Free Driver Fitting

Find Your Driver in 60 Seconds

Best Value
Titleist GT2

Titleist · 2024

92%

GT2

Forgiveness8/10
Distance9/10

Stiff · 9°

Kai'li White 60

Shop GT2 →
Runner-Up
Ping G440 Max

Ping · 2025

94%

G440 Max

Forgiveness9/10
Distance8/10

Regular · 10.5°

Alta CB 55 (R)

Shop G440 →
Top Pick
TaylorMade Qi4D Max

TaylorMade · 2025

98%

Qi4D Max

Forgiveness10/10
Distance8/10

Regular · 10.5°

Speeder NX 40 (R)

Shop Qi4D Max →
3 personalized picks
Matched to your swing
Includes budget options

Covering all major brands

TitleistTaylorMadeCallawayPINGCobra

How the Driver Fitting Tool Works

Our free fitting tool asks 7 questions about your swing and immediately matches you to the driver category and specific models that will perform best for your game.

1

Answer 7 Quick Questions

Swing speed, miss direction, carry distance, strike consistency. The same data points a professional fitter would ask about.

2

Get Matched to Your Driver Type

Our algorithm identifies whether you need a Core Driver, Low Spin, Max Forgiveness, or Lightweight driver based on your swing profile.

3

See Your Top 3 Picks

A best-in-class new driver, a strong alternative, and a pre-owned value pick. All matched to your flex and swing characteristics.

Which Type of Driver Do You Need?

Not all drivers are built the same. The right driver category depends on your swing speed, ball flight, and what you want to fix.

Core Driver

The all-around standard driver that most golfers play and most brands build their lineup around. Balances distance, forgiveness, and workability for a wide range of players.

Best for: most golfers, mid handicappers, players who want distance and accuracy

Low Spin

For elite swingers (115+ mph) whose ball balloons too high and loses distance. Forward CG, compact head shape, and stiff shaft keep spin rates down and flight penetrating.

Best for: scratch golfers, fast swingers, those consistently hitting 115+ mph

Max Forgiveness

For golfers who consistently miss right (slice or fade). Heel-weighted CG, closed face angle, and high MOI promote a right-to-left ball flight and keep mis-hits in play.

Best for: slicers, faders, golfers who miss right regularly

Lightweight

For seniors, juniors, or anyone with a swing speed under 85 mph. Lighter shaft and head allow a faster swing without extra effort, adding distance through speed.

Best for: seniors, slower swing speeds, under 85 mph

What Golfers Are Saying

Real feedback from golfers who used the fitting tool.

Bought the G440 K on this recommendation. Best driver I've put in the bag. Gained about 15 yards carry and finally stopped losing balls right.

Mike D.

14 handicap

I've been fitted in-store twice and still felt like I was guessing. This told me exactly what shaft flex I needed and why. Ordered the Qi4D, couldn't be happier.

James T.

8 handicap

Didn't want to spend $600 on a new driver. The used pick saved me $280 and it still outperforms my old Stealth by a mile.

Tom R.

22 handicap

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a golf driver fitting?

A driver fitting matches the specs of a driver (loft, shaft flex, shaft weight, and head design) to your specific swing. The goal is to maximize distance and accuracy based on how you actually swing, not how the average golfer swings.

What driver is best for a slicer?

Golfers who slice should look for a draw-bias driver with an offset hosel and a closed face angle. Top picks for slicers include the TaylorMade Qi10 Max D, the Ping G440 SFT, and the Callaway Elyte. These drivers are engineered to reduce side spin and promote a straighter or right-to-left ball flight.

What is the best driver for a high handicapper?

High handicappers benefit most from a high-forgiveness driver with a large sweet spot and a low, deep center of gravity. The Ping G440 Max, TaylorMade Qi10 Max, and Callaway Paradym Ai Smoke Max are consistently rated the most forgiving drivers available.

What driver shaft flex do I need?

Shaft flex should match your swing speed. Under 85 mph: Senior or Regular flex. 85-95 mph: Regular flex. 95-105 mph: Stiff flex. 105-115 mph: Stiff or X-Stiff. 115+ mph: X-Stiff. Using the wrong flex adds spin and reduces accuracy. It's one of the most common fitting mistakes.

Is it worth buying a pre-owned driver?

Yes. For most golfers a one- or two-year-old driver is the best value in golf. Driver technology improves gradually, so a 2023 or 2024 model from a reputable pre-owned retailer like 2nd Swing can save you $200-$300 with virtually no performance difference.

How often should I upgrade my driver?

Most golfers get meaningful improvement every 3-5 years. If your driver is more than 5 years old you're likely leaving distance on the table. If it's 2-3 years old, an upgrade is nice but not necessary unless your swing has changed significantly.