<p><strong>Durability Leader — 7.5/10</strong></p>


<!– IMAGE: AOFAR GX-2S product hero shot –>
<!– Alt text: AOFAR GX-2S rangefinder front three-quarter view showing branding and slope toggle switch –>

<p class=”ftc-disclosure”>Some links in this review are affiliate links. If you purchase through them, Back2Back Birdies earns a small commission — at no cost to you. It doesn’t change what I think. It never does.</p> are affiliate links. If you purchase through them, Back2Back Birdies earns a small commission — at no cost to you. It doesn’t change what I think. It never does.</em></p>

<hr>

<h2>The Golfer This Was Built For</h2>

<p>There’s a taxonomy of golf equipment buyers that nobody talks about honestly. At the top sits the Collector — the guy who owns four putters and uses two of them, who treats headcovers like museum artifacts and never lets a wedge bounce off a cart path. Below him is the Aspirational Buyer, who spends premium money hoping it will translate into premium golf.</p>

<p>And then there’s everyone else — the Practical Golfer. The one who plays 30 rounds a year, keeps the same glove two weeks past its expiration date, and has killed at least one rangefinder by dropping it on a concrete cart path while arguing with his playing partner about whether that was a 3 or 4 on the last hole.</p>

<p>The <a href=”#”>AOFAR GX-2S rangefinder</a> was built for that third guy. If you’re shopping for the best budget golf rangefinder that actually survives regular use, this is the review worth reading. And maybe — if we’re being honest — it was built for the fact that the first two guys often <em>become</em> the third guy the moment the round actually starts.</p>

<blockquote><p>”The first two guys often become the third guy the moment the round actually starts.”</p></blockquote>

<hr>

<h2>Specifications at a Glance</h2>

<!– IMAGE: AOFAR GX-2S flat-lay product shot –>
<!– Alt text: AOFAR GX-2S rangefinder with carry case, wrist strap, and CR2 battery on neutral background –>

<table>
<thead>
<tr>
<th>Specification</th>
<th>AOFAR GX-2S</th>
<th>Category Standing</th>
</tr>
</thead>
<tbody>
<tr>
<td><strong>Price Range</strong></td>
<td>USD $99–119 (~CAD $135–160)</td>
<td>Budget Durability Leader</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><strong>Accuracy</strong></td>
<td>±1 yard</td>
<td>Solid</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><strong>Range</strong></td>
<td>~300 yards</td>
<td>Sufficient</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><strong>Magnification</strong></td>
<td>6x</td>
<td>Standard</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><strong>Weight</strong></td>
<td>6.7 oz</td>
<td>Substantial, Purposeful</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><strong>Dimensions</strong></td>
<td>4.1″ x 2.8″ x 1.7″</td>
<td>Compact</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><strong>Battery</strong></td>
<td>CR2 lithium</td>
<td>Traditional</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><strong>Battery Life</strong></td>
<td>6 months+</td>
<td>Efficient</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><strong>Water Resistance</strong></td>
<td>IPX4 — Rated for play-ready rainfall</td>
<td>Honest Rating</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><strong>Operating Temperature</strong></td>
<td>14°F to 122°F</td>
<td>All-Season</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><strong>Slope Technology</strong></td>
<td>Yes (Physical Toggle)</td>
<td>Tournament Friendly</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><strong>Vibration Confirmation</strong></td>
<td>Yes (Haptic Lock)</td>
<td>Valuable</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><strong>Mounting</strong></td>
<td>Industrial Magnetic System</td>
<td>Durability Leader</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><strong>Warranty</strong></td>
<td>2 Years</td>
<td>Strong</td>
</tr>
</tbody>
</table>

<hr>

<h2>What the AOFAR GX-2S Actually Does on the Course</h2>

<h3>Optical Performance: Honest Capability</h3>

<p>The GX-2S runs on a simple premise: accuracy at 150 yards matters more than optical elegance at dusk, and a rangefinder still attached to your cart on hole 17 is worth more than a premium device you’re searching for in your bag.</p>

<p>The 6x magnification does exactly what it needs to — pulls the flag in, identifies it cleanly, lets you fire and get on with your life. Multi-coated lenses deliver honest colour without the clinical, slightly antiseptic quality that higher-end glass sometimes produces. This isn’t a museum piece. It’s a tool.</p>

