Callaway Apex Ti Fusion, Ti Fusion 250 bring titanium tech to a wide range of players
Callaway’s new Apex Ti Fusion irons use a titanium faces and forged bodies to offer speed, consistency, and forged feel in two different shapes.
David Dusek- Callaway's new Apex Ti Fusion irons come in two models: the Ti Fusion for skilled players and the Ti Fusion 250 for mid-handicappers.
- Both models feature a titanium face brazed to a forged steel body for a blend of speed and control.
- The Ti Fusion irons offer a compact shape, while the Ti Fusion 250 has a larger, more forgiving profile.
Gear: Callaway Apex Ti Fusion, Apex Ti Fusion 250 irons
Price: $350 per club with True Temper Dynamic Gold Mid steel shafts and Golf Pride Tour Velvet grips (available in 4-iron through attack wedge),
Specs: Titanium face brazed to a forged steel body, internal tungsten weighting, available in chrome plated and darker finishes
Available: July 9 (pre-sale); July 25 (in stores)
Who It’s For: The Apex Ti Fusion is geared toward skilled players who want speed with control; the Ti Fusion 250 is for mid-handicappers seeking high-tech forgiveness with forged feel
What You Should Know: Callaway’s Ti Fusion platform pushes multi-material construction further with a unique titanium face design and two shaping profiles—one compact, one more forgiving
The Deep Dive: Callaway’s Apex family continues to evolve, and this summer it’s expanding with the release of the Apex Ti Fusion and Ti Fusion 250 irons—two siblings built on the same foundation, but tuned for different types of golfers.
Like the original Ti Fusion irons released in 2024, at the core of both models is a unique titanium face brazed to a forged steel body —a construction technique that Callaway has made its own. Titanium has been used in irons before, but typically in clubs designed to generate significantly more speed for less accomplished players. In the Ti Fusion line, Callaway’s engineers have managed to pair the face’s high-speed potential with structural stability and a solid feel. That blend translates into irons that are fast, but not unpredictable. The result is a consistent launch, repeatable spin, and a sound that feels closer to a forged iron than a springy distance club.
If that sounds like a blend of high-tech performance and traditional feedback, it is. And the two models split from there.

The Apex Ti Fusion is shaped for better players who typically prefer a compact head, thinner topline, and reduced offset. It’s a better-player’s distance iron—a tool for golfers who strike the ball well but want added consistency and speed without changing into a larger frame.
The Ti Fusion 250 extends that platform to a wider audience. It has a longer blade length, thicker topline, and wider sole. Those elements improve forgiveness and encourage a higher launch for players who don’t always find the center of the face. In terms of performance profile, it aligns closely with the Ai200 irons, but again, with the added benefits of the Ti Fusion’s hot face and brazed construction.
Both Ti Fusion models will be available in two finishes: a darker tone similar to last year’s release, and a new chrome-plated version. The shift to chrome wasn’t just cosmetic; Callaway had to develop a new plating process that could adhere to reactive titanium. But for players who prefer the look and durability of traditional silver irons, the result is worth it.
What separates the Ti Fusion and Ti Fusion 250 from the Ai-series Apex irons isn’t just the material—it’s the feeling. Where the Ai 200 and 300 irons use Smart Face technology to optimize speed and spin across the face, the Ti Fusion line leans into its materials and construction. It’s a more premium build, with an emphasis on solid feel at contact, enhanced sound, and a refined shape that doesn’t scream game-improvement club, even if it delivers plenty of help.
At $350 per club, these are positioned as high-end offerings, but Callaway is betting that golfers who care about material innovation—and the way it feels at impact—will notice the difference.