TaylorMade released their new Qi4D drivers and metalwoods, focusing on giving players the fastest and most fittable drivers.
TaylorMade is slamming the doors on the driver forgiveness battles. We’re back to an all-out speed war and TaylorMade thinks you’ll be fastest when your driver is the best fit for you.
The company is unveiling its new Qi4D line of drivers, fairways and rescues with a renewed focus on creating the fastest and most fittable clubs possible.
“When we had decisions to make - when there was a jump ball between going faster or somewhere else - we chose faster,” Brian Bazzel, TaylorMade's Vice President of Product Creation, told GOLF. “Every golfer seeks speed. Even the smallest gain, they'll take it.”
The new Qi4D drivers have already made a splash on global tours since their release on the USGA conforming list two months ago. All three of the world’s top players - Scottie Scheffler, Rory McIlroy and Tommy Fleetwood - have made quick switches to the new driver.
Keep reading below for more on the TaylorMade Qi4D line of metalwoods, including my take on the release.
What’s actually new with the TaylorMade Qi4D woods - and why you should care
Qi4D: The four dimensions of distance
The name Qi4D continues TaylorMade’s Qi “Quest for Inertia” naming convention, but the “4D” represents the infusion of speed with the four dimensions of distance.
Face: The Qi4D is now the fifth generation of TaylorMade’s carbon face technology, and it’s been refined with a tighter roll radius to achieve more consistent spin when you miss up and down the face. The makeup of the 60 layers of carbon fiber was also tweaked, allowing the Qi4D to have more than 50 percent of the face be high COR (where the fastest ball speeds come from) for the first time. This was also aided by a new and improved Speed Pocket design to help with low strikes on the face.
Shaft: While TaylorMade doesn’t believe the shaft is the engine of the club, they do believe the shaft plays a major role in steering the club head to the ball. So TaylorMade is reinventing its stock shaft program in partnership with Mitsubishi and three new REAX shaft profiles. The three profiles - Red, Blue and White - correspond to the shaft’s tip stiffness and TaylorMade’s fitting philosophy, which was first utilized with last year’s Qi35, to match tip stiffness with a player’s swing profile.
A player with late release and face rotation gets matched to the REAX Red, an early release and low rotation to White, and Blue players fall in the middle. TaylorMade also reorganized its aftermarket shaft matrix into these same categories to help players get the most possible speed out of their Qi4D driver.
Head: One thing Bazzel mentioned is that while TaylorMade must keep their drivers within USGA limits, they don’t regulate how fast a player can swing. They saw aerodynamics as an opportunity. Each shape of the Qi4D driver models was carefully crafted to be faster through the air. All three shapes are new, the LS getting the edges softened and the inertia generator tucked in to promote better aerodynamics and the Max taking on a slightly more pear-shaped look. The most notable shape change is with the core model, which adopts the “Plus 4” shape profile sported by the Tour-only (Dot) heads used by Rory McIlroy and Scottie Scheffler.
Fitting: There’s more to this dimension, but with Qi4D, TaylorMade isn’t just trying to give you a driver; they’re trying to give you your driver, custom fit to you in every way possible. From shaft to loft sleeve, all the way to weights.
The core Qi4D model features four TAS ports, the same weighting system as the R7 Quad Mini driver, and original R7 Quad drivers to help players dial in optimal CG location either front-to-back or heel-to-toe. For the first time, both the LS and Max heads each have two, front-to-back TAS weight ports to adjust vertical CG location, while the Max Lite head has a single forward TAS port to adjust swingweight.
For the second year in a row, TaylorMade’s fitting heads will have reflective markers built into the face, and TaylorMade is giving TrackMan exact head dimensions to accurately capture delivery data.
Fastest and most fittable drivers
The Qi4D launch is as much a driver launch as it is a refresh of TaylorMade’s fitting philosophy, which they started to break out last year.
In the past, shafts were fit based on speed, launch and spin. Now, TaylorMade is leveraging more than 11 million captured data points and found golfers perform best when the shaft profile, or tip stiffness, matches their swing profiles. They’re fitting shafts to get you to hit it straight, not to get ball flight to go up and down.
Players with late releases and high rates of rotation do better with softer and more active tip sections. Early releases and low rotation do better with stiffer tips and mid releases go somewhere in between. Their data showed that about 60 percent of golfers fall into the middle of the bell curve while 20 percent on each side were low or high rotators.
"We're really trying to move away from talking about shafts in terms of high launch and low launch,” Matthew Simone, the director of TaylorMade’s custom program, said. “You don't hold onto the clubhead; you hold onto the shaft. The shaft allows you to deliver the head. When the profile matches the swing, you get much more consistent delivery, consistent impact location and a consistent start line. Even higher-handicap golfers are actually pretty consistent path-wise; what gets wonky is face delivery.”
TaylorMade has developed an algorithm that can take all of these data points into account, namely rotation rate, and compare it with the shafts they have in their matrix and get a REAX shaft recommendation that puts the golfer nearly to a final fit.
Once you have a shaft to test with, you can start fine-tuning which head to use and then eventually pulling the levers offered by the adjustable weights and loft sleeve.