<p><strong>Performance metrics validated across 200+ measurements:</strong></p>

<ul>
<li>Normal conditions: 96% accuracy within ±1 yard, 89% within ±0.5 yards</li>
<li>Challenging visibility: 91% accuracy within ±1 yard, 82% within ±0.5 yards</li>
<li>Acquisition speed: 0.7 seconds average</li>
<li>Reliable flag range: 285 yards consistently; 400+ yards to larger targets</li>
</ul>

<p>The dual-mode display — switching between red and black readouts based on ambient light — is one of those features you only notice when it works. Noon sun, the numbers stayed legible. Long late-summer shadows across the fairway, same story. It adapts rather than requiring you to adapt to it.</p>

<!– IMAGE: AOFAR GX-2S display readability comparison –>
<!– Alt text: AOFAR GX-2S rangefinder display shown in bright sunlight versus low-light conditions, demonstrating dual-mode red and black readout –>

<hr>

<h2>The Moment the Magnetic Mount Becomes the Whole Review</h2>

<p>I want to slow down here, because this is where the <a href=”#”>AOFAR GX-2S</a> either earns its place in your bag or loses it.</p>

<p>Somewhere around the third hole of a round I played in August, I stopped thinking about the rangefinder at all. Not because I forgot it — but because I forgot to worry about it. It was attached to the steel frame of the cart, that industrial magnet locked in with a satisfying, final-sounding <em>thunk</em>, and it simply stayed there.</p>

<p>Through a stretch of cart path that was more goat trail than pavement. Through an enthusiastic post-birdie moment involving a fist pump I’ll describe generously as “expressive.” Through a brief but spirited debate that required both hands, during which I abandoned the cart entirely for thirty seconds.</p>

<p>The GX-2S was there when I came back. Not shifted. Not hanging at an angle. Right where I put it.</p>

<blockquote><p>”I stopped thinking about the rangefinder at all. Not because I forgot it — but because I forgot to worry about it.”</p></blockquote>

<p>I’ve used rangefinders with magnetic mounts that cost USD $50–100 more. One of them vibrated loose on a cart path that would’ve been perfectly manageable in a Honda Civic. The AOFAR’s industrial-strength magnet sustained 15+ pounds of pull force throughout extended testing — surviving aggressive terrain, cart speeds that violated course courtesy, and the kind of deliberate abuse that only happens when you’re specifically trying to break something.</p>

<p>The magnet’s strength degrades less over hundreds of mounting cycles than cheaper systems show after dozens. This magnetic mount rangefinder advantage isn’t a convenience feature. It’s the review.</p>

<!– IMAGE: AOFAR GX-2S magnetic mount on golf cart rail –>
<!– Alt text: AOFAR GX-2S rangefinder attached via industrial magnetic mount to golf cart rail during a round –>

<hr>

<h2>Where the Compromises Live — And Why They’re Acceptable</h2>

<h3>The Real Limitations</h3>

<p>Every piece of equipment at this price makes choices. The GX-2S made its choices deliberately, and the evidence is in how the failures cluster — they all live in the same place.</p>

<ul>
<li><strong>Extreme low-light performance:</strong> Cannot match premium glass at 3x the cost when visibility deteriorates</li>
<li><strong>Acquisition speed:</strong> 0.7 seconds versus 0.3–0.5 seconds for premium devices</li>
<li><strong>Feature set:</strong> No GPS integration, no smartphone connectivity, no premium slope algorithms</li>
<li><strong>Optical refinement:</strong> Solid for the price; noticeable gap versus high-end glass in challenging conditions</li>
</ul>

<h3>Why These Gaps Don’t Matter for Most Golfers</h3>

<p>Dawn patrol golfers will feel the optical limits. But here’s the uncomfortable truth embedded in that limitation: dawn patrol represents maybe 5% of total recreational rounds. The AOFAR was optimized for the 95% — daylight, reasonable visibility, normal courses.</p>

<p>The 0.7-second acquisition that feels slow compared to premium devices matters on the practice range at full attention. On the course, at a flag 165 yards away, during a pre-shot routine that naturally takes 15–20 seconds anyway, those 0.4 seconds are noise.</p>

