Titleist Pro V1x 2023 Golf Ball Review

By , Digital Editor
  • At a glance

  • TG Rating 5 out of 5
  • Owner Rating Not yet rated
  • Pros

    – Consistently long
    – Exceptional spin rates on approach shots
    – High flight and soft landing
    – Tighter dispersion than the 2021 model
    – Played by a host of the world's best players

  • Cons

    – More than £4 per golf ball is a lot for most amateurs
    – Urethane cover marks quite easily

What we say...

The 2023 Titleist Pro V1x golf ball uses an improved core for more distance and consistency.

Introduced on Tour last September, the 2023 Titleist Pro V1x – arguably the best golf ball in the game – had been in development since the end of 2021.

Titleist‘s design brief was to lower long-game spin while maintaining spin levels around the greens and they say the new Pro V1x, launched alongside a new Pro V1, is “demonstrably better” than the 2021 Pro V1 and Pro V1x thanks to a new high-gradient core design.

The 2023 Titleist Pro V1x golf ball.

The reimagined dual core in the four-piece Titleist Pro V1x is built to be firmer on the outside and progressively softer on the inside. This promotes fast speeds, low long-game spin and tighter dispersion while maintaining high levels of greenside spin.

The new core designs are inspired by the brand’s custom Pro V1 Left Dot and Pro V1x Left Dash, which both use high gradient cores and are the choice of several players on tour.

The 348 dimple pattern from the previous Titleist Pro V1x golf ball has remained in the 2023 model.

If it ain’t broke

Several of the key innovations from Titleist’s 2021 iteration remain in the 2023 model, with the cast thermoset urethane cover, the tetrahedral dimple design, and the speed-amplifying high-flex casing layer,

The urethane cover on the Pro V1x is created by mixing two components, with the liquid urethane cast into Titleist-manufactured cavities to form the appropriate dimple pattern into the cover. Titleist say the precise timing and temperature are integral to the consistency of golf’s No.1 ball.

The 348-dimple design was a huge change in the 2021 ball and, unsurprisingly, that remains on the new model to optimize aerodynamics. The casing works with the new core to reduce excess long-game spin, while combining with the cover to create greenside spin.

How the cores of the Titleist Pro V1 and Pro V1x cores differ.

Key Tech

As well as being one of the best tour golf balls, Pro V1 is among the favorite balls for club golfers. But how is the 2023 model better than previous generations?

High Gradient Core Design

An all-new, reimagined core in the new Pro V1x is built to be firmer on the outside and progressively softer on the inside, which promotes fast speeds and low long-game spin. The new cores take inspiration from the popular Pro V1 Left Dot and Pro V1x Left Dash – both of which feature high gradient cores and are the choice of several players on professional tours.

New Dual-Core Dimension

There has been a change in the 2023 Pro V1x dual-core design, with the inner core increasing center volume by 44%, from 1” to 1.13” in size. This works in concert with the high gradient, as the larger and softer center helps to drive down long-game spin and increase stability through the air.

Speed Amplifying High-Flex Casing Layer

The casing layer interacts with the high gradient cores to further neutralize excess spin while combining with the soft cast urethane cover to provide unparalleled greenside spin and control.

Cast Thermoset Urethane Cover

The urethane cover on the Titleist Pro V1x utilizes a proprietary thermoset process. Two separate components are mixed, and the liquid urethane is cast into Titleist-manufactured cavities which form the appropriate dimple pattern into the cover. The precise timing of the curing process and temperature are integral to the consistency of the urethane and the performance of the ball.

Spherically-tiled Tetrahedral Dimple Designs

With a 348-dimple design on the Pro V1x, the golf balls have optimized aerodynamics to fly consistently and far. The Pro V1x’s dimple pattern allows the ball to launch and fly in a slightly higher window than the Pro V1.

Inside the Titleist Pro V1 and Pro V1x.

What Titleist say about the Pro V1 and Pro V1x

Mike Madson, Titleist’s Senior Director Golf Ball Research and Engineering

“We’re looking for consistency in every element of golf ball construction, from the aerodynamics down to the core.

“We always want the ball flying in the same window regardless of how it’s oriented, and we want the ball to produce consistent launch, spin, and speed on every shot.

“Consistency means when a golfer tees up a Pro V1 or Pro V1x, every properly executed shot they make is going to deliver the performance they expect and the performance they trust.”

Frederick Waddell, Titleist’s Director of Golf Ball Product Management

“For a Titleist golf ball to be new, it must be better. For us to call it a new Pro V1, it needs to be demonstrably better than the prior generation.

“We go through a rigorous testing and validation process to ensure the performance improvements developed by our world-class R&D team are recognized by the golfer when they put it in play and experience the product.”

Will Zalatoris ball

Will Zalatoris, PGA Tour star and Titleist staff player

“The golf ball is the engine of everything I do equipment-wise. So, the big thing that I look for whenever I’m testing balls, is ‘Does it do exactly what I think it’s going to do?’

“When I switched to the [2023 Pro V1x], it had the exact same reactions around the greens, I actually gained a little bit of distance with the driver and it was actually better through the wind.

“My dispersion also went from maybe a five, six yard loss to a one, two or three – the change was a no brainer.”

Jordan Spieth, three-time Major champion and Titleist staff player

“The Pro V1 and ProV1x, as a whole, are the best balls in golf, so it’s hard to say, ‘How are you going to possibly make that ball better when it’s already the best?’

