stopping power on approach shots without sacrificing distance.

On the 35-yard wedge test, where performance gaps between balls are the biggest, the Pro V1x produced reliable, predictable greenside spin. It also performed well across all three swing speeds, which reinforces why it finished as the No. 1 ball overall.

Play Pro V1x if

  • You want the most complete Titleist ball for every part of your game.
  • You prefer a higher flight with dependable stopping power.
  • You want a ball that fits a wide range of swing speeds.

Skip Pro V1x if

  • You would benefit from a lower trajectory or reduced spin

Titleist Pro V1

Pro V1 is the neutral, balanced option in the lineup with mid-spin, mid-flight and consistently strong performance across driver, iron, and wedge testing. It showed excellent iron performance in 2025 and was a mid-spin top pick for both mid and low swing speeds. If you want tour-level control without the firmer feel or higher flight of Pro V1x, this is the alternative.

Play Pro V1 if

  • You prefer a slightly softer feel than Pro V1x.
  • You want predictable iron flight and consistent wedge spin.

Skip Pro V1 if

  • You need higher flight or more spin in the long game.

Titleist Pro V1x Left Dash

Pro V1x Left Dash remains Titleist’s distance-leaning tour ball. It’s firm, fast and consistently low spin across all three swing speeds. The 2025 test shows that Left Dash is still one of the longest balls but it’s no longer alone at the top the way it once was. The tradeoff is feel and greenside control. It’s firm and wedge spin falls below Pro V1 and Pro V1x.

Play Left Dash if

  • You want to reduce driver spin.
  • You prefer a firm, crisp strike.
  • You like a flatter, lower-spinning driver flight.

Skip Left Dash if

  • You struggle to hold greens and need more iron/wedge spin.
  • You prefer a softer feel.
  • You want more short-game spin than a low-spin tour ball can deliver.

Titleist AVX

AVX is Titleist’s soft-feeling urethane option designed for a more penetrating flight. In the 2025 test, it showed up as a mid-spin recommendation at low swing speeds and delivered a noticeably lower flight window than Pro V1 and Pro V1x. It suits players who generate too much height on their own.

Play AVX if

  • You want the softest-feeling urethane ball in the Titleist lineup.
  • You already hit it high and want to flight the ball down.
  • You play in wind and prefer a lower, more controlled trajectory.

Skip AVX if

  • You need more height or stopping power into greens.
  • You want a firmer tour-ball feel.
  • Greenside spin is your top priority.

Titleist Tour Soft

Tour Soft is the ionomer ball that kept showing up in the 2025 data as an overachiever. It produced strong speed and above-average iron spin at mid and low swing speeds.

At high speed, it was one of the longest ionomer golf balls tested with ball speeds similar to some urethane models. The predictable tradeoff is lower greenside spin but if you want a Titleist logo on the ball without Pro V pricing, Tour Soft is one of the most compelling options in the lineup right now.

Play Tour Soft if

  • You want more speed and spin than most ionomer balls offer.
  • You’re not willing to pay top dollar for premium golf balls.

Skip Tour Soft if

  • You need enough wedge spin for one-hop-stop control.
  • You prefer urethane feel and short-game performance.

Titleist Velocity

Velocity is Titleist’s distance ball. It has high launch, high speed and noticeably low greenside spin. In the 35-yard wedge test, it delivered some of the lowest spin numbers in the entire group and at slower swing speeds it produced competitive driver distance. If you want a firmer feel and a ball that gets up quickly and flies long, that’s Velocity.

Play Velocity if

  • You want maximum distance and height.
  • You don’t rely on greenside spin to score.
  • You prefer a firmer feel at impact.

Skip Velocity if

  • You need the ball to stop quickly around the greens.
  • You prefer a softer feel or urethane performance.

Titleist TruFeel

TruFeel is Titleist’s softest, lowest-compression option. It launched high, produced competitive driver distance for slow swingers and sat firmly in the low-spin ionomer category during wedge testing. It’s the most affordable entry into the Titleist lineup and a strong fit for players prioritizing soft feel and lower price.

Play TruFeel if

  • You want the softest-feeling Titleist ball.
  • You swing at slower speeds and need help with launch and carry.
  • You want a budget-friendly Titleist option.

Skip TruFeel if

  • You need premium wedge spin and stopping power.
  • You prefer a firmer, more responsive feel.
  • You want urethane-level control around the greens.

Final thoughts

If none of these Titleist golf balls is a fit for your game, check out the complete results of our 2025 Golf Ball Test.

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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





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      Malcolm Sutton-Foster

      7 months ago

      I am a titleist player through and through everything in the bag is titleist but the ball is taylor made tour response or preferred,I found these balls by chance through a freind of mine . They are better in the colder winter months as the cover still stays soft compared to the pro v1x , good spin , distance off tee and they putt extremely well , but in the summer out will come the prov1x again .It doesn’t hurt to change balls for climate change if it helps you to keep scoring well , I remember back in the day Tom Watson used to play with two balls ,always keeping one in the pocket to keep it warm so that it performed as manufactured , but I suppose now that’s illegal for the pro?, but for us amatures it’s a good game.e plan as long as its legal ,but just friendly golf with the usual 4 ball should be OK maybe . But experimenting with different balls is a good strategy to keep your golf level .

      Reply

      ericsokp

      7 months ago

      Although Titleist makes the Pro V1/V1X in Yellow, why not Orange? As a colorblind golfer, Whites & Yellows are extremely difficult to see in green grass, so I play the Velocity which is available in Orange.

      Reply

      John rado

      7 months ago

      Great summary, however you have overlooked the results of using a driver, can you up date the discussion to include the results obtained when using a driver

      Reply

      Bob

      7 months ago

      Slow swing speeds need some extra distance. Why in the name of God with someone with a slow swing speed want a soft golf ball that is according to all your testing shorter?

      Reply

      Fake

      7 months ago

      Soft compression balls are effectively marketed to people thinking that’s what they need with a slow swing speed.

      Reply

      GolfinNut

      7 months ago

      Why isn’t the Left Dot in this discussion?

      Reply

      mg

      7 months ago

      was wondering the same thing

      Reply

      BR549

      7 months ago

      I would encourage anyone considering one of these balls to go to the data and plug in your swing speed, club and all these balls and see for yourself what works. For example, the V1x gives surprising low distance results for both driver and iron. Granted there are other considerations in a ball, but it was eye opening.

      Reply

      Pat

      7 months ago

      I bought some of the Tour Soft before the testing came out. I hit a few of my longest drives of the year using them. My course has some serious rough so even using yellow balls I still lose quite a few so the cheaper option is good. I give up a little spin but barely short shots seem to bounce onto the green instead of stopping short. The TS also putts like a more expensive ball. Hard not to like for the price but its definitely not the PV1 or PV1x.

      Reply

      REC911

      7 months ago

      I tried the X and by the 10th hole the brand new ball was so chewed up I could not recognize it in the grass. Maybe the mower ran over it? Anyone else experiencing this with the X?

      Reply

      Fake

      7 months ago

      Try the Maxfli Tour X and see how it compares.

      Reply

      TomR

      7 months ago

      The Left Dash is the best golf ball for my game and then I bought the limited run Left Dots. That is now the best golf ball I have ever played.

      Reply

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