DIAL IN YOUR SHORT GAME

A Golf Wedge Set Built to Score From 100 Yards In

A wedge set is the three matched wedges you carry to score from 100 yards in: a 52° gap wedge, a 56° sand wedge, and a 60° lob wedge.Stix's Compete Wedge Set ships all three direct for $299, with a 1 Year Warranty and free shipping.

The Stix Compete Wedge Set: matte black 52, 56, and 60 degree wedges fanned out on a green.
4.8★
Thousands of 5 Star Reviews
100k+
Happy Customers
Free
Shipping & Easy Returns
1 Year
Warranty
Earned, not paid

The clubs the golf world is talking about

MyGolfSpy
Editor's Choice
Red Dot Award
Design Excellence
Partnered with
The Nicklaus Brand
Reviewer
Top Rated
THE SHORT ANSWER

What wedges should I carry in my bag?

Many golfers carry a 52° gap wedge, a 56° sand wedge, and a 60° lob wedge so they can cover every yardage from roughly 100 yards in to the cup.

Each wedge is built for a different shot. The 52° gap is your full-swing scoring club. The 56° sand handles bunkers and mid-distance pitches. The 60° lob opens up for flops and tight-lie shots near the green. Together they cover every yardage between your pitching wedge and the cup, which is where most rounds are won and lost.

The Approach

Three Wedges. One Matched Set.

Three blade-style wedges (52°, 56°, and 60°) cast from 431 stainless steel, milled face on every head, two loft-specific sole grinds (full sole on the 52, double sole on the 56 and 60), and an ultra durable matte black PVD coating.

Most rounds aren't lost on the tee. They're lost in the 70-yard pitch that comes up short, the bunker shot that stays in the bunker, the chip that runs ten feet by. Three wedges that work as one system: same feel, same setup, same look at address. One less variable to manage when it's time to get up and down.

Three Stix Compete wedges (52, 56, 60 degrees) lined up on a putting green, showing the matching matte black finish.
01

Built to Your Bag

Right or left dexterity, standard or tall length, picked at checkout. The same setup ships across all three wedges so the feel is consistent loft to loft.

02

Two Grinds, Two Jobs

The 52 has a full sole — wide and flat, designed to glide through fairway turf on full swings. The 56 and 60 have a double sole — the trailing edge is relieved so the leading edge stays low whether you keep the face square or lay it open. Square it for a stock pitch; open it for a flop.

03

$299, Not $549

Three comparable big-brand wedges bought separately typically run $450 to $600. The Compete Wedge Set is $299 for all three, shipped direct. The savings come from cutting the retail markup, not the spec.

DISTANCE BY CLUB

Where the Wedges Fit in Your Bag

This is your wedge distance chart. Mid-handicap amateurs cover roughly these yardages on a full swing, and the Compete Wedge Set fills the bottom three rows — every distance from your pitching wedge to the cup.

Club Typical amateur range Notes
Driver 220–260 yds Perform / Compete Driver
3 Wood 195–235 yds Perform / Compete Fairway
4 Hybrid 175–205 yds Perform / Compete Hybrid
5 Iron 145–180 yds Perform / Compete Irons
6 Iron 135–170 yds Perform / Compete Irons
7 Iron 125–160 yds Perform / Compete Irons
8 Iron 115–150 yds Perform / Compete Irons
9 Iron 105–140 yds Perform / Compete Irons
Pitching Wedge (46°) 95–125 yds Perform / Compete Irons
Gap Wedge (52°) 80–105 yds Compete Wedge Set
Sand Wedge (56°) 70–90 yds Compete Wedge Set
Lob Wedge (60°) 55–80 yds Compete Wedge Set

Ranges shown are typical for a 5–15 handicap on a full swing at sea level. Source: PGA.com + Arccos Golf amateur data. Full reference: Doc/Product/Specs/wedge_yardage_reference.md.

SOLE GRIND, EXPLAINED

Two Grinds. Two Jobs.

