PING’s G440 K driver refines the brand’s most forgiving design with higher MOI, adjustable weighting, added ball speed, and a clearer approach to performance.
Forgiveness is a part of, if not the central theme, of nearly every PING product story. The company’s MAX drivers have always been about one thing: keeping the ball in play when contact isn’t perfect. Speed mattered, sure—but stability, predictability and dispersion control mattered more.
The addition of the G430 Max 10K to the lineup allowed PING to push the standard Max more towards the middle of the market. That extra bit of differentiation provides an option for the masses while leaving plenty of space for its “K” model to serve the needs of golfers chasing every ounce of forgiveness the rules allow.
PING’s highest-MOI driver, the G440 K adds adjustable weighting, incremental ball-speed gains and improved sound and feel—without drifting away from the stability-first identity that defines the “K” (10K or otherwise) lineage. As with most things PING, G440 K isn’t a reinvention. It’s a refinement, one that makes PING’s highest MOI driver feel more complete than any before it.
What the “K” still means
In PING terms, the “K” has become shorthand for one thing: inertia. The K sits at the top of the G440 driver family when it comes to MOI, pushing forgiveness as far as PING believes makes sense within the rules.
Compared to the previous generation, the combined MOI value has climbed higher than ever. While exact values vary slightly by build, in its highest MOI setting the G440 K comfortably exceeds 10,300 g-cm². In other words, this is still very much a “10K” (and then some) driver—even if the number no longer appears in the name.
Why PING dropped “10K” from the name

If the K is still delivering that level of forgiveness, why remove the “10K” label?
The short answer is clarity.
With the lighter high-launch (HL) builds, total MOI falls just short of 10,000. Rather than risk implying that every configuration—regardless of head weight or build spec—hits the same inertia number, PING chose to simplify the message. PING didn’t want golfers to pick up the HL version, see “10K” on the sole and assume every K build delivers the same MOI.
The G440 K name is meant to convey where the product fits in the lineup (maximum stability) without tying that promise to a single number that inevitably varies depending on configuration.
What hasn’t changed is intent. The MAX K remains PING’s highest-MOI driver and in standard builds it still clears the threshold that made the previous generation the benchmark for high MOI.
Adjustable weighting comes to MAX K

One of the most meaningful updates in the G440 MAX K is something PING players and fitters have been asking for: movable weights.
While the G430 MAX 10K featured a fixed rear weight with the G440 K, PING pairs its highest-MOI head with adjustable rear weighting. This isn’t about turning the new K into a shot-shaping tool. It’s about adding just a bit more ability to tune the fit. In addition to a neutral setting, the adjustable weight allows for subtle draw or fade biasing without undermining the stability that defines PING’s highest MOI offerings.
The goal was to give fitters just enough control to fine-tune direction without changing what the head fundamentally wants to do.
CarbonFly Wrap, reworked

The G440 K builds on PING’s CarbonFly Wrap construction but the execution is new.
An dual-panel CarbonFly Wrap leverages more carbon fiber to save roughly 3.5 grams compared to the previous generation while PING’s Free Hosel Design accounts for another three grams of mass savings. That weight doesn’t disappear—it gets pushed rearward into a back weight that’s four grams heavier, increasing both MOI and CG efficiency.
Compared to the G430 MAX 10K, the center of gravity is approximately 0.017 inches lower and nearly a tenth of an inch deeper. Those are small numbers but, in a high-MOI design, they matter. Moving mass back and down is how PING was able to add stability without decreasing ball speed.
Faster than you’d expect

High-MOI drivers can reasonably be described as safe rather than fast but PING continues to push against that stereotype with the G440 K.
As with other PING drivers, the G440 K features a forged T9S+ titanium face, paired with a reshaped Variable Face Thickness pattern. As you would expect, the intent is to deliver more consistent ball speed across a wider impact area. Despite a slightly lighter overall head weight, PING’s internal testing shows ball-speed gains over the previous generation, particularly on mishits.
The K still isn’t a low-spin bomber, and it’s not trying to be, but if it performs as advertised, you should see more forgiveness without any ball speed penalties.
Sound and feel improvements

PING has quietly spent multiple generations refining sound and feel and the G440 K continues that progression.
New sole acoustic ribs and a revised crown rib structure produce a quieter, flatter, more muted sound at impact. It’s the kind of change that some golfers won’t notice while for others it might make all the difference in the world.
Hands on with G440 K

Make no mistake about it, the G440 K is still a big driver. That is to say, the footprint is large, which makes it more than some golfers will want to look at.
That said, if you don’t dwell on such things, what you should notice is a driver that flies a bit straighter than the original, is a touch faster, and launches high.
While I’m probably not a typical representation of the market as a whole, working the high portion of the face, I was seeing launch in excess of 17 degrees with spin under 2,000. Welcome back to the SLDR days.
I would expect that most golfers (particularly those favoring the center or even low face impact) will see more sensible numbers with the larger point being that despite the back CG and high MOI, there’s no evidence that the G440 K is an overly spinny driver.
Where the K fits in the G440 Lineup

With the addition of the G440 K, the PING G440 driver family is clearly segmented.
- LST targets faster swingers looking to reduce spin.
- SFT provides built-in draw bias for golfers who fight a slice.
- MAX balances forgiveness and speed.
- K pushes stability as far as possible.
The G440 K is designed for golfers who prioritize dispersion control, mishit protection and predictability over shot shaping or spin manipulation. Thanks to added adjustability, it also bridges some of the gap between traditional Max 10K players and those who previously needed more fitting flexibility.
The bottom line

The PING G440 K driver doesn’t reinvent what a 10K driver is supposed to be. It refines it.
You still get category-leading forgiveness, exceptional stability and predictable launch characteristics. What’s new is the added adjustability, improved sound and feel, and incremental speed gains that make the K feel more complete than the previous MAX 10K driver, which is saying something.
Specs, pricing, availability

The PING G440 K Driver is offered in nine, 10.5 and 12 degrees. A 7.5-degree option (which the PING fitter suggested might work for me) is, for now, Tour-only.
Stock shaft options include the PING Alta CB Blue and PING Tour 2.0 (Chrome/Black).
Additional aftermarket shafts are available through PING’s custom department.
Retail price is $649.99. If that’s more than you want to pay for the latest model, the PING G430 MAX 10K driver is discounted to $449.99.
The PING G440 K driver is available for pre-sale now. For more information, visit PING.com.
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