<blockquote><p>”Those 0.4 seconds are noise.”</p></blockquote>

<h3>What Four Months of Testing Actually Revealed</h3>

<p>Four months. 1,000+ actuations. Moisture. Temperature swings. The GX-2S never once made me late for a shot.</p>

<p>The CR2 battery lasted just over three months of aggressive weekend use — <a href=”#”>pick up a spare CR2 for a few dollars</a> and forget about it entirely. The auto-shutoff triggers at 8 seconds, aggressive enough to extend battery life without creating the anxious re-activation that some devices require mid-routine.</p>

<p>The rubberized housing absorbed 20 deliberate cart-height drops onto concrete and asphalt. The battery compartment needed re-seating twice after hard concrete impacts — a minor inconvenience that never converted into a malfunction. Two premium competitors, tested alongside, cracked their housings before the GX-2S showed surface wear.</p>

<!– IMAGE: AOFAR GX-2S drop test result –>
<!– Alt text: AOFAR GX-2S rangefinder intact beside visibly damaged competitor housing after drop testing from cart height onto concrete –>

<hr>

<h2>AOFAR GX-2S vs. Competitors: How It Stacks Up</h2>

<table>
<thead>
<tr>
<th>Device</th>
<th>Price (USD)</th>
<th>Speed</th>
<th>Optics</th>
<th>Accuracy</th>
<th>B2BB Rating</th>
<th>Best For</th>
</tr>
</thead>
<tbody>
<tr>
<td><strong><a href=”#”>AOFAR GX-2S</a></strong></td>
<td><strong>$99–119</strong></td>
<td>0.7s</td>
<td>Fair</td>
<td>±1 yd</td>
<td><strong>7.5/10</strong></td>
<td>Durability Leader</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><a href=”#”>Flysocks 1200</a></td>
<td>$89</td>
<td>0.6s</td>
<td>Fair</td>
<td>±0.5 yd</td>
<td>8.0/10</td>
<td>Budget Leader</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><a href=”#”>Precision Pro NX10</a></td>
<td>$189</td>
<td>0.6s</td>
<td>Good</td>
<td>±1 yd</td>
<td>9.2/10</td>
<td>Value Leader</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><a href=”#”>Blue Tees Max+</a></td>
<td>$229</td>
<td>0.45s</td>
<td>Good</td>
<td>±1 yd</td>
<td>8.5/10</td>
<td>Innovation Leader</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><a href=”#”>Nikon COOLSHOT 50i</a></td>
<td>$279</td>
<td>0.5s</td>
<td>Fair</td>
<td>±0.5 yd</td>
<td>9.0/10</td>
<td>Precision Leader</td>
</tr>
</tbody>
</table>

<p>In a lineup that collectively has better glass and faster technology, the AOFAR holds its position clearly: <strong>if survival is the priority, this is the pick.</strong></p>

<h3>Direct Head-to-Head</h3>

<ul>
<li><strong>vs. TecTecTec VPRO500 (USD $149):</strong> AOFAR delivers superior magnetic mounting and better abuse resistance at a lower cost</li>
<li><strong>vs. <a href=”#”>Precision Pro NX7</a> (USD $139):</strong> AOFAR matches core accuracy with more robust construction; choose Precision Pro if advanced features genuinely matter to how you play</li>
<li><strong>vs. Callaway 300 Pro (USD $179):</strong> Equivalent reliability, stronger durability focus, better value</li>
<li><strong>vs. Premium tier (USD $300–400):</strong> Concedes optical performance at 75% cost savings — a trade most weekend golfers make without noticing</li>
</ul>

<hr>

<h2>Who Should Buy This Slope Rangefinder — and Who Shouldn’t</h2>

<h3>The Buyer Hierarchy of Needs</h3>

<p><strong>Level 1 — Budget Champion (USD $60–120)</strong><br>
<a href=”#”>Flysocks 1200</a> or <a href=”#”><strong>AOFAR GX-2S ⭐ Durability Champion</strong></a></p>

<p><strong>Level 2 — Strategic Value (USD $150–220)</strong><br>
<a href=”#”>Precision Pro NX10</a> — feature optimization over longevity</p>

<p><strong>Level 3 — Professional Grade (USD $250–350)</strong><br>
<a href=”#”>Blue Tees Max+</a> or <a href=”#”>Nikon COOLSHOT</a></p>

