Iron buying guides
How to Compare Irons
Compare iron models by ball flight, distance control, forgiveness, and set makeup instead of marketing claims.

Compare outcomes, not labels
Two irons can both be called “forgiving” and play very differently. One may launch high and straight but feel large behind the ball. Another may offer more control but punish low-face contact. The label is only a starting point.
Hit shots and compare what happens when you miss the middle.
What to look at side by side
| Category | What it tells you |
|---|---|
| Launch | Whether the ball gets high enough to hold greens |
| Spin | Whether shots stop or release too far |
| Carry distance | How reliable each club’s yardage is |
| Dispersion | How wide your misses are |
| Feel | Whether you can sense strike quality |
Don’t be fooled by strong lofts
A modern 7-iron may fly farther partly because it has less loft than your old 7-iron. That isn’t bad, but it does mean you should check the full set. If the pitching wedge flies too far from your sand wedge, you may need another wedge to fill the gap.
Quick recap
The best comparison is practical: which set gives you useful height, reliable distance, manageable misses, and confidence when the lie is less than perfect?