Overview & Specs

Toro Titan 60 Zero Turn Mower Reviews, Specs & Ratings

The Toro Titan 60 (model 76605) is the wide-deck machine in Toro’s Titan series — pairing the Titan’s commercial-style I-beam build with a 60-inch IronForged deck and a Kawasaki engine, at a meaningful price gap below the flagship Titan MAX 60. Built around a 24 HP Kawasaki FR730 726cc V-twin engine, a 60-inch IronForged 10-gauge steel deck with a fully-welded grade-50 steel bumper, a commercial-style I-beam front enddual hydrostatic HG-ZT2800 transaxles, and massive 22-inch aggressive-tread rear tires, the Titan 60 delivers Titan-grade durability and the widest deck in the series for acreage owners who want coverage speed without flagship pricing.

The 24 HP Kawasaki FR730 726cc V-twin — a brand with a strong durability reputation among zero-turn owners — drives the full 60-inch deck at up to 8.5 mph, with blades spinning at 18,908 ft/min for a clean cut and strong discharge. What sets the Titan apart from the TimeCutter range below it is the build: the commercial-style I-beam front end, cast-aluminum spindle housings, a grade-50 welded bumper, and the heavy 22-inch rear tires. The Titan 60 is the same Titan as the 54 — just with the wider deck for larger open properties, and notably a Kawasaki engine rather than the 54’s Kohler.

For Canadian owners with larger rural properties, acreages, and hobby farms (3-6 acres of grass)larger open areaswhere the 60-inch deck pays off, and a preference for Titan-grade build and a Kawasaki engine at a price below the flagship MAX, the Titan 60 is a strong-value choice.

Built around a 60-inch IronForged 10-gauge steel deck (fully-welded grade-50 steel bumper, rubber discharge chute, 3 blades with stiffeners, 4 anti-scalp wheels), the 24 HP Kawasaki FR730 726cc air-cooled gas engine, a commercial-style I-beam front enddual hydrostatic HG-ZT2800 transaxles, cast-aluminum spindle housings, a standard foot-operated pro drop-pin deck lift, a 20-inch gaming-style seat, a standard hitch bracket, 5-gallon fuel capacity, and Toro’s 3-year residential limited warranty.

The Titan 60 occupies a specific position: the wide-deck Titan, the coverage-speed pick of the Titan series below the flagship MAX. For acreage owners who want the Titan build and a 60-inch deck without MAX pricing, the Titan 60 is typically the right choice.

Canadian pricing typically ranges $7,800-$8,800 CAD depending on dealer and configuration. The Titan 60 sits just below the Titan MAX 60 — the MAX adds the larger 26 HP Kohler engine, a 7-gallon tank, standard ROPS and armrests, and a 4-year warranty.

For broader context on how the Titan series compares across the lineup, see our Toro Zero Turn Mowers Comparedbuyer’s guide.

Quick Specs

  • Equipment type: Wide-deck Titan-grade residential zero-turn mower
  • Manufacturer: Toro
  • Model: Titan 60 (model 76605)
  • Series: Titan
  • Engine: 24 HP Kawasaki FR730 726cc V-twin (air-cooled gas)
  • Displacement: 726cc
  • Engine HP: 24 HP gross (17.9 kW, at 3,600 RPM SAE J1940/J2723 as rated by Kawasaki)
  • Fuel type: Gasoline
  • Cooling: Air-cooled
  • Air filter: Kawasaki standard air cleaner
  • Deck size: 60 inches (IronForged 10-gauge steel, fully-welded grade-50 steel bumper)
  • Deck features: 3 blades (0.164″ steel with stiffener), rubber discharge chute, 4 anti-scalp wheels
  • Front end: Commercial-style I-beam
  • Front bumper: Reinforced bull-nose, fully-welded grade-50 steel
  • Spindle housing: Cast aluminum
  • Deck lift system: Standard foot-operated pro drop-pin
  • Cutting height: 1.5-5.0 inches
  • Number of blades: 3
  • Blade tip speed: 18,908 ft/min
  • Transmission: Dual hydrostatic HG-ZT2800
  • Drive type: Rear-wheel drive
  • Clutch: Electromagnetic
  • Forward speed: Up to 8.5 mph
  • Drive tires: 22×11 (massive aggressive tread)
  • Caster tires: 13×6.5-6 pneumatic, treaded
  • Frame: 3 × 1.5 × 0.120 in wall tubular steel
  • Seat: 20-inch gaming-style
  • Armrests: Optional
  • Steering controls: Twin lever with standard dampers
  • Hitch bracket: Standard
  • Fuel tank: 5 gallons (18.9 L)
  • Operating weight: 845 lb
  • Terrain type: Flat with obstacles
  • ROPS: Optional
  • Recommended use: Residential
  • Start type: Electric
  • Warranty: 3-year residential limited
  • Approximate CAD price: $7,800-$8,800 depending on dealer

