- Color: Red/Gray
- Material: Plastic
- Brand: PuttOut
- Shaft Material: Alloy Steel
- Item Weight: 675 Grams
- Grip Material: Rubber
- Grip Type: Putter
- The PuttOUT Mirror helps you work on alignment and positioning while putting. With this pack you can setup all of the best putting drills.
- Set the width of the magnetic putter guides on the mirror to check your alignment and address position.
- Your putter is the most used club in the bag by improving your putting and reducing the number of putts per round you will dramatically improve your score.
- PuttOUT mirror comes with a stand-alone 2 inch putting gate allowing you to actively work on your strike path and target by having the putter pass through the guide.
- Mirror measures 9.5 x 7.9 x 0.20 inches with durable rubber casing with spikes on underside to keep in place without tees.













Bishop –
I had considered myself to be a better-than-decent putter, but thought I had occasional issues with distance and/or direction due to being too “Handsy” with the putting stroke. After purchasing the Putt Out Mirror System, I was able to determine the slew of issues I was having. Granted, it is best to work with a qualified instructor to verify that one is making the correct adjustments to their address, stroke, etc., but this was a great way to determine almost immediately that I was putting toe-up (due to improper length), in-to-out (huge arc in the stroke), and handsy (unable to deliver a square face at impact, which would lead to a combination of pushes or pulls, and cause the ball to strike the gate).I found this tool to provide very abrupt feedback, as well. The plastic “bumpers” on the mirror fully indicate when the putting stroke is off (be it too inside, outside, whichever the user should choose to work to correct), as they can be easily struck if the user is not very deliberate with their stroke. The putting gate has been the biggest source of frustration for me personally, as the tool has indicated to me that my wrist movement is my largest area of opportunity.In reference to results, I purchased the trainer within the last month or so, and use it a few times per week (and have developed a bit of an obsession with trying to achieve perfection). I actually played a full round of 18 holes in the last few weeks, and have seen significant improvement in both the lines which I’ve been putting, but also in confidence.This used in grouping with a quality putting mat, and balls with a decent alignment line (I’ve personally been using the Chromesoft X with ERC, though I don’t game the ball), and I’m confident that another user would see very similar results.
Drew –
Good putting mirror that adds value with magnetic putting gates. There are some problems that keep it from getting 5 stars, but is still very good depending on how you use it.Pros:- Like any other putting mirror, has lines, and has a place to put the ball for consistency.- Comes with two magnetic gates that you can use to check the path of your putter.- Has little spikes on the bottom to keep the mirror in place once you set it on your carpet or on a green.Cons:- The gates are relatively long. This means that if you have an arc in your putting stroke (like I do, but some people go straight back and forth), you may actually be hitting the back of the gate even though you are delivering the putter correctly at impact.- The little putting gate that comes with it (u-shaped gate) is way too small. I practiced with it and it drove me nuts that I could not put the ball through it cleanly (there is only enough space for the ball and millimeters of space on each side). The problem was not that I installed it crooked, or even with my stroke, but the fact is that it is extremely difficult to find a perfectly straight putt. This meant that while I thought my stroke was bad, when I removed the gate, all the putts went in. I now never use this gate because it only hinders my practice instead of helping me.Conclusion:This is a good training aid, but due to the reasons mentioned above, this one just misses being perfect for putting in the bag. Like I said, maybe if you have less of an arcing putting stroke, or a perfectly straight putt to practice on then this would work better for you. Keep these things in mind when purchasing this putting mirror.
Michael Thomas –
I was really excited to try out the putting mirror. The materials are quality, and it looked fun. In practice I found it to be more frustrating than anything. And honestly, two tees in the ground as your putting stroke gate, and two tees as your start line gate work much more effectively as I’ll explain below.First off I use a Scotty Cameron Newport 2 putter. Extremely popular on tour and a quality putter I got from SC. And my putters center line does not align with the mirrors center line (when I align them both the ball sits towards the hosel of my putter off center). Which really messes with lining everything up and getting comfortable.Secondly, if you barely touch the magnetic stroke gate pieces during your swing, the gates fly around and get crooked. Then you have to bend over and correct it… every stroke. The same for the start line gate. If your ball hits it, the gate rotates or falls over and you have to walk over, bend over, and reset it. Every bad stroke. The design just ruins the flow of practice.If you are already a Great putter with a very consistent stroke and start your ball on line 9/10 times, then sure it wouldn’t be a big deal. But then why buy a training aid at all at that point? The classic two tees on either side of your putter and two tees as your ball start line gate are not only cost effective (around 12 cents total for 4 tees), but they also don’t move and require resetting if you bonk into them. 0.12c versus $70.00 is kind of a no brainer.OBVIOUSLY you can’t peg four tees into your carpet or hardwoods at home, which is the only place I would use this mirror. But then again could I find an alternative that saves me $70? Salt shakers? Advil bottles? Shampoo bottle? That can serve as the same “gate” aid? Probably.The mirror benefit of seeing your eye line is nice, but not as important as the gate function. Many tour players have their eye line over the ball or inside the ball so it varies and is not as important as stroke and start line, where 99% of tour players are on point where this aid would help the most. But again, it’s not worth the frustrating.So in conclusion, great idea, poorly executed. If the gates were more stable and allowed bad swings to not require a reset every stroke then it might be worth it. But even then $70 is steep for a piece of glass, a small piece of metal, and four plastic pieces with a bag.
Kenneth Swango –
It was what I was looking for. needed something that would give me feedback on my alignment and it did that. It also helped me with seeing that my eyes are over the ball. Nice training tool.