What Testers Had to Say: Best And Worst Driver Feedback From 2026
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What Testers Had to Say: Best And Worst Driver Feedback From 2026

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What Testers Had to Say: Best And Worst Driver Feedback From 2026

We tested dozens of drivers in 2026. Every one of them got scored on distance, accuracy and forgiveness. Those numbers are important and the best way to compare one driver versus another and what works for each swing speed.

But in addition to collecting that data, we ask every tester what they think of the driver they hit. We require scores for things like sound, feel and looks.

The data tells you what performed. The feedback tells you what golfers trusted. Here’s where those two things lined up and where they didn’t.

When the scores and feedback matched

At the top of the leaderboard, scores and tester confidence moved together. These drivers performed well and golfers felt it immediately.

DriverMGS ScoreWhat testers said
Callaway Quantum Max9.1“Consistent, long, very appealing overall.” / “I’d buy it. Love it. Long and consistent.” / “Fantastic across the board.”
Callaway Quantum Triple Diamond9.1“All around super driver. Very consistent across the face.” / “Extremely good. Year to year, one of the best.” / “I’d game it. Very good, very consistent.”
TaylorMade Qi4D9.2“Very consistent, repeatable club.” / “Favorite TaylorMade head in a long time.” / “Spin was stupid consistent.”
PING G440 LST8.8“I’d game it. Long and consistent.” / “Great on the mishits with dispersion and distance.” / “Performs like you would expect a PING driver to.”
Titleist GT28.8“Couldn’t miss with this.” / “Would buy now. Easy to swing, like a one-piece extension of your arm.” / “Gamer.”

The common thread across all of them was consistency. Not one tester in this group got excited because a driver was occasionally long. They got excited because it did the same thing over and over.

High scores at the top of the leaderboard produced high confidence in the feedback. Distance, accuracy and feel all moved together and golfers noticed right away.

When the scores and feedback didn’t match

This is where it gets more interesting. A number of drivers posted competitive MGS scores but generated feedback that was far more negative than those numbers suggest. In a few cases, the gap was significant.

This isn’t about bad drivers. An 8.4 or 8.6 MGS score is competitive. But golfers were reacting to things the score doesn’t measure like sound, look at address, feel on off-center strikes and, in most cases, those things won.

DriverMGS ScoreWhat the score saysWhat testers said
LA Golf Driver8.8Top 10 finish. Second-highest accuracy score in the test.“Wouldn’t buy it strictly because of the sound.” / “Sound is bad. I wouldn’t buy it because of the sound.”
Tour Edge Exotics Max8.9Fourth overall. Elite forgiveness score of 9.2.“Didn’t motivate me.” / “Nothing special.” / “Zero feedback off the face.”
Ben Hogan PTX LST8.6Top half of the field. Accuracy score of 9.0.“If Kmart was still in business I could buy a better driver.” / “Just everything about this is cheap.” / “Very inconsistent.”
MacGregor Tourney Max8.4Mid-pack score. Accuracy score of 8.9.“Sounds like a gun is going off.” / “Horribly inconsistent.” / “So if Big Lots sold clubs I would find this there.”

The LA Golf driver is the most striking example here. A 9.3 accuracy score is strong but tester after tester brought up the sound.

Tour Edge is a different kind of disconnect. Fourth overall is a great result for a brand that doesn’t get the same shelf space as Callaway or TaylorMade. But testers weren’t excited. “Didn’t motivate me” showed up more than once. The driver performed but it didn’t create any feeling of confidence or connection that made golfers want to buy it.

Sound and feel at address created immediate hard-to-overcome reactions. In most cases, performance alone wasn’t enough to change a golfer’s mind once those first impressions landed.

The “I wanted to like it” category

These are drivers that had real strengths, good feel on center strikes, interesting technology, competitive distance numbers, but couldn’t get all the way there for most testers.

The language in this category is distinct. You hear things like “with the right shaft,” “needs a fitting,” and “I’d tinker with it,” which tells you the driver has something worth pursuing but isn’t ready out of the box for most golfers.

DriverMGS ScoreWhat testers said
Mizuno JPX One8.4“Beautiful club.” / “Center strikes are very pleasing. Very consistent.” / “Wicked design and profile and I want to like it. However I couldn’t control it.”
PXG Lightning Tour8.6“Best PXG to date. Consistent and solid distance.” / “Very consistent. Inspired confidence to free swing.” / “Just make it matte.”
COBRA OPTM LS8.6“Would change this with my gamer shaft and put it in the bag today.” / “33 ways to mess it up or make it great.” / “Gamer with proper fitting.”
Titleist GT48.6“Another stellar driver. Not my first choice of the Titleist drivers but it is damn good.” / “Great sound, very appealing overall.” / “Just not the right Titleist for me.”