Reviews & Ratings on Aglist

Factory specifications tell you what the Toro Titan 60 is engineered to do. Real owner reviews tell you whether the Titan’s I-beam build and Kawasaki engine deliver the durability that justifies the step up from the TimeCutter range, and whether the 60-inch Titan is the right value over the flagship MAX.

What Titan 60 buyers consistently want to know:

  • Does the 24 HP Kawasaki hold up under years of acreage use?
  • Is 24 HP enough for the 60-inch deck in thick prairie grass?
  • How much does the I-beam front end and grade-50 build matter in practice?
  • Real-world cut quality and discharge in Canadian conditions?
  • Is the Titan 60 a better value than the Titan MAX 60?
  • How does the ride feel with standard suspension (no MyRIDE)?
  • Long-term durability of the cast-aluminum spindles and HG-ZT2800 transaxles?

This is where real Canadian owner experience matters most. The Titan 60 sits at a specific decision point — the wide-deck Titan below the flagship MAX. Owner reviews help future buyers understand whether the Kawasaki engine and lower price make it the smarter Titan buy for their acreage.

What Makes the Titan 60 Different

Three factors define the Titan 60 within Toro’s residential zero-turn lineup.

The Wide-Deck Titan with a Kawasaki Engine

The Titan 60’s defining combination is the 60-inch IronForged deck — the widest in the Titan series — paired with a 24 HP Kawasaki FR730 726cc V-twin. Kawasaki’s FR series has a strong durability reputation among zero-turn owners, and for many buyers the engine brand alone is a reason to pick this model. Note the engine difference within the Titan series: the Titan 60 runs the Kawasaki, while the Titan 54 runs a 26 HP Kohler — worth knowing if you have a brand preference.

Commercial-Style I-Beam Front End

Like the rest of the Titan series, the Titan 60 is built with a commercial-style I-beam front end for extreme durability, plus a fully-welded grade-50 steel bumper, cast-aluminum spindle housings, and massive 22-inch aggressive-tread rear tires. These build details put the Titan well above the TimeCutter range.

The Value Wide-Deck Below the MAX

The Titan 60 delivers the Titan build and the full 60-inch deck at a meaningful price gap below the flagship Titan MAX 60. The trade-offs are the smaller engine (24 HP Kawasaki versus 26 HP Kohler), the 5-gallon tank (versus 7), optional ROPS and armrests (standard on the MAX), a slightly lower top speed (8.5 versus 9 mph), and a 3-year warranty (versus 4). For owners who don’t need the flagship extras, it’s the value wide-deck Titan.

24 HP Kawasaki Engine & 60-Inch IronForged Deck

The engine-and-deck pairing delivers the Titan 60’s acreage performance.

24 HP Kawasaki FR730 726cc Engine

The Kawasaki air-cooled V-twin (726cc) provides:

  • Ample power to drive the full 60-inch deck through typical acreage grass
  • Kawasaki FR-series durability — a strong reputation among zero-turn owners
  • Up to 8.5 mph forward ground speed
  • Electric start with electromagnetic blade clutch
  • 10W-30 oil, standard 4-cycle maintenance

In the thickest, tallest, or wettest conditions, the Titan MAX’s 26 HP Kohler has more reserve — but for typical Canadian acreage mowing, the 24 HP Kawasaki is well-matched to the 60-inch deck.

60-Inch IronForged Deck

The 60-inch IronForged 10-gauge steel deck features a fully-welded grade-50 steel bumper, a reinforced bull-nose leading edge, 3 blades (0.164-inch steel with stiffeners) spinning at 18,908 ft/min, and 4 anti-scalp wheels. The commercial-style rubber discharge chute flexes for close trimming without damaging landscaping.

