Toulon Golf has released its 2026 Collection of putters, and I got a sneak peek at what they have to offer.
Toulon has added a couple of new models in the Monaco and the Boston, plus well as refinements across the board. They’ve also brought back their crowd favorite Deep Diamond Mill pattern, this time with a groove similar to the pattern that Xander Schauffele won two majors with in 2024. This is now the third collection release from this “third life” of Toulon Golf following on growth and success in 2024 and 2025. Let’s take a look at what makes the 2026 collection different, and give some insight into the company itself and its family members Sean, Kathy, Preston, Tony, and honorary family member Toru.
The first thing you’ll notice about Toulon’s 2026 collection is the Midnight Blue finish. This is a finish that has been used in their Toulon Smallbatch program with putters like Smallbatch Sea Island, Smallbatch Pinehurst and Smallbatch Palo Alto. It’s been quite the crowd pleaser so they decided to bring it to their 2026 collection along with accents and paintfill in white and cool grey. The putters are milled once again from 304 stainless steel which is a bit of a softer material compared to some other milled putters on the market, and they take their time in the milling machine. You can see very soft milling details everywhere you look on the new 2026 collection putters and they’ve included their Saulsalito fine milling patter on some of the 6061 aluminum sole plates as well.
While Toulon has always been known for their beauty — and, with the new finish and a softer overall shaping approach, that’s still a focus — this year’s line focused in on performance.
This led to the development of the latest iteration of the Deep Diamond Mill face pattern, a crowd favorite. The new mill pattern is a touch shallower than players may remember from older iterations of Toulon Design, but more closely resembles the milling pattern that starred in Schauffele’s two 2024 major wins. They have also added a groove to the pattern this year, which helps get the ball into its initial roll faster and with more efficiency. From a feel perspective it gives the putter a bit more volume, but not at the sacrifice of pitch.
You get a nice confident impact sound without any ringing or “shatter” to the sound. There’s also an intentional approach to hand feedback. Each putter has been built with the maximum MOI they can pull out of that given shape, so you’ll get a bit more feedback from the blades than you will the mallets, but it’s nice “player’s desired” feedback. Not harsh enough to make you jump, but just enough to make sure you know you missed the middle of the face.
Toulon’s new line doesn’t make revolutionary changes; in some ways that’s the point. They’re sticking to their guns and making thoughtful and directed tweaks in their efforts to improve and refine. There’s a lot of purpose in the changes they make not only to the putters but to the lineup itself.
What’s also important is the putters that aren’t in the line. Toulon has only added two new models this year, but you’ll also notice that lots of models have been removed from the line. Carlsbad, Charleston, Atlanta, Miami, and New York City were all put on the chopping block. One of Toulon’s superpowers is its loyal consumers, and the company is geared towards making sure that they are doing right by them. Curating the lineup into the right combination of shapes and necks takes some serious thought. Making sure that they are covering everything that their base wants to buy from them is on the short list of priorities.
The two new models in Boston and Monaco tell the story of where Toulon is innovating. Boston is their first long-neck offering in a collection series, and it takes cues from the traditional Austin shape that Toulon has had around since inception. It wasn’t a straight swap of a head to a different hosel, though. By moving the hosel up into the long-neck configuration they had to make subtle changes to the geometry of the head to ensure that the acoustics and the feel of the putter was still up to their standards. A hosel essentially acts like a tuner between the head and the hands, so shifting to a different hosel will typically mean some geometry changes. Boston is finished off with a sight dot, which is one of my personal favorite details, and has two adjustable sole weights.
Monaco, on the other hand, is a completely new shape they have developed. It can be seen as sort of a cousin to Las Vegas, which is how it was given its name. If you look at Monaco as sort of a Las Vegas with a crown, you can see the design inspiration. The 304 stainless face and crown marry up with a 6061 aluminum sole plate to create a very stable multi-material shape. Monaco, like Las Vegas, is also a very good transition putter for players looking to switch from a blade to a mallet. With it’s adjustable weighting on the sole moved towards the face a bit and a large hollow cavity in the center of the putter head, you get the benefits of a more forward C.G. position like a blade, with the footprint and the M.O.I. benefits of a mallet putter. It also comes in two different neck configurations with an H1 plumber’s neck style hosel that’s becoming more and more popular for mallet users (which is also available in left-handed) and their H4.5 slant neck which gives a player more toe hang and a tighter feeling to the putting surface during the putting stroke.
In summing up the entire collection, the word I would use is “care”. That’s what they’ve used to massage the returning shapes to create a new look and feel while also introducing two killer shapes in Boston and Monaco. It’s really hard to describe the detail that went into this lineup until you can get a putter in your hands to see with your own eyes and feel the work yourself. There isn’t an edge, a point, a sharp spot or a flaw anywhere to be seen. Bumpers roll smoothly, the slow milled shaping lines are purposeful and soft, and new finish is brilliant in the light, and that Deep Diamond Mill? It gets me every time. Toulon has changed internal structures in a few of the putters to help adjust sound and feel. Changes you can’t see, but you will certainly hear and feel. That sums up their approach.
The crew over at Toulon Golf cares about the work and the detail that goes into every putter that leaves their shop. Fun fact: if you order a Toulon Collection putter, it’s actually being built by a member of the Toulon family every day in Vista, California. More than anything, they care about and listen to their customer. The entire new lineup is driven by feedback from the people who purchase and use their equipment on a day to day basis. In the third iteration of their third life, it seems Toulon is thriving more than ever before.
In total there are 7 new shapes to choose from: 3 blades and 4 mallet offerings. Each blade comes in a plumber’s neck configuration with the Hollywood (tri-sole) and Austin (Anser style) using their H1 standard length neck with Austin also being available left-handed and their Boston (Anser style) using their new H3 long-neck. For mallets you get to choose between two necks for each model including the return of Alcatraz Mini in double bend and H1 plumber’s neck, Alcatraz in double bend (available left-handed) and H1 plumber’s neck, Las Vegas in Double Bend and H7 Flow Neck, and the brand new Monaco available in H1 plumber’s neck (available left-handed) and a H4.5 slant neck. Each model can be purchased with a chrome or black shaft and choice of new 2026 match collection grip or any other Toulon grip color. Plumber’s neck options can also be custom ordered with a Mitsubishi Diamana P105 putter shaft and all putters can be built with their heavy spec options that use heavier adjustable sole weights, longer length, and a longer 15″ grip. You can purchase Toulon Golf’s 2026 Collection from their website starting at $600.00 USD.
Toulon has also hinted that there might be quite a bit coming from their camp in 2026 as they ramp up their low torque Formula series as well as their brand new exploratory/experimental Project 59 series. I for one am looking to see what they come up with, but for now, we all get to enjoy their new 2026 collection and hey; Let’s Make Toe Hang Great Again.
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