
Distance and forgiveness. Every golfer wants both and every manufacturer claims to deliver both. But our 2026 driver testing tells a different story. If you plot every driver we tested on a Distance Versus Forgiveness chart, what you see are clubs pulling hard in opposite directions.
Here’s what the data shows and what it means when you’re choosing your next driver.
The forgiveness specialists
These drivers will produce the most consistent results and help you keep your golf ball in play. The problem is that they will come with a yardage trade-off.
The Srixon ZXi Max carries one of the highest forgiveness scores in our entire test but averaged 246.3 yards, nearly four yards below the field average. The TaylorMade Qi4D Max Lite is in the same camp, averaging 245.4 yards total. The most extreme example is the COBRA OPTM Max-D which averaged just 240.0 yards. That is more than 10 yards below the field average and a full 15 yards shorter than the longest driver in our test.
The Tour Edge Exotics Max is really strong in forgiveness and only gives up about five yards from the longest drivers in the test. It does a good job of offering forgiveness without sacrificing too much distance.
However, for golfers whose biggest problem is keeping the ball in play and hitting consistent shots, the distance trade-off can be worth it. Just go in knowing what you’re giving up.
The distance bombers
On the other end of the chart sit the drivers that will genuinely move the needle on distance.
The Callaway Quantum Max averaged 255.2 yards of total distance, the longest in our entire test. The Titleist GT4 averaged 252.6 yards and the Vice Golf VGD01+ and Wilson DYNAPWR Carbon both cracked 251 yards. All four sit toward the bottom of the field for forgiveness. These are drivers that reward a good swing and punish a bad one.
If you consistently find the center of the face, a distance bomber could be exactly what your game needs. If you don’t, the extra yards might come at too high a cost.
The ones that don’t force you to choose
A handful of drivers in our test managed to sit near the top of the field in both categories.
The TaylorMade Qi4D leads the pack here, posting elite distance and forgiveness numbers simultaneously, exactly why it tops our overall MGS Score rankings. The PING G440 LST is another strong option that delivers in both areas without a significant compromise in either.
There are also drivers that land right in the middle of the chart, not because they’re great at both, but because they’re average at both. The Mizuno JPX One, Wilson DYNAPWR Max+ and Ben Hogan PTx LST all fall into this category.
If your game needs real help in one area, a driver that’s mediocre at everything isn’t actually the safe choice. Identify what you need most and choose a driver that’s genuinely built to deliver it.
Final thoughts
Want to dig deeper into how every driver in this test performed? Head over to our full 2026 Best Drivers results where you’ll find complete scores across every category we tested.