The 'sole' is the part of the wedge that meets turf or sand at impact. How it's shaped — the 'grind' — changes how the club moves through the ground, which changes the shots you can hit. The Compete Wedge Set ships with two grinds, each matched to the wedge it's built for.

On the 52°

Full Sole

Wide and flat — designed to glide through fairway turf on full swings.
Best for
  • Full-swing pitches from 80 to 105 yards
  • Three-quarter approach shots
  • Stock pitches from clean fairway lies
Why this grind: The 52 is your full-swing scoring wedge. A wider sole forgives a slightly steep angle of attack and keeps the leading edge from digging on a hard fairway.
On the 56° and 60°

Double Sole

Trailing edge relieved so the leading edge stays low whether the face is square or laid wide open.
Best for
  • Bunker shots — open the face, use the full bounce
  • Flop shots — open over the green for a soft landing
  • Tight-lie pitches — square the face, leading edge cuts
Why this grind: These are the wedges you open up. A relieved trailing edge lets you lay the face open without lifting the leading edge off the turf — the move that lets a 60 hit a flop or a 56 splash through sand.
PICK YOUR WEDGE

Add one wedge, or get the matched set.

Pick the loft you're missing — individual wedges from $99. Or get the matched Compete set (52°, 56°, 60°) below for $299.

PW

Pitching Wedge

Full-swing approaches from 110–135 yards. The first wedge in the bag — usually replaced when upgrading from an iron-set PW.
Full swing 110–135 yds
52°

Gap Wedge

Full-swing scoring from 80–105 yards. Fills the gap between your pitching wedge and your sand wedge.
Full swing 80–105 yds
56°

Sand Wedge

Bunker shots and mid-distance pitches. The wedge most golfers reach for if they only carry one.
Full swing 70–90 yds
60°

Lob Wedge

Flops, partials, and tight-lie pitches that need to land soft and stop.
Full swing 55–80 yds
Or step up to the matched Compete set — Shop the Compete Wedge Set · $299
Side by Side

The matched set vs. one wedge at a time

Feature Big-brand bundle Stix
Sole grinds One sole grind per wedge model — pick a generic mid grind and live with it Two loft-specific grinds: full sole on the 52, double sole on the 56 and 60
Face construction Stamped grooves on cast wedges at this price Milled face on a 431 stainless steel head, every wedge in the set
Finish durability Plated black coatings often show wear inside the first season Ultra Durable PVD coating
Length options Standard length only on most off-the-rack wedges Standard or tall, picked at checkout
Left-handed availability Many big-brand wedge models are right-handed only Left-handed available alongside right at checkout
Buy one, or buy the matched set Often sold individually with mixed grinds, finishes, and shaft profiles Singles from $69 (Perform tier) or the matched 52°/56°/60° Compete Set for $299 — same grinds, same finish, same look
Pricing Three big-brand wedges separately typically run $450 to $600 $299 for the 52, 56, and 60 set
Worth of clubs
$549
vs. comparable premium-brand clubs
Your price
$299

For the Compete Wedge Set

Haven't had a new set of clubs in 20 years and these have performed beyond my expectations. The wedges alone were worth the purchase.

— Jared F., Verified Stix customer (Perform 12 Silver)

The Lineup

The Compete Wedge Set, Plus the Sets It Lives In.

Buy the wedge set on its own, or step up to a complete set that ships with the wedges already matched.

  • 52°, 56°, and 60° matched in one set
  • Milled face on a 431 stainless head
  • Three sole grinds tuned to each loft
  • 5,000-swing PVD black finish
  • Right or left dexterity, standard or tall length
  • 1 Year Warranty
★ 4.8 — Thousands of 5 Star Reviews
Reviews

What customers are saying

★★★★★
The grooves on these wedges are sharp. Hit a 60 from the rough yesterday and it stopped on a dime. First wedge set that actually performs like advertised.
· Compete Wedge Set
★★★★★
The wedge set inside the Compete 14 is the best part of the whole bag. The spin matches the irons and the finish is consistent across the set.
· Compete 14 Club Set
★★★★★
Bought the wedge set instead of three separate brand wedges. The matching shafts and feel make a real difference on partial swings — it finally feels intentional.
· Compete Wedge Set
★★★★★
The 52 and 56 in my Perform 12 set have given me a short game I never had. Picking up where the irons leave off, no awkward gap.
· P02 Perform 12 Club Set
Frequently Asked

FAQ

Do I need a 60 degree wedge?