Cut Quality Configuration

  • Cutting height: 1.5-5.0 inches, via standard foot-operated pro drop-pin
  • 3-blade system with stiffeners for even cut across the full 60-inch width
  • Rubber discharge chute standard; optional 60-inch Recycler kit for mulching
  • Optional striping kit and powered bagger (#79348, 6.42 bushel, shared with Titan MAX)

I-Beam Front End & Operator Station

The Titan 60’s build and operator interface reflect its commercial-style intent.

Commercial-Style I-Beam Front End

  • I-beam front end for extreme durability and strength under demanding use
  • Fully-welded grade-50 steel bumper protects the front of the machine
  • Cast-aluminum spindle housings for long deck life
  • Massive 22-inch rear tires with aggressive tread for traction on mixed terrain
  • Treaded front casters for added grip

Operator Station

  • 20-inch gaming-style seat for support during long sessions
  • Twin-lever steering with standard dampers
  • Cast-aluminum stomp pad for grip and to scrape boots
  • Spray-blocking fenders keep tire spray off the engine and operator
  • Standard hitch bracket for towing yard accessories
  • Optional armrests — note armrests are not standard
  • Optional ROPS — note ROPS is not standard

Note that the Titan 60 uses standard suspension rather than MyRIDE, and both armrests and ROPS are optional. For slope work, a ROPS with seatbelt is strongly advisable — budget for it if your property has grades.

Dual Hydrostatic Drive System

The Titan 60 uses dual hydrostatic HG-ZT2800 transaxles matched to its Titan-grade duty.

HG-ZT2800 Drive

  • Dual hydrostatic HG-ZT2800 transaxles, one per rear drive wheel, for true zero-turn maneuverability
  • Rear-wheel drive with massive 22×11 drive tires
  • Up to 8.5 mph forward ground speed
  • Smooth, infinitely variable speed control through the twin levers

Traction & Stability

The 22-inch rear tires with aggressive tread give strong traction on the mixed terrain common on Canadian acreage, and the treaded front casters add grip. The I-beam front end and tubular steel frame provide a stable, durable platform at the machine’s 845 lb operating weight.

Best Applications for the Titan 60

The Titan 60 fits a specific Canadian acreage buyer profile.

Best fit for the Titan 60:

  • Larger rural properties, acreages, and hobby farms (3-6 acres of grass)
  • Larger open areas where the 60-inch deck’s coverage speed pays off
  • Owners who prefer a Kawasaki engine — the FR-series durability reputation
  • Buyers who want Titan-grade build at a price below the flagship MAX
  • Owners who tow yard accessories — the hitch bracket is standard

Less suitable for:

  • Properties with tight gates or obstacles — the Titan 54 maneuvers more easily
  • The most demanding tall-grass conditions — the MAX’s 26 HP Kohler has more reserve
  • True full-time commercial operations — a liquid-cooled commercial machine is the right tier
  • Owners mowing rough ground for long sessions — a MyRIDE-equipped model adds ride comfort
  • Very hilly properties — ROPS is optional here, so fit one and operate with care

The honest assessment: the Titan 60 is the right answer for Canadian acreage owners with 3-6 acres of open ground who want the Titan’s I-beam build and a 60-inch deck, with a Kawasaki engine, at a meaningful saving over the flagship MAX. It shares the Titan 54’s commercial-style construction with the wider deck for faster coverage. The trade-offs versus the MAX are real but manageable for most owners: 2 fewer horsepower, a smaller tank, optional ROPS and armrests, and a shorter warranty. If you want the widest Titan deck and don’t need the flagship extras, the Titan 60 is the value pick; if you mow the heaviest grass or want everything standard, the MAX justifies its premium.

Titan 60 vs Titan 54 vs Titan MAX 60

The Titan 60 is most-commonly cross-shopped within the Titan family.

FeatureTitan 54 (76501)Titan 60 (76605)Titan MAX 60
Engine26 HP Kohler 747cc24 HP Kawasaki 726cc26 HP Kohler 747cc
Deck54″ IronForged60″ IronForged60″ IronForged
Front endI-beamI-beamI-beam / heavy
Top speed8.5 mph8.5 mph9 mph
Fuel tank5 gal5 gal7 gal
Drive tires22×1122×1123×12-12
ArmrestsOptionalOptionalStandard
ROPSOptionalOptionalStandard
Warranty3-yr3-yr4-yr
Weight751 lb845 lb876 lb
Price (CAD)$7,500-$8,500$7,800-$8,800$9,500-$10,500

Choose the Titan 54 if your property has gates, tight spots, or obstacles where the narrower deck maneuvers better — or if you prefer the 26 HP Kohler engine.

