Want Bang For Your Buck? This Is The Best Value Driver Of 2025

Driver expert Joe Ferguson has been out testing out the Tour Edge C725 driver and the performance you get for the price blew him away…

Tour Edge C725 Driver Review
(Image credit: Future)
Golf Monthly Verdict

This is an excellent driver and the price makes it even more appealing. The combination of ball speed, adjustability, looks, and feel on offer here is fantastic, and when you consider it is available at $200 less than many of the major manufacturers, it is a mightily compelling proposition.

Reasons to buy
  • +

    Lively impact feel

  • +

    Strong launch monitor data

  • +

    Premium looks from every angle

Reasons to avoid
  • -

    Not everyone will like the look of the thick, short hosel

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In recent years, Tour Edge has really begun to establish itself as a very credible, high-performing brand at a significantly more digestible price point than many of the major manufacturers. Players like Bernhard Langer and many of his contemporaries on the PGA Champions Tour have been using Tour Edge equipment very successfully for some time. In this review, I am going to take a look at the new C725 driver to see if it can rival some of the best golf drivers in the game…

Photo of the Tour Edge C752 Driver from the back

(Image credit: Future)

In terms of the technology, this is very much a low-spin/low-launching driver, with features such as a 3D Diamond Face and 360-degree Ridgeback designed to provide optimal feel and maximize ball speed. Tour Edge has very much tried to blend a low-spin profile with more stability than typically available in that category of driver.

Photo of the Tour Edge C725 Driver from down the line view

(Image credit: Future)

With regards to the visual the Tour Edge Exotics C725 driver is a very premium-looking driver with a carbon fiber crown and a banner strip of matte black along the leading edge which looks excellent and frames the ball beautifully. It has a very rounded profile which always suits my eye, and overall is very impressive from this angle. My only negative - and this is very pedantic - is with the loft adapter. Much like with Mizuno models such as the ST-G, the adapter stops too abruptly for me before joining the shaft, lacking a small ferrule to help taper it down more subtly.

Photo of the Tour Edge C725 Driver at address

(Image credit: Future)

From a shelf appeal perspective, again Tour Edge has done a fine job. The adjustable weights are neatly tucked away and there is a real simplicity to the ‘in the bag’ angle that I very much enjoy. Not basic, just understated.

In terms of performance, the C725 was a genuine surprise to me. I don’t know what I expected but the FullSwing KIT launch monitor data was very impressive. While maybe not reaching the ball speed and distance numbers of a TaylorMade Qi35 or Callaway Elyte Triple Diamond, it is pretty close. On top of the impressive measurables, I enjoyed so much more about this driver, in particular the feel.

Photo of the face of the Tour Edge C752 Driver

(Image credit: Future)

A lively combination of power and feedback really struck the right chords with me and quite honestly the consistency of ball flight was up there with anything else I have tried in the low-spin category. In terms of that spin, I would put it in the middle grounds of aggression in terms of the rpm, averaging around 2250 for me personally, which was plenty low enough to offer a solid, penetrating ball flight. The C725 also has a weight port in the front of the head to allow the spin to be fine-tuned to your preference and I found it very effective.

Photo of the Tour Edge C725 Driver from the toe angle

(Image credit: Future)

There are eight available hosel settings that allow you to alter the lie, loft, and face angle to get you dialed in even further. There really isn't a shape or trajectory this driver can't produce, all while sending your ball a competitive distance down the fairway.

Overall, I couldn’t be much more impressed with what Tour Edge has created here with the C725. When you consider the speed, adjustability, premium visuals and the solid, powerful feel on offer here for $400, the value for money is genuinely exceptional.

Joe Ferguson
Staff Writer

 Joe has worked in the golf industry for nearly 20 years in a variety of roles. After a successful amateur career being involved in England squads at every age group, Joe completed his PGA degree qualification in 2014 as one of the top ten graduates in his training year and subsequently went on to become Head PGA Professional at Ryder Cup venue The Celtic Manor Resort. Equipment has always been a huge passion of Joe’s, and during his time at Celtic Manor, he headed up the National Fitting Centres for both Titleist and Taylormade.  He’s excited to bring his knowledge of hardware to Golf Monthly in the form of equipment reviews and buying advice. 

Joe lives in North Devon and still plays sporadically on the PGA West region circuit. His best round in recent years came earlier in 2023 where he managed a 9 under par 63 at Trevose GC in a Devon & Cornwall PGA Tournament.

Joe's current What's In The Bag? 

Driver: Switch between Ping G430 Max 10K & TaylorMade Qi10 - both with Fujikura Ventus Black 6-X

Fairway wood 1: TaylorMade BRNR Copper Mini Driver - Fujikura Ventus Black 7-X

Fairway wood 2: Callaway Paradym Ai Smoke TD 5 Wood - Fujikura Ventus Black 8-X

Irons: TaylorMade P7CB 3-PW with Dynamic Gold Tour Issue X100 shafts

Wedges: Callaway Opus 50, 54, and 60 degrees - Project X LS 6.0 shafts

Putter: Odyssey Toe Up #9

Ball: TaylorMade 2024 TP5x 

Grips: Golf Pride Tour Velvet 60R

Bag: Vessel Player IV Pro DXR Stand