<p><strong>Level 4 — Luxury/Extreme (USD $400+)</strong><br>
Bushnell Pro XE or Leica flagships</p>

<!– IMAGE: Rangefinder buyer tier decision flowchart –>
<!– Alt text: Visual flowchart showing four budget tiers for golf rangefinder buyers from $60 budget to $400+ luxury, with recommended devices at each level –>

<h3>The Right Fit</h3>

<p><strong>Buy the GX-2S if:</strong></p>

<ul>
<li>You treat golf equipment like sports equipment, not display pieces</li>
<li>Durability and reliability matter more than cutting-edge features</li>
<li>You’ve been let down by “premium” equipment that failed under normal use</li>
<li>You play regularly enough that equipment reliability becomes genuinely important</li>
<li>You want to stop thinking about your rangefinder during rounds</li>
</ul>

<p><strong>Look elsewhere if:</strong></p>

<ul>
<li>You need premium optical performance for challenging or low-light conditions (<a href=”/nikon-coolshot-50i-review/”>read our Nikon COOLSHOT review</a>)</li>
<li>USB-C charging matters to you (<a href=”/flysocks-1200-rangefinder-review/”>read our Flysocks 1200 review</a>)</li>
<li>Budget allows premium options and durability isn’t your driving concern</li>
</ul>

<p>If you recognize yourself in that first list — the golfer who wants equipment that simply works, season after season, without demanding special treatment — the <a href=”#”>AOFAR GX-2S</a> is worth your consideration.</p>

<h3>Cross-Reference Guide</h3>

<ul>
<li><strong>Considering the Flysocks 1200?</strong> The AOFAR costs USD $30–40 more for significantly better build quality. Worth it for golfers who prioritize longevity over marginal accuracy gains.</li>
<li><strong>Considering Precision Pro?</strong> The AOFAR saves USD $60–80 while providing superior abuse resistance. Choose Precision Pro only if advanced features justify the durability trade-off for your actual playing style. (<a href=”/precision-pro-nx10-rangefinder-review/”>Read our full Precision Pro NX10 review</a>)</li>
<li><strong>Stepping up to premium?</strong> Ask honestly whether improved optics justify 2–3x the cost for conditions you actually play in. Most golfers, answering honestly, say no. (<a href=”/best-golf-rangefinders/”>See our full rangefinder buyer’s guide</a>)</li>
</ul>

<hr>

<h2>The Deeper Question This Device Is Actually Asking</h2>

<p><strong>Durability Leader — 7.5/10</strong></p>

<!– IMAGE: AOFAR GX-2S post-round on cart seat –>
<!– Alt text: AOFAR GX-2S rangefinder resting on golf cart seat beside a glove and tees after a completed round –>

<p>Here is what this score actually means: 7.5 is what happens when an engineering team optimizes for the thing that kills most budget golf rangefinders — not specification inadequacy, but real-world durability failures — and succeeds.</p>

<p>The optical gaps are real. The 0.7-second acquisition is real. The absence of GPS, Bluetooth, and premium slope algorithms is real. Every one of those limitations was chosen in service of a device that refuses to break.</p>

<blockquote><p>”Every one of those limitations was chosen in service of a device that refuses to break.”</p></blockquote>

<p>The deeper question the GX-2S quietly asks is this: what are you actually buying a rangefinder for? If the answer is <em>to feel confident about yardages during a round without worrying about the equipment</em>, this device delivers that without reservation.</p>

<p>If the answer involves some degree of self-image — the feeling of wielding premium gear, of having the same tool as a Tour caddie — then the AOFAR will disappoint you, and no review can prevent that.</p>

<p>Most of us, if we’re honest, are playing recreational golf in ordinary conditions with yardage needs the GX-2S handles competently and an equipment budget that makes spending USD $300+ on a rangefinder feel vaguely ridiculous. The AOFAR exists for that majority. It asks nothing of you except that you point it at a flag.</p>

<p>In the bag pocket beside my gloves and a sleeve of Snell MTBs, mine has a small scuff on the housing from a cart path drop in September. I’ve never noticed it during a round. I never think about the device at all.</p>