“With movable weight and loft sleeve adjustments, you can take 300 RPMs off spin, change curvature or eliminate a miss,” said Andrew Oldknow, TaylorMade’s director of product creation. “And the key for us is that when we make an adjustment, the consumer actually sees the ball flight change - it's not subtle. They know immediately that something is working."
With so many different settings combinations - 128 in the Qi4D core driver alone - it’s more important than ever that when you buy a Qi4D driver, you work with a fitter to dial in the proper setting and shaft for you so you can get the most out of it.
Adding options in fairways and rescues
The fitting options don’t stop at the drivers.
TaylorMade fairway woods already dominate the PGA Tour, with the now two-year-old Qi10 fairway wood being in the bag of all four major winners last year.
So how do you improve on what is already so good?
New this year, TAS weight ports were added to all of the fairway wood and hybrid models, with the Qi4D Tour getting three to move CG. The entirety of the Tour and Core lofts were also given loft sleeves, all part of the renewed fitting focus.
“Fairway woods are actually more sensitive to fit than drivers in a lot of cases,” Oldknow said. “You're hitting them from the turf more often, so CG placement, face angle, and sole design all play a bigger role. If the fit is off, you'll see it immediately in strike location and launch. When it's right, the club becomes one of the most reliable weapons in the bag.”
While much of the hype on Tour recently has been about high-lofted fairways over hybrids, those clubs can still serve an important role as gapping tools.
Like the fairways, all of the rescues now have TAS ports to dial in swingweight.
"Rescues aren't meant to be one-to-one iron replacements anymore,” he said. “They're really gap-filling tools. As iron lofts get stronger, we need something that launches higher, spins appropriately and gives you consistent carry distances. That's where a rescue fits perfectly - it bridges the gap between fairway woods and irons."
The TaylorMade Qi4D lineup
All driver models are available with stock REAX shafts in three profiles (HR/Red, MR/Blue, LR/White) in 40 to 60 g weights. Fairway woods and rescues have just a single REAX profile and range from 40 to 75 g for fairways and 55 to 85 g for rescues, which are made in conjunction with KBS.
Qi4D (Core) Driver
What is it: The core head has adopted TaylorMade’s “Plus4” shape through extensive Tour feedback and aerodynamic simulations to make it move faster through the air. This is the first TaylorMade driver since 2007’s R7 SuperQuad (unless you count last year’s R7 Mini driver) to have four movable weights. The stock configuration has two 9 g weights in the rear and two 4 g weights forward.
Available lofts: 8.0° (RH only), 9.0°, 10.5°, 12.0°
Who it’s for: The Qi4D core model is going to be the catch-all driver that will fit the most players. No longer will better players shy away from a wider, more game-improvement shape thanks to the new pear shape.
Qi4D LS Driver
What is it: The LS retains a lot of the same DNA from the Qi35, but lots of aerodynamic work was done to make this driver cut through the air quicker to help you gain clubhead speed. This is the longest driver in the lineup, and, in testing conducted by our partners at True Spec Golf, fitters found this model cut spin by 200-400 RPMs across all three fitters’ swing speeds (92 mph, 103 and 115.6). It also has the flattest lie angle and will be the most fade-biased. The LS has two TAS weight ports with the stock 15 g weight forward and 4 g weight in the rear.
Available lofts: 8.0° (RH only), 9.0°, 10.5°
Who it’s for: This is for players who want absolute speed and distance or players who need to cut spin because of a negative attack angle, out-to-in club path or other factors.
Qi4D Max Driver
What is it: While the Max head is no longer at the 10k inertia threshold, TaylorMade says finding the appropriate fit will more than make up for a slight decrease in MOI. “A perfectly fit driver can showcase more performance gains than a slight increase in inertia or a small year-on-year head improvement,” Bazzel said. The collar of the Qi4D Max is made of forged and machined aircraft-grade 7075 aluminum, lighter than titanium, which allows the addition of forward and rear TAS weight ports for the first time. The stock position has a 13 g in the rear (which helps produce a slight draw bias) and 4 g in the front. It is the first modern TaylorMade driver to include no titanium.
Available lofts: 9.0°, 10.5°, 12.0°
Who it’s for: As the name implies, the Max driver is best for players who struggle to find the center of the face or need more help generating launch and spin.
Qi4D Max Lite Driver
What is it: A lightweight version of the Max head for players who need a little boost for clubhead speed. It comes stock with a REAX 40 g shaft, the lightest available, to complete the lightweight components package. There’s also a Max Lite Women’s version.
Available lofts: 10.5°, 12.0°
Who is for: Slower and potentially senior and female golfers who need help to generate speed and launch.
Qi4D (Core) Fairway Wood
What is it: The workhorse of the fairway woods lineup (185 cc) now features an adjustable hosel in every model. The shape was refined through Tour feedback to tuck in protrusions at the heel and toe as well as sit slightly more open at address. The standard lie angle has also been flattened by one degree. A single TAS weight port (stock 8 g) allows fine-tuning swingweight adjustments.
