×
Sports
Fitness & Outdoors
Content
Golf · Equipment Analysis · Report #TSP-G-007

The Only Wedge Guide You Need: Bounce, Grind, Loft, and When They Matter

Wedges are the most misunderstood clubs in the bag. Here's the complete breakdown of bounce angles, grind types, and loft gapping.

Woman in red and khaki golfing outfit standing by a cart, holding a golf club on a...

Why Wedges Are the Most Misunderstood Clubs in Your Bag

Most golfers can tell you their driver loft to the tenth of a degree but have no idea what bounce angle their sand wedge has. This is backwards. Per Arccos Golf data from 150,000+ golfers, shots from 100 yards and in account for 65% of all strokes. Your wedge setup directly determines your scoring ability.

The three variables that define a wedge — loft, bounce, and grind — interact to create a tool for specific conditions and swing types. Here's how to decode all three.

Loft Gapping: The Foundation

Your wedge lofts should create even distance gaps of 10–15 yards between clubs. The most common mistake is having a gap between your pitching wedge and your next wedge.

WedgeTypical LoftDistance (avg male amateur)Primary Use
Pitching Wedge43–47°110–130 yardsFull approach shots
Gap Wedge50–52°95–110 yardsFill the gap (hence the name)
Sand Wedge54–56°80–95 yardsBunkers, pitch shots
Lob Wedge58–60°60–80 yardsFlop shots, tight lies around green

Step 1: Check your pitching wedge loft (stamped on the club or in manufacturer specs). Modern game-improvement PW lofts have crept down to 43–44°, creating bigger gaps. If your PW is 44°, you need: 48° GW → 52° SW → 56° or 58° LW.

Bounce: The Spec Nobody Understands

Bounce is the angle between the leading edge and the lowest point of the sole. It's the "rudder" that prevents the club from digging into turf or sand.

  • Low bounce (4–6°): Less sole contact with ground. Best for firm conditions, tight lies, and players who sweep/pick the ball. Increased risk of "blading" shots.
  • Mid bounce (7–10°): Versatile for most conditions and swing types. The safe default for most amateurs.
  • High bounce (10–14°): More sole contact prevents digging. Best for soft conditions, fluffy bunker sand, and players who take deep divots.

Bob Vokey (Titleist's legendary wedge designer) explains it simply: "Bounce is your friend. It forgives mistakes. Most amateurs need more bounce than they think." If you're unsure, go with mid-to-high bounce. You can always open the face to reduce effective bounce, but you can't add bounce to a low-bounce wedge.

Grind Types: Shaping the Sole

Grind refers to material removed from the sole to change how the club interacts with different surfaces. Major manufacturers offer 3–6 grinds per wedge model:

GrindSole ShapeBest ForSkill Level
Full / Standard (S)No material removed, full sole widthFull shots, bunkers, soft turfAll levels
Mid (M)Slight heel and toe reliefVersatile — open/close faceMid to low handicap
Low / C-grindSignificant heel and toe reliefTight lies, firm turf, shot varietyLow handicap / creative players
Wide (K)Extra-wide soleSoft sand, fluffy lies, high handicapHigh handicap / beginners

Cobra KING Wedge EDITOR'S CHOICE

Cobra's KING Wedge is a standout for mid-handicappers — available in 6 loft options (50° to 60°) with three sole grinds. The CNC-milled face delivers consistent spin even from tight lies. Excellent choice if you're building a 3-wedge setup on a budget.

~$150 Shop at Cobra Golf →

Cobra Golf via CJ Affiliate

Building Your Wedge Setup

3-Wedge Setup (Most Common)

Best for: Golfers who carry 14 clubs and want room for extra woods/hybrids. PW (stock) + 50° GW + 54° SW.

4-Wedge Setup (Scoring Focused)

Best for: Players who want maximum short-game versatility. PW (stock) + 48° GW + 52° SW + 56–58° LW. This is the most common tour setup — 78% of PGA Tour players carry 4 wedges (per Titleist tour data).