Choose the Titan 60 if you have larger open ground and want the widest Titan deck at the best price — the Kawasaki-powered value pick of the series. The coverage-speed choice below the MAX.

Choose the Titan MAX 60 if you want the most power, the biggest tank, standard ROPS and armrests, and the longest warranty — the flagship for the most demanding residential acreage.

An interesting wrinkle in this decision: the Titan 54 actually has the larger engine (26 HP Kohler) while the Titan 60 has the wider deck (with the 24 HP Kawasaki). If raw power-per-inch matters most, the 54 wins; if coverage width matters most, the 60 wins; if you want both, that’s the MAX. For the complete lineup view, see our Toro Zero Turn Mowers Compared guide.

Coverage & Productivity

The Titan 60’s value case rests on fast, durable coverage of open acreage.

Coverage Math

At practical mowing speeds (6-7 mph practical, 8.5 mph reserved for open transport):

  • 60-inch deck: approximately 3.4-4.0 acres/hour open, 2.7-3.3 with obstacles
  • A 3-acre property: roughly 0.8-1.1 hours per cut on open ground
  • A 6-acre property: roughly 1.5-2.2 hours per cut depending on obstacles

The 60-inch deck is what makes the Titan 60 efficient on larger open properties — each pass covers meaningfully more ground than the 54, cutting total mowing time across the season. Use the Mowing Time Calculator to estimate session time for your property.

Fuel & Running Cost

The air-cooled 24 HP Kawasaki runs on regular gasoline with standard 4-cycle maintenance. Running cost is typical for a residential gas zero-turn — the 5-gallon tank covers most acreage sessions, with ongoing costs being blades, belts, oil, and filters on a seasonal schedule.

Maintenance & Long-Term Ownership

The Titan 60 has a straightforward residential gas maintenance profile built around the Kawasaki engine and HG-ZT2800 drive.

Residential Maintenance Schedule

  • Before each use: Visual inspection, oil and fuel check, deck clearance, debris removal
  • Every 25 hours: Grease points lubrication, blade inspection, air filter check
  • Every 50 hours: Engine oil and filter change (10W-30), deck belt inspection, deck washing
  • Every 100 hours: Air filter replacement, spark plug inspection, full deck inspection, hydro oil check
  • Seasonally: Blade sharpening or replacement, belt inspection, full service
  • Winter storage: Fuel stabilizer treatment, battery maintenance, deck cleaning and treatment

Typical Wear Part Replacement Costs (Canadian Pricing)

  • Mower blades (set of 3 for 60″ deck): $60-$130 CAD per set
  • Engine oil + filter (10W-30): $40-$80 CAD per change
  • Air filter: $25-$55 CAD per replacement
  • Deck belt (60-inch): $70-$140 CAD per belt
  • Drive/hydro belt: $50-$110 CAD per belt
  • Hydro oil service kit: $130-$160 CAD
  • Battery: $120-$200 CAD per replacement (every 4-6 years)
  • Spark plugs (pair): $15-$35 CAD per set

Long-Term Residential Ownership Economics

Typical 10-year cost of ownership for an acreage owner (50-70 hours/year average):

  • Purchase: $7,800-$8,800 CAD
  • Annual fuel: $180-$350 CAD (50-70 hours residential use)
  • Annual maintenance: $150-$280 CAD (residential service)
  • Wear parts (10 years): $1,400-$2,800 CAD
  • Total 10-year residential cost: Approximately $12,500-$16,000 CAD

The Titan 60’s I-beam front end, grade-50 build, and Kawasaki engine are what justify the total over a TimeCutter — for an owner putting real seasonal hours on the machine across open acreage, the durable build and wide deck spread the purchase price across many seasons of fast, reliable mowing.

Frequently Asked Questions

Where can I read Toro Titan 60 reviews and ratings?

On Aglist, the Reviews & Ratings section helps Canadian buyers compare owner feedback on the 24 HP Kawasaki engine, the 60-inch IronForged deck’s cut quality, the I-beam build’s durability, and long-term acreage ownership impressions.