A 60° lob wedge is the right call if you regularly face short pitches over bunkers, tight lies around the green, or partials inside 70 yards.

Players new to the game often skip the 60 and run a simpler bag for a season. Most golfers add it in once they're comfortable with full-swing wedges. The Compete Wedge Set includes the 60 so it's in the bag when you're ready.

Full sole vs. double sole — what's the practical difference?

A full sole is wider and flatter, designed to glide through fairway turf on full swings. A double sole has a relieved trailing edge so the leading edge stays low whether the face is square or laid open.

The Compete Wedge Set ships the 52 with a full sole — it's the wedge you'll take a full swing with most often. The 56 and 60 ship with the double sole because they're the wedges you'll open the face on for bunker shots, flops, and tight-lie pitches. The grind matches the shot the loft is built for.

How much does a golf wedge set cost?

The Stix Compete Wedge Set is $299 for all three wedges (52, 56, and 60 degrees).

Buying three comparable big-brand wedges separately typically runs $450–$600, with no guarantee they'll match in finish, shaft, or feel.

What spec choices do I get on the wedge set?

The Compete Wedge Set ships with a stiff steel shaft on every wedge, with right or left dexterity and standard or tall length picked at checkout.

All three wedges in the set arrive in the same configuration so the feel is consistent across the lofts. If you want graphite shafts, the 52 and 56 are available in graphite as part of the P02 Perform 12 Club Set.

What's the difference between gap, sand, and lob wedges?

Gap wedges (50–52°) cover the full-swing window. Sand wedges (54–58°) cover bunkers and the mid-range pitch. Lob wedges (58–62°) cover flops, partials, and shots that need to come down soft.

The yardages are loft × swing speed and vary by player; the windows in our intent section above are amateur averages. The Compete Wedge Set ships the most common amateur configuration (52, 56, 60).

What's the warranty on Stix wedges?

Every Stix wedge ships with a 1 Year Warranty, including the Compete Wedge Set.

Reach out via the Help Center for any defect or finish issue inside that window.

Are these the same wedges that come in the Compete 14 Club Set?

Yes — the Compete Wedge Set is the same 52, 56, and 60° configuration that ships inside the Compete 14 Club Set.

If you already own the Compete 14, you don't need this set. If you're piecing your bag together one purchase at a time, the wedge set is the most direct way into Stix's wedge program.

What is a 52 degree wedge?

A 52° wedge is a gap wedge — the wedge that fills the yardage gap between your pitching wedge (around 46°) and your sand wedge (54–56°).

Most golfers cover roughly 80–105 yards with a 52° on a full swing. It's the wedge you reach for on a stock approach shot from inside 110 yards, and the most-used wedge in the bag for a mid-handicap amateur.

How far should you hit your wedges?

A mid-handicap amateur typically hits a 52° gap wedge 80–105 yards, a 56° sand wedge 70–90 yards, and a 60° lob wedge 55–80 yards on a full swing.

Your numbers vary by swing speed, lie, and shaft. The yardage table earlier in this page maps the full bag — wedges fill the bottom three rows. Three-quarter and half swings cover the partial yardages between.

What degrees should my wedges be?

Most amateurs play 52°, 56°, and 60° because that lineup covers every yardage from the pitching wedge to the green with even gaps.

Tournament players sometimes shift to a 50 / 54 / 58 / 60 four-wedge lineup for finer control, but for a three-wedge bag, 52 / 56 / 60 is the configuration that earns its spots. That's the Compete Wedge Set lineup.

SCORE FROM 100 YARDS IN

Three Wedges. One Set. One Price.

One checkout, one shipment, one box. The 52, 56, and 60 you'd otherwise build over three trips to the pro shop — configured to your dexterity and length at checkout, on your doorstep in days.