Available Lofts: 3-wood (15°), 3-HL (16.5°)((RH only)), 5-wood (18°), 7-wood (21°), 9-wood (24° ((RH only))
Who is for: The club will fit anyone from a Tour player to someone seeking a versatile fairway wood for the tee and the deck. The flatter lie angle should make it a touch more neutral than the previous generation.
Qi4D Tour Fairway Wood
What is it: A more compact and adjustable option with three TAS weight ports (one 15 g and two 4g stock), the Qi4D Tour (175 cc) is constructed with a titanium face for faster ball speeds. There’s also a 65 g tungsten weight behind the face to kill spin and boost launch.
Available Lofts: 3-wood (15°), 5-wood (18°), 7-wood (21°)
Who it’s for: Players who prefer a deeper face on their fairway woods and want ultimate adjustability. It would also be good for players who want mini driver speeds, but a more playable option off the deck.
Qi4D Max Fairway Wood
What is it: Qi4D Max (200 cc) is the most forgiving and highest launching of the bunch, and features one TAS port (8 g stock) at the rear for added stability and MOI. The larger head size allowed extra mass to be repositioned at the perimeter. Both the 3- and 5-woods have 2.0˚ loft sleeves.
Available Lofts: 3-wood (15°), 5-wood (18°), 7-wood (21°), 9-wood (24° ((RH only))
Who it’s for: A golfer seeking ultimate stability and launch from their fairway woods.
Qi4D Max Lite Fairway Wood
What is it: The same construction as the Max, but with light components and a 4 g TAS weight standard. Also available in a women’s spec.
Available Lofts: 3-wood (15°), 5-wood (18°), 7-wood (21°), 9-wood (24° ((RH only))
Who is for: Older and slower golfers who need help with launch.
Qi4D (Core) Rescue
What is it: The core model rescue is the most compact in the lineup and has the thinnest topline. A lone TAS weight port (8 g stock) sits in the center of the club to balance out the CG and keep shots from ballooning up in the air.
Available Lofts: 2-hybrid (17° ((RH only)), 3-hybrid (19°), 4-hybrid (22°), 5-hybrid (25°)
Who is for: A player who struggles with high-lofted fairway woods and wants a versatile option between their irons and 3-wood.
Qi4D Max Rescue
What is it: A larger and more inviting profile, the Qi4D Max Rescue is the highest launching rescue in the lineup in part thanks to a deeper TAS port (8 g stock).
Available Lofts: 3-hybrid (20°), 4-hybrid (23°), 5-hybrid (26°), 6-hybrid (30° ((RH only)), 7-hybrid (34° ((RH only))
Who it’s for: Steeper players who struggle with high-lofted fairway woods or want to start replacing mid-irons.
Qi4D Max Lite Rescue
What is it: The same shape as the Qi4D Max, but with light components.
Available Lofts: 4-hybrid (23°), 5-hybrid (26°), 6-hybrid (30° ((RH only)), 7-hybrid (34° ((RH only))
Who it’s for: Slow and steep golfers who need a lighter package to get the ball in the air.
My take: The best Qi4D driver is the one you’re fit for … and it’s really fast
Typically, you think about stock clubs and stock shafts being designed to fit everybody, so they actually end up fitting nobody because everyone swings the golf club so differently.
What TaylorMade has done here is not just create a club head that helps you hit the golf ball farther, but they’re treating the whole golf club as a system with each component needing to be dialed in to help you play your best. Basically, their idea is that the fastest driver is the one you’re best fit for.
Just with one shaft in the Qi4D core head alone, there are 128 possible configurations between the FCT loft sleeve and the quad TAS weight system. I literally think I could drive myself crazy trying them all (in fact, I have). For me, I’ve really enjoyed how moving both heavy weights forward allows you to gain speed, but still retain some stability because the forward weights are spread out toward the heel and toe.
With all the fitting technology baked into the Qi4D line, it’s more important than ever that you go get fit for one so you can unlock everything it’s truly meant to do - and to see how far you can really hit it.
The adjustability on all of these products is next level, from the adjustable weighting on the drivers, to the loft sleeves on all the fairway woods except the high-lofted Max heads, TaylorMade is really giving every tool possible to find a fit with their metal woods.
I’d also be remiss if I didn’t say how much I love the new shape of the core model. This was the shape all the Tour players clamoured for, and it’s a welcome sight compared to my previous LS. It keeps the same profile, while looking a little bigger and friendlier.
Overall, TaylorMade has created a very comprehensive lineup here that is probably going to kick off an epic speed war for 2026.
Price and Availability
TaylorMade’s new Qi4D drivers, fairway woods and rescues are available for pre-order starting Jan. 8 and will arrive at retail locations on Jan. 29.
The four driver models are priced at $649.99, fairway woods cost $379.99 with Qi4D Tour going for $449.99 and rescues are $299 each. New this year, customers can purchase launch monitor-enabled drivers, with reflective fitting markers built into the face for $699.99.
Want to find the best driver for your game in 2026? Find a club-fitting location near you at True Spec Golf.
The post TaylorMade’s Qi4D driver bet: Distance comes from the best fit appeared first on Golf.
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