What engine does the Toro Titan 60 use?

The Titan 60 (model 76605) uses a 24 HP Kawasaki FR730 726cc air-cooled V-twin. The horsepower is rated at 3,600 RPM (SAE J1940/J2723); as configured to meet safety, emission, and operating requirements, actual engine output on the mower may be significantly lower. Note that the Titan 54 in the same series uses a 26 HP Kohler instead — the engines differ by deck size within the Titan series.

Is 24 HP enough for the 60-inch deck?

For typical Canadian acreage grass, yes — the Kawasaki FR730 is well-matched to the 60-inch deck at the machine’s practical mowing speeds. In the thickest, tallest, or wettest conditions, the Titan MAX’s 26 HP Kohler has more reserve, which is one of the reasons the MAX commands its premium. For most residential acreage mowing, the 24 HP Kawasaki handles the deck comfortably.

What is the difference between the Toro Titan 60 and Titan MAX 60?

Both share the 60-inch IronForged deck and Titan build, but the MAX adds a larger 26 HP Kohler engine (versus 24 HP Kawasaki), a 7-gallon tank (versus 5), standard ROPS and armrests (both optional on the Titan 60), a slightly higher top speed (9 versus 8.5 mph), bigger 23-inch drive tires, and a 4-year warranty (versus 3). The Titan 60 is the value wide-deck Titan; the MAX is the fully-equipped flagship.

What is the difference between the Toro Titan 60 and Titan 54?

The Titan 60 has the wider 60-inch deck and a 24 HP Kawasaki engine; the Titan 54 has a 54-inch deck and a 26 HP Kohler engine. Otherwise they share the I-beam front end, grade-50 build, HG-ZT2800 transaxles, and 22-inch rear tires. Choose the 60 for larger open ground and coverage speed; choose the 54 for tighter properties or if you prefer the bigger Kohler engine.

Does the Toro Titan 60 have MyRIDE suspension?

No. The Titan 60 uses Toro’s standard suspension rather than the MyRIDE floating-platform system. For owners mowing rough ground for long sessions, a MyRIDE-equipped model (such as the TimeCutter MAX MyRIDE) or the discontinued Titan MyRIDE 60 on the used market is worth considering for ride comfort.

How many acres can a Titan 60 mow per hour?

At practical mowing speeds (6-7 mph), the 60-inch deck covers approximately 3.4-4.0 acres/hour on open ground and somewhat less with obstacles. A 3-acre property takes roughly 0.8-1.1 hours per cut on open ground. The 8.5 mph top speed is best reserved for open transport.

Does the Titan 60 come with ROPS and armrests?

Both ROPS and armrests are optional rather than standard on the Titan 60 — a difference from the flagship Titan MAX, where both are standard. If you’ll mow any slopes, a ROPS with seatbelt is strongly advisable and should be budgeted for.

Can I mulch or bag with the Titan 60?

Yes. It discharges via a rubber chute by default, and Toro offers a 60-inch Recycler (mulching) kit, a striping kit, and the powered bagger (#79348, 6.42 bushel, shared across Titan and Titan MAX) as accessories. These are dealer or aftermarket add-ons rather than standard equipment.

How does the Titan 60 handle hills?

Toro rates the Titan 60 for flat ground with obstacles, so operate with care on slopes — mow up and down rather than across, reduce speed on inclines, and stay clear of drop-offs and water. Because ROPS is optional, fit one with a seatbelt before any slope work. Zero-turns lose traction and steering on steep or wet grades.

How heavy is the Toro Titan 60?

The Titan 60 has an operating weight of 845 lb — heavier than the Titan 54 (751 lb) thanks to the wider deck, but lighter than the flagship Titan MAX 60 (876 lb). Transport it on an appropriately rated trailer with proper ramps and tie-downs.

Is the Toro Titan 60 available in Canada?

Yes. The 76605 is a current-production model sold and serviced through Toro’s authorized dealer network across Canada and through some retailers. Canadian dealer pricing typically ranges $7,800-$8,800 CAD depending on dealer and configuration. Confirm current pricing and availability with your local Canadian Toro dealer.

Similar Equipment

Note: We try our best to keep specs and information accurate, but some details can be missing or different depending on the source. Before you buy, service, or repair equipment, please double-check key specs with the manufacturer, the owner’s manual, or your dealer.

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