Bounce/Grind by Position

  • Gap wedge (48–50°): Mid bounce, standard grind — this is primarily a full-shot club
  • Sand wedge (54–56°): Mid-to-high bounce, standard or wide grind — needs to handle bunkers
  • Lob wedge (58–60°): Low-to-mid bounce, mid grind — needs versatility for open-face shots

Product Recommendations

Titleist Vokey SM10 — The industry standard. Six grind options, available in every loft from 46° to 62°. Tour-proven performance. The F-grind in 56° with 10° bounce is the most versatile single wedge in golf.
~$180 per wedge Check Price on Amazon
Program: Amazon Associates / PGA Tour Superstore
Cleveland CBX ZipCore Full Face — Best wedge for high handicappers. Cavity-back design adds forgiveness on mis-hits. Wide sole with mid bounce prevents digging.
~$140 per wedge Check Price on Amazon
Program: Amazon Associates / Cleveland Golf Direct
Callaway Jaws Raw — Aggressive groove design for maximum spin. Raw face (no chrome plating) rusts over time, increasing friction and spin. Popular among mid-to-low handicap players.
~$170 per wedge Check Price on Amazon
Program: Callaway Direct / Amazon Associates
Kirkland Signature Wedge Set (3-piece) — The Costco value play. 52°/56°/60° with quality CNC-milled faces. Made by the same OEM as several premium brands. Absurd value.
~$120 for 3 wedges Check Price on Amazon
Program: Costco Affiliate

Common Mistakes

Mistake #1: Not knowing your pitching wedge loft. If you don't know your PW loft, your entire wedge gapping strategy is built on guesswork. Check it — it's stamped on the club or listed on the manufacturer website.
Mistake #2: Using too low bounce in bunkers. Low-bounce wedges in soft sand dig in and cause fat shots. If your home course has soft, fluffy bunker sand, you need 12°+ bounce on your sand wedge.
Mistake #3: Carrying a 60° lob wedge you can't hit. The lob wedge is the hardest club to hit consistently. If you chunk or blade it more than 30% of the time, drop to a 58° or stick with your 56° for greenside shots.

Sources & Further Reading

  1. Vokey, B. "Understanding Bounce and Grind." Titleist Vokey Wedge Fitting. titleist.com/vokey
  2. Arccos Golf. "Strokes Gained Analysis: Where Scoring Happens." arccosgolf.com, 2025.
  3. Cleveland Golf. "Wedge Fitting Guide: Bounce, Grind, and Loft Selection." clevelandgolf.com
  4. GolfWRX. "PGA Tour Wedge Setup Data 2024–2025." golfwrx.com
  5. MyGolfSpy. "2025 Wedge Test: Most Wanted." mygolfspy.com
  6. TXG (YouTube). "How to Gap Your Wedges Properly — Launch Monitor Data." youtube.com/@txg
WEDGE SETUP DECISION GUIDE What's your PW loft? 43–45° (Modern GI) 46–48° (Players/Blade) → 48° GW → 52° SW → 56-58° LW → 50° GW → 54° SW → 58-60° LW BOUNCE GUIDE LOW (4-6°) Firm turf, tight lies Shallow divot players ⚠️ Less forgiving MID (7-10°) Most conditions Most golfers ✅ Best default choice HIGH (10-14°) Soft turf, fluffy sand Deep divot players Most forgiving

Frequently Asked Questions

What wedge lofts should I carry?

A standard setup is pitching wedge (44-46°), gap wedge (50-52°), sand wedge (54-56°), and lob wedge (58-60°). Maintain 4-6° gaps between wedges for consistent distance spacing. Most amateurs should skip the 60° lob wedge — a 56° is more versatile.

What does bounce angle mean on a wedge?

Bounce is the angle between the leading edge and the lowest point of the sole. High bounce (12-16°) prevents digging in soft turf and sand. Low bounce (4-8°) allows cleaner contact on firm turf and tight lies. Mid bounce (8-12°) is the most versatile.

How often should I replace my wedges?

Replace wedges every 65-75 rounds or when grooves visibly wear. Worn grooves lose spin — studies show wedges can lose 2,000+ rpm of spin after 75 rounds. Tour pros replace wedges every 3-4 weeks.

More from Golf

All Golf →
Custom Club Fitting: Is It Worth $300+? A Data-Driven Answer
Golf

Custom Club Fitting: Is It Worth $300+? A Data-Driven Answer

Fitters say yes, manufacturers say yes, your wallet says maybe. Here's what the actual data shows.

11 min read
Golf Ball Compression Explained: Why the Ball You Play Matters More Than Your Driver
Golf

Golf Ball Compression Explained: Why the Ball You Play Matters More Than Your Driver

Your ball affects every shot. Here's the science of compression ratings.

10 min read
The Complete Guide to Golf Shaft Flex: How to Pick the Right One Without a Fitting
Golf

The Complete Guide to Golf Shaft Flex: How to Pick the Right One Without a Fitting

Shaft flex affects your accuracy and distance more than clubhead design.

12 min read

Equipment Intel, Weekly

New analysis, test results, and gear science — delivered to your inbox.