The Amazon Big Spring Sale is live. It runs through March 31, and for golfers, this is the one spring sale worth actually paying attention to.
Golf deals — real ones, not clearance-bin garbage — are rare outside of Black Friday and the occasional spring event. This is that event.
We sorted through the noise. Here's what's actually worth buying this week.
⏰ Sale Window: March 25–31
These aren't permanent price drops. Inventory moves fast, especially on balls and GPS gear. Don't wait until Sunday.
🎯 The Three Picks
1. Titleist Pro V1x Left Dash — ~30% Off
The Left Dash is Titleist's answer to golfers with faster swing speeds who want the feel and construction of the Pro V1x with a higher flight and slightly less driver spin. It's not talked about as much as the standard Pro V1x, but on the right player — swing speeds above 95 mph, mid-to-high ball flight — it's the better ball.
At ~$38-40 per dozen versus the normal $54.99, this is the best price on a current-gen Titleist ball you'll see until November. Stock up.
The practical rule: if you consistently lose balls to the woods or water, skip premium balls entirely. But if you're a single-digit or low-teens handicap who actually finds most of their shots, a sale like this is exactly when to lock in your ball for the season.
Best for: Grinders and Weekend Warriors with faster swing speeds who want a premium ball without paying full retail.
→ Related: Best Golf Balls for Weekend Golfers (2026)
2. Callaway Chrome Soft (1 Dozen) — 15-25% Off
Chrome Soft is the ball that converts golfers. Soft off the face, responsive greenside, and the Triple Track alignment system on the cover is legitimately useful for putting setup — three parallel lines that line up with the hole and help you start the ball on your intended line.
Sale pricing drops it to ~$39-42 per dozen versus $49.99 standard. That's not "steal of the century" territory, but it's the deal that makes sense: you're getting tour-level urethane construction at a real-world price during the exact window when you need spring stock.
If you've been playing a mid-tier ball and want to try something better, Chrome Soft on sale is the entry point.
Best for: Weekend Warriors who want to upgrade their ball without committing to full Pro V1 pricing.
3. Callaway 300 Pro Laser Rangefinder with Slope — ~25% Off
The Bushnell Tour V6 is the gold standard. But not everyone needs to spend $300 on a rangefinder.
The Callaway 300 Pro hits the sweet spot most golfers actually occupy: accurate flag acquisition, built-in slope function, tournament-legal slope toggle, and Callaway's Pin Acquisition Technology for locking onto elevated greens where GPS apps go wrong.
Big Spring Sale pricing drops it to ~$149.99 from $199.99. At that price, the calculus is simple: a rangefinder that gives you accurate slope-adjusted distances pays for itself in strokes within a season.
If you're still guessing yardages off cart GPS or squinting at 150-yard markers, this is the upgrade that changes how you approach every approach shot.
Best for: Budget Ballers and Weekend Warriors who want accurate yardages without the premium tier tax.
→ Related: Best Golf Rangefinders (2026)
⭐ Staff Pick of the Week: Garmin Approach S70 GPS Watch — $50-100 Off
This is the one that doesn't go on sale often. The Garmin Approach S70 is the best golf GPS watch on the market — 42,000+ preloaded courses, green view with hazard overlays, accurate hole distances, and a brilliant AMOLED display you can actually read in sunlight.
Full price runs $600-700. During the Big Spring Sale, Amazon is discounting $50-100 off depending on the configuration. That's not a "life-changing deal," but it's the real discount on a category-leader that doesn't need to discount to sell.
If you've been using a basic GPS watch or relying on a phone app for yardages, the S70 is a meaningful upgrade. The green view feature alone — showing the actual shape of the green with pin placement and hazard distances — changes how you club and commit on approach shots.
Best for: Gear Junkies and serious Weekend Warriors who want a complete GPS watch that lasts a decade.
The Three Before You Buy Questions
Before pulling any trigger, apply these:
- Does it close a real gap? Not "do I want it" — will it produce a measurable difference in your next 10 rounds?
- Am I replacing a weak link or adding to a strong bag? A ball upgrade matters if you're already making consistent contact. It doesn't matter if tempo is your actual issue.
- Is sale pricing actually a deal? Google the product before buying. Some "sale" prices are manufactured. The picks above are verified real discounts on gear with legitimate full-price points.
Full Deals Board
See all three picks in one place — filterable by your golfer type — on the Bogeylicious Weekly Deals page.
Crew Game of the Week: Wolf 🐺
Tired of the same Nassau format? Run Wolf this weekend.
One player is designated the Wolf on each hole (rotating through the foursome). After each player tees off — in order — the Wolf decides whether to partner with them or pass and wait for someone better. The Wolf can also choose to go solo (lone wolf) before any drives.
If the Wolf goes lone wolf and wins the hole, they collect from all three players. If the pack beats the Wolf, the others split. If the Wolf partners up and wins, only they collect.
It creates real drama on every tee box. Use the Bet Splitter to track the math across 18 holes.
Related Gear Guides
- Best Golf Balls for Weekend Golfers (2026)
- Best Golf Rangefinders (2026)
- Best Golf GPS Watches Under $250
- Spring Golf Gear Refresh 2026
Affiliate Disclosure
Some links on this page are affiliate links. If you purchase through them, Bogeylicious may earn a small commission at no extra cost to you. Our picks are based entirely on value and relevance — affiliate availability is never a factor in selection. Full details at bogeylicious.com/disclosure.
Buy what the sale actually earned. Skip what it just made visible.
Then go play.
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