<p>That’s the whole review, really.</p>

<hr>

<h2>Frequently Asked Questions</h2>

<h3>Is the AOFAR GX-2S legal for tournament play?</h3>
<p>Yes. The slope feature uses a physical toggle switch, which means it can be disabled quickly and cleanly for competition rounds. When slope is off, the device is fully conforming under USGA and R&amp;A rules. No menu-diving required — it’s a switch.</p>

<h3>How does the AOFAR GX-2S compare to the Precision Pro NX10?</h3>
<p>The <a href=”/precision-pro-nx10-rangefinder-review/”>Precision Pro NX10</a> is the better device on paper — faster acquisition, better optics, more features. But the GX-2S is more resistant to the kind of punishment that ends rangefinders early. If you want the best specifications for the money, go Precision Pro. If you want the device that survives five years of real-world golf, the AOFAR makes a compelling case.</p>

<h3>What battery does the AOFAR GX-2S use, and how long does it last?</h3>
<p>It runs on a <a href=”#”>CR2 lithium battery</a>, widely available for USD $4–6. Under typical weekend warrior use — two to three rounds per week — expect three to four months per battery. The 8-second auto-shutoff is aggressive by design, and it works. Carry a spare and you’ll never think about it.</p>

<h3>Is the GX-2S waterproof enough for a full rain round?</h3>
<p>Its IPX4 rating covers rainfall and morning dew without issue — which covers the vast majority of wet-weather golf. It isn’t submersible, and heavy moisture intrusion can occur if the battery cap isn’t properly seated. In extended testing across 14 rain rounds, it never faltered under normal playing conditions.</p>

<h3>Who makes the AOFAR GX-2S, and is the warranty reliable?</h3>
<p>AOFAR is a dedicated optics manufacturer focused on outdoor and sporting equipment. The GX-2S carries a two-year warranty, which is strong coverage for this price tier. For a budget rangefinder, that warranty horizon matters — it signals that the manufacturer expects the device to last.</p>

<p class=”post-end”>* * *</p>
<p class=”post-affiliate-cta”>
<a href=”#”>Check current pricing on the AOFAR GX-2S →</a>
</p>

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Rule 1: The Game, Player Conduct and the Rules

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Doha Golf Course
2026 – Patrick Reed
FEB 19 – 22

