Titleist T250 Iron Review

Golf Monthly irons tester Joe Ferguson has been thoroughly testing out Titleist’s newest addition to its irons lineup, the T250…

Photo of the Titleist T250 Iron
(Image credit: Future)
Golf Monthly Verdict

The Titleist T250 iron feels like a significant step for players' distance irons. Titleist has managed to create a quite stunning aesthetic that blends in beautifully with the rest of the T-Series range while incorporating well-thought-out technological developments and creating explosive distance output. For those who appreciate a ‘player’s’ look but desire a noticeable boost in their yardage, the T250 is an outstanding choice.

Reasons to buy
  • +

    Outrageously good-looking

  • +

    High levels of ball speed and carry distance

  • +

    Good stability and consistent trajectory - no unwanted ‘jumpers’

Reasons to avoid
  • -

    If Titleist made this with a fraction less offset, it may be the perfect iron!

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The Titleist T-Series franchise has been a wildly successful one, and 2025 sees the latest versions hitting the shelves. While there are some familiar models returning, such as the T100 and T150, allow me to introduce you to the mysterious new T250, a model specifically crafted for golfers seeking serious distance out of their irons without compromising on looks. I have been testing out the Titleist T250 for a few weeks now to see what innovations it brings to the table, and if it can muscle its way into the conversation among the best irons in the game.

Photo of the Titleist T250 Iron

(Image credit: Future)

In terms of the technology story, the T250, as Titleist describes, is "built different". Its singular design features a face and body made entirely of high-strength steel, which allows powerful performance technologies to be discreetly housed within its profile. For elevated speed, Titleist has incorporated a new forged L-Face with a V-taper design, which has been introduced to create greater ball speed across the entire face and increase launch on low-face strikes, which is a predominant miss for many players who will be shopping in this market.

Photo of the Titleist T250 Iron face

(Image credit: Future)

Enhanced consistency is a core pillar of the T250's design. Titleist states that Improved Max Impact Technology helps produce more consistent carry distance and tighter dispersion, and complementing this, more aggressive mid/short-iron grooves are designed to promote enhanced spin control from any lie. For high flight & stability, split high-density tungsten has been utilized to produce an optimal CG with good stability in what is still a relatively compact profile.

Photo of the Titleist T250 Iron at address

(Image credit: Future)

Looks-wise, the T250 is simply outstanding and may actually be peerless in this iron category. It presents a genuinely clean, modern, minimalist design that oozes quality, and I believe will appeal to a wide range of discerning golfers. Without getting carried away, I am not sure I have seen many better-looking products in any iron category in terms of the ‘in the bag’ angle, and they will offer some serious shelf appeal in retail stores.

While T250 absolutely offers a slightly larger profile than the T100 or T150, I found this increase to be barely noticeable because it is so beautifully executed in terms of the shaping. It is genuinely confidence-inspiring at address, with a marginally thicker top line and subtly increased offset, the only clues to the style of iron in hand.

Photo of the Titleist T250 Iron

(Image credit: Future)

Those visual characteristics, however subtle, definitely offered a touch more reassurance for me in the playing position without compromising the clean, traditional aesthetic that I have come to expect from any Titleist product.

Performance-wise, the T250 truly delivered on its promise of elevated speed and enhanced consistency in my testing. The stronger lofts (7-iron is 30.5˚), combined with the refined internal weighting and muscle channel, provided some exceptional ball speed numbers and pretty explosive distance!

Photo of the Titleist 2025 T100 Iron data

(Image credit: Future)

As long as I am testing irons, I will always be on the lookout for that destructive ‘jumpy’ strike in the players' distance category, and I can happily report there wasn’t even the merest hint of one with T250. I mean, they went miles, but they consistently went miles, which is the key point! Unpredictability is a killer in any iron, but the T250 delivered time and time again.

The impact feel, for me, was certainly livelier than the T100 and T150 models, but still gave a nice solid sensation at strike that provided excellent feedback, allowing me to truly feel where on the face I had struck the ball, which can’t be said for all irons in this genre. I would still put a model like the TaylorMade P790 just ahead in the feel department personally, being a touch softer, but there really isn’t much in it.

Photo of the Titleist T250 Iron

(Image credit: Future)

You’ll be pleased to hear there is forgiveness in bucket loads with the T250 iron, and that was most evident in the front-to-back dispersion from my testing. I had to miss it pretty badly to lose much more than 2 mph of ball speed from this iron, which is an excellent return.

It's also worth noting that the T250 irons are available in what Titleist calls 'Launch Spec'. This variant is specifically designed to take iron performance to new heights for players with moderate swing speeds or those who naturally produce extremely low ball flight. By subtly reducing the head weight and adding more loft than the standard T250, these irons are engineered to encourage effortless launch, increased carry, and enhanced stopping power. This thoughtful option ensures that a wider range of golfers can experience the T250's exceptional performance, but have it tailored to their unique swing characteristics.

Photo of the Titleist T250 Iron sole

(Image credit: Future)

I firmly believe that the T250 will be a roaring success at retail. Those players who need that distance bump but maybe don’t want people to know it by the look of their clubs will be flocking to this model. As new entries to the market, it is hard to imagine a better one than the T250 iron.

The Titleist T250 will be available for $1499/£1379 per 7-piece set (steel), $1599/£1479 per 7-piece set (graphite).

Joe Ferguson
Staff Writer

Joe has worked in the golf industry for nearly 20 years in a variety of roles. After a successful amateur career being involved in England squads at every age group, Joe completed his PGA degree qualification in 2014 as one of the top ten graduates in his training year and subsequently went on to become Head PGA Professional at Ryder Cup venue The Celtic Manor Resort. Equipment has always been a huge passion of Joe’s, and during his time at Celtic Manor, he headed up the National Fitting Centres for both Titleist and Taylormade. He’s excited to bring his knowledge of hardware to Golf Monthly in the form of equipment reviews and buying advice.

Joe lives in North Devon and still plays sporadically on the PGA West region circuit. His best round in recent years came earlier in 2023 where he managed a 9 under par 63 at Trevose GC in a Devon & Cornwall PGA Tournament.

Joe's current What's In The Bag?

Driver: Switch between TaylorMade Qi35 and Callaway Elyte TD - both with Fujikura Ventus Black 6-X

Fairway wood 1: TaylorMade BRNR Copper Mini Driver - Fujikura Ventus Black 7-X

Fairway wood 2: Callaway Apex UW 17˚- Fujikura Ventus Black 9-X

Irons: TaylorMade P7CB 3-PW with Dynamic Gold Tour Issue X100 shafts

Wedges: Callaway Opus 50, 54, and 60 degrees - Project X LS 6.0 shafts

Putter: LAB Golf Oz.1 (zero shaft lean)

Ball: TaylorMade 2024 TP5x

Grips: Golf Pride Tour Velvet 60R

Bag: Vessel Player IV Pro DXR Stand

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