The COBRA OPTM LS comment is worth reading twice: “33 ways to mess it up or make it great.” That’s a golfer who sees the ceiling on the driver but is honest about the fact that the adjustability cuts both ways. The Mizuno JPX One generated some of the most enthusiastic aesthetic reactions in the entire test: “wicked design,” “beautiful club.”

These drivers aren’t failures. But they require something from the golfer that the top performers don’t: more fitting time, more patience or a different shaft.

The bottom line

The best drivers in the 2026 test weren’t just long. They were predictable, easy to align and forgiving enough that golfers stopped worrying about the bad swings. The feedback on those clubs wasn’t complicated. Testers just kept saying the same positive things over and over.

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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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      Mackdaddy

      1 month ago

      For me I will not pay $600+ for a driver. I tested the Drivers last year and found the one I liked the best and loved the consistence and distance. This year I bought the Callaway Eylte for just $223 it had been hit so little it was even hard to find signs of wear on the sole.

      Reply

      Mark

      1 month ago

      … From “my personal” results of testing, I found somewhat similar results. My background: played from 02-08. Finished with a 7.5 handicap. Natural draw flight but could fade. Back then my tamed down driver swing speed was 99-104. Carry 236 rollout to 266.
      Coming back in 2024, I struggled with finding my driver swing (carry 210 and rollout 225). Fade, fade, pull hook, fade, rinse and repeat. During this time period I went without going through a fitting. So in return, I went through several driver heads and shafts.
      I stumbled across a Callaway Elyte Triple Diamond Max. Before experimenting with the stock shaft (Stiff Denali 1k Black), I tried some of my other Callaway adapter shafts in that head with the same previous results. I was about to list it on FB Marketplace but for some reason, I decided to regrip the 1k Black stock shaft. Wow! Unbelievable results. My draw flight came back, my overall yardage improved 235 carry 265 rollout. Then came the Quantum Triple Diamond Max. Same results but 6-8 more yards. Rediculous forgiveness, easy to manipulate flight (draw, straight or fade). I even tried the Ventus Black (non-velocore) stock shaft. Very nice but a little harder feel than the 1k Black.
      I did enjoy the TaylorMade Qi4D Core model. The adjustable weights help manipulate the ball flight and launch. I probably had the strongest power fades with this driver.
      I know the Titleist GT line has earned a reputation for being one of the best. I’ve tried the 2 and 3. Like others, the GT2 is more forgiving but the GT3 can produce some rockets when striking around the sweet spot. My personal issue is the occasional duck hook left out of nowhere.
      The Ping 440G LST is a solid all around low spin driver. To me, it’s similar to the Qi4D, more fade bias with my swing but maybe just a little less distance.
      I’ve tried several Cobra models (LTDX, Aerojet, Dark speed and DS-ADAPT). I tend to favor the X and Max models and enjoy the 33 different settings. They’re nice drivers but the off center hits can feel a little harder than most.
      Since finding my new friendship with the Tensei 1k Black Shaft, I did try them in most of the above mentioned and my best results was with the Callaway Elyte and Quantum Triple Diamond Max Drivers. By the way, I do have several other shafts, including the Ventus Black (with Velocore) and while nice feeling, I prefer the 1k Black. Obviously, I don’t center strike every shot but as a weekend warrior, I’m really enjoying the Callaway TD Max Drivers.
      Obviously, there’s a lot to choose from out there and everyone is different. I was just putting out my “average golfer” opinion and results from experimenting with some different models of 2021-2026
      Good luck!

      Reply

      Dr Tee

      1 month ago

      regarding the GT3: the “occasional duck hook out of nowhere is the archer, not the arrow !

      Reply

      Mark

      1 month ago

      Probably the archer wanting to put a little more into it. Lol!

      Fake

      2 months ago

      Is there a way to see all of the tester feedback on the drivers? I always take “too loud” or “weird sound” with a grain of salt, as it doesn’t tell me anything at all. I would hit a loud driver if it works for me. Then again, I have a Cleveland HB, so loud drivers don’t bother me.

      Reply

      vito

      1 month ago

      I’m with ya. Noise and looks don’t matter if the ball goes straight and long, IMO.

      Reply

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