“I believe when you think of anything being the best, you’re really going against yourself. You’re trying to beat your former self versus worrying about the competition. And I think Titleist does that. They continue to push being the best and continuing to stay No. 1, and that’s a really difficult thing to do.”

Justin Thomas won the PGA Championship for the second time with his victory at Southern Hills.

Who uses Titleist Pro V1 and Pro V1x golf balls?

Titleist’s flagship balls were played by all four Major winners in 2022, with Scottie Scheffler using the Pro V1 for his victory at the Masters and as he rose to No.1 in the world. Former World No.1 Justin Thomas used the Pro V1x as he lifted his second PGA Championship before Matt Fitzpatrick secured his maiden Major at the US Open with the Pro V1x. And there was another Grand Slam success for the Pro V1x at The 150th Open, where Cameron Smith sealed the Claret Jug.

On the PGA and DP World Tours, it’s more a case of who doesn’t use a Pro V1 or Pro V1x. Some of the biggest names include Jordan Spieth, Will Zalatoris, Viktor Hovland, Tony Finau, Adam Scott, Tom Kim, Max Homa, Cameron Young, Tyrrell Hatton, Seamus Power and Sungjae Im.

Titleist's 2023 golf balls family.

Which Titleist golf ball should I play?

With three different Pro V1 golf balls and eight balls targeting different standards of player in their 2023 family, it’s tough to know which Titliest ball is right for your game.

If you want to play the No.1 ball in golf then the Pro V1 is the softer ball and offers the best combination of distance, spin, and feel with a penetrating flight.

Pro V1x flies higher and spins more with irons and wedges, while still offering low spin on longer shots.

Pro V1x Left Dash is designed for players seeking a high flight similar to Pro V1x with dramatically lower full-swing spin and firmer feel.

It’s also worth considering the Titleist AVX, which is a medium compression ball for players seeking a durable premium option that feels softer than the Pro V1.

The 2023 Titleist Pro V1x golf ball is available in white and yellow.

Titleist Pro V1x availability

The 2023 Pro V1x is available in white and yellow. The white balls are available in numbers 1-4, 5-8 and matching double digits from 00-99. The yellow ball is available in 1-4 only.

The white balls are available from February 3, 2023, with the yellow balls available from February 17. They all have an RRP of £50 / $54.99 per dozen, meaning Titleist have kept the price the same as the 2021 model

Robot test data and verdict: Titleist Pro V1x

Driver 85mph SwingTitleist Pro V1x
Ball speed (MPH) / Launch angle (º)123.5 / 13.3
Backspin (RPM)2,646
Carry (YDS)190
Driver 100mph Swing
Ball speed (MPH) / Launch angle (º)145.1 / 12.4 (T3)
Backspin (RPM)2,539
Carry (YDS)240.6
Driver 115mph Swing
Ball speed (MPH) / Launch angle (º)166.7 / 11.1
Backspin (RPM)2,048
Carry (YDS)277.9
7-Iron
Ball speed (MPH) / Launch angle (º)107.1 / 20.4
Backspin (RPM)5,835
Height (YDS)31
Descent angle (º)44.7
Carry (YDS)151
Wedge
Backspin (RPM)8,046 (2)
Shot area (SQ YDS)4.7
Carry (YDS)104.3
Average Shot Area
Averaged over driver, 7-iron and PW25.4 SQ YDS

VERDICT: Titleist Pro V1x (2023)

In all the robot golf ball testing we’ve ever completed the Pro V1x has come out as a more favorable choice than the Pro V1, as unless you put a hefty premium on a softer feel or lower ball flight it’s really hard to ignore how the X is generally faster, longer and higher spin with the irons and wedges (not from the greenside), so it’s hard to argue it’s not a better choice across the bag on a spreadsheet.

If you like the feeling of firmer X style balls then you really should pay attention to how the Pro V1x compares to the Callaway Chrome Tour X and TaylorMade TP5x. Compared to Callaway’s Tour X the Pro V1x was 4.87 yards shorter, when averaged over our 100 and 115 mph driver speeds. It also produced less iron spin (358rpm) and missed out (to the Chrome Tour X) on maxing out wedge spin (34rpm) too. With an average shot area of 25.4 sq yards, the Pro V1x as you’d expect was well within our test average for accuracy but there’s no escaping the Callaway with an average of 19.2sq yds was 24.4% tighter.

Where the Pro V1x will set you back 0.21p yard or £4.17 per ball the TaylorMade TP5x drops that to 0.19p a yard or £3.75 per ball, so if you buy 6 dozen for the 2024 season you’ll save £30.06 by playing TaylorMade.

Our data has the TP5x out gunning the Pro V1x at 100 and 115mph driver swing speeds it’s also 3.2 yards longer with a 7-iron. The Pro V1x is higher spinning with the iron (367rpm) and wedge (440rpm), whereas the TP5x flies higher and has a steeper descent angle, so essentially you will see similar results but shots reach their destination in slightly different ways.

Product Information

Titleist Pro V1x

RRP £50 per dozen | VIEW UK OFFER / $54.99 per dozen | VIEW US OFFER

Construction Four-piece ball

Cover Cast urethane elastomer

Colours White, yellow

Availability White – Numbers 1-4, 5-8, 00-99. Yellow – Numbers 1-4 only.

First released: February 3, 2023

www.titleist.co.uk

Photo Gallery

Your Reviews

Titleist Balls User Reviews