Don’t Buy This $199 Cart Bag. Buy This Instead

Some differences between golf bags are subtle. A zipper that feels smoother. A divider that doesn’t grab your grip. A pocket that actually holds what it’s supposed to hold.

The key is figuring out which differences matter for your game.

In this year’s cart bag test, scores were tight. Most bags landed within a single point of each other. That means the small details, especially in storage and organization, are what separate a good buy from a smarter one.

At $199, here’s one bag I’d buy and another I wouldn’t.

Why this bag falls short

The Tour Edge Xtreme Lux finished near the lower tier of the test. Storage and organization account for nearly half of our scoring and this is where the Xtreme Lux trails the field.

  • Storage scoring was one of the lowest in the test
  • Six-way top divided into four sections wasn’t functional
  • Noticeable shaft and grip entanglement during testing
  • Layout leans more stand bag-inspired than purpose-built cart bag

It has some strengths such as waterproof pockets and zipper and two magnetic quick access pockets. If you’re trying to invest in something that checks all the boxes without breaking the bank, the Xtreme Lux comes up a little short.

Maxfli Honors

For $10 less, you can get the Maxfli Honors cart bag. It scored slightly higher overall than the Tour Edge and performs better in the categories that define a cart bag. The storage was noticeably better along with the capacity.

In addition you’ll get a 15-way divider top, less overall weight and a large cooler pocket. It’s still kind of a basic layout and there are no true quick access magnetic pockets. It has fewer premium features than a $300-plus golf bag but it’s about half the price at $189.

The overall score difference is small but the structural difference is not. If you’re to try and stay under $200 on a cart bag, the Maxfli Honors is the better value.

Buy Maxfli Honors Cart Bag at Golf Galaxy

OGIO Woode

If you can move slightly up in price, the conversation shifts entirely. The OGIO Woode finished near the top of the test with a 9.4 overall score. It is about $100 more but here’s what you’ll get for that extra money.

  • 15-way Woodē top that does a great job of separating woods and irons
  • Smooth club entry and removal
  • Magnetic pocket for quick access
  • Strong overall pocket layout

It’s not a perfect bag as there is no true cart strap pass-through but it is one of the most complete cart bags we tested. If you play a lot and want to get a few years out of a bag, it may be worth the extra $100.

Buy OGIO Woode Cart Bag at Ogio

Final thoughts

When scores are tight, you look at the trade-offs. The Tour Edge Xtreme Lux gives up ground in organization and storage weighting. The Maxfli Honors gives up premium touches. The OGIO Woode gives up very little.

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