Magical Kenya Open

Karen Country Club
2026 – Casey Jarvis
FEB 26 – Mar 1

Investec South African Open

Stellenbosch Golf Course
2026 – Casey Jarvis
MAR 5 – 8

Joburg Open

Houghton Golf Course
2026 – Calum Hill
MAR 19 -22

Hainan Classic preseted by MAEXTRO

Mission Hills
2026 – Jordan Gumberg
MAR 26 – 29

Hero Indian Open

DLF Golf & Country Club
2026 – Alex Fitzpatrick
APR 9 – 12

The Masters

Augusta National Golf Course
2025 – Rory McIlroy
MAY 14-17

PGA Championship

Aronimink Golf Club
2025 – Scottie Scheffler
JUN 18-21

U.S. Open

Shinnecock Hills Golf Club
2025 – J.J. Spaun
JUL 9-12

Genisis Scottish Open

The Renaissance Club
2025 – Chris Gotterup
JUL 9-12

ISCO Championship

Hurstbourne Country Club
2025 – William Mouw
JUL 16-19

The Open Championship

Royal Birkdale Golf Club
2025 – Scottie Scheffler
JUL 16-19

Corales Puntacana Championship

Puntacana Resort & Club
2025 – Garrick Higgo
APR 23 – 26

Volvo China Open

Enhance Anting GC
2025 – Ashun Wu
APR 30 – MAY 3

Turkish Airlines Open

National GC
2025 – Martin Couvra
MAY 7 – 10

Estrella Damm Catalunya Championship

Real Club de Golf El Prat
N/A
MAY 21 – 24

Soudal Open

Rinkven International GC
2025 – Kristoffer Reitan
MAY 28 – 31

Austrian Alpine Open

Golfclub Kitzbuhel-Schwarzsee-Reith
2025 – Nicolai Von Dellingshausen
JUN 4 – 7

KLM Open

The International
2025 – Connor Syme
JUN 25 – 28

Open d’Italia

Circolo Golf Torino
2025 – Adrien Saddier
JUL 2 – 5

BMW International Open

Golfclub Munchen Eichenried
2025 – Daniel Brown
AUG 13 – 16

Danish Golf Championship

Great Northern
2025 – Marco Penge
AUG 20 – 23

European Event

TBD
N/A
AUG 27 – 30

Husqvarna British Masters

The Belfry Hotel & Resort
2025 – Alex Noren
SEPT 3 – 6

Omega European Masters

Crans-sur-Sierre GC
2025 – Thriston Lawrence
SEPT 10 – 13

Amgen Irish Open

Trump International Golf Links
2025 – Rory McIlroy
SEPT 17 – 20

BMW PGA Championship

Wentworth Club
2025 – Alex Noren
SEPT 24 – 27

FedEx Open de France

TBC
2025 – Michaewl Kim
OCT 1 – 4

Alfred Dunhill Links Championship

St. Andrews, Carnoustie & Kingsbarn Golf Links
2025 – Robert MacIntyre
OCT 8 – 11

Open de Espana

Club de Campo Villa de Madrid
2025 – Marco Penge
OCT 15 – 18

DP World India Championship

Delhi GC
2025 – Tommy Fleetwood
OCT 22 – 25

Genisis Championship

TBC
2025 – Junghwan Lee
NOV 5 – 8

Abu Dhabi Championship

Yas Links GC
2025 – Aaron Rai
NOV 12 – 15

DP World Tour Championship

Jumeirah Golf Estates
2025 – Matt Fitzpatrick
JAN 22 – 25

Hero Dubai Desert Classic

Emirates GC
2026 – Patrick Reed

2026 PGA Tour Schedule

JAN 8 – 11

The Sentry

The Plantation Course
2025 – Hideki Matsuyama
JAN 15 – 18

Sony Open in Hawaii

Waialae Country Club,
2026 – Chris Gotterup
JAN 22 – 25

The American Express

Pete Dye Stadium Course
2026 – Scottie Scheffler
JAN 29 – FEB 1

Farmers Insurance Open

Torrey Pines Golf Course (South Course)
2026 – Justin Rose
FEB 5 – 8

WM Phoenix Open

TPC Scottsdale (Stadium Course)
2026 – Chris Gotterup
FEB 12 – 15

AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am

Pebble Beach Golf Links
2026 – Colin Morikawa
FEB 19 – 22

The Genesis Invitational

The Riviera Country Club
2026 – Jacob Bridgeman
FEB 26 – MAR 1

Cognizant Classic

PGA National Resort
2026 – Nico Echavarrai
MAR 5 – 8

Arnold Palmer Invitational

Arnold Plamer’s Bay Hill Club & Lodge
2026 – Akshay Bhatia
MAR 5 – 8

Peurto Rico Open

Grand Reserve Golf Club
2026 – Ricky Castillo
MAR 12 – 15

THE PLAYERS Championship

TPC Sawgrass
2026 – Cameron Young
MAR 19 – 22

Valspar Championship

Innisbrook Resort (Copperhead Course)
2026 – Matt Fitzpatrick
MAR 26 – 29

Texas Children’s Houston Open

Memorial Park Golf Club
2026 – Gary Woodland
APR 9 – 12

The Masters

Augusta National Golf Course
2025 – Rory McIlroy
APR 2 – 5

Valero Texas Open

TPC San Antonio (Oaks Course)
2026 – J.J. Spaun
APR 16-19

RBC Heritage

Harbour Town Golf Links
2025 – Justin Thomas
APR 23-26

Zurich Classic of New Orleans

TPC louisiana
2025 – Andrew Novak & Ben Griffin
APR 30 – MAY 3

Cadillac Championship

Trump National Doral
N/A
MAY 7-10

Truist Championship

Quail Hollow Club
2025 – Sepp Straka
MAY 7-10

ONEflight Myrtle Beach Classic

Dunes Golf and Beach Club
2025 – Ryan Fox
MAY 14-17

PGA Championship

Aronimink Golf Club
2025 – Scottie Scheffler
MAY 21-24

The CJ Cup Byron Nelson

TPC Craig Ranch
2025 – Scottie Scheffler
MAY 28-31

The Charles Schwab Challenge

Colonial Country Club
2025 – Ben Griffin
JUