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The Callaway 2026 Chrome Tour April Major 360 Stripe golf balls retail for $60 per dozen at Golf Galaxy
At least one eBay sale of a four-ball sleeve has been confirmed at $30
This is a moderate-risk play with limited secondary market data and no indication returns will be accepted
We all know that golfers like to spend money, and we know that Augusta National and Masters-themed merch can carry hefty premiums. Callaway recently launched its “April Major” 360 Chrome Tour golf balls, and these have “resell opportunity” written on them. We’ve seen similar releases flip for solid profits in the past, so keep these on your radar.
The Chrome Tour is Callaway’s flagship performance ball, built around a urethane cover, a hyper-elastic core for distance, and Callaway’s Seamless Tour Aero dimple pattern. The “April Major” edition adds a bold 360-degree alignment stripe that wraps fully around the ball, designed to help with putting alignment and start-line visualization. The Masters-season timing is obviously intentional.
Golf brands are not allowed to actually make a direct reference to the Masters or Augusta without getting a cease-and-desist letter from the infamously litigious and touchy Augusta National Corporation, so they are opaquely billed as “April Major” balls and sport unnamed flowers that are clearly the iconic azaleas from the course.
Callaway calls these “limited edition,” though that phrase can mean just about anything. They haven’t published production numbers, and it’s unclear whether Golf Galaxy will restock once initial inventory moves. For now, they’re available at $59.99 per dozen.
We’ve seen the golf ball collector market produce real returns before. When Titleist released their ultra-rare Pro V1 Left Dot balls, they sold out almost immediately and reached double retail on the secondary market, with prices continuing to climb months later. That was a different situation — the Left Dot had genuine tour exclusivity behind it and a four-year gap between public sales — but it demonstrated clearly that golfers will pay up for balls they perceive as scarce.
The Callaway Masters edition doesn’t have the same backstory, but the demographic overlap between golf enthusiasts and collectors willing to pay for “limited” anything is real. We’ve confirmed at least one eBay sale of a four-ball sleeve, which works out to a per-ball price meaningfully above retail. Whether that’s an isolated data point or the start of a real market is still unclear.
The math on a full box is thin at current prices. After eBay’s 13% fee, a $60 box would need to sell for roughly $69 just to break even. To clear $20 in profit, you’re looking at needing buyers to pay around $90 per dozen. That’s not impossible given the Masters season timing and collector interest, but it’s not a slam dunk either.
This is a moderate-risk play and you should treat it accordingly. Golf Galaxy’s return policy varies, but limited edition items frequently fall outside standard return windows. Assume you cannot return these if the flip doesn’t materialize.
The smart version of this play is buying a box or two if you’re already a golfer. If the secondary market develops, great. If it doesn’t, you’ve got premium golf balls you’ll actually use. If you have no use for the balls and are buying purely to flip, the current data doesn’t justify more than one box, and even that requires some patience while the market develops around Masters week.
Home & Living
Oh yeah, that's medium rare
Music & Movies
This one was forged in the fires of hell
Video Games
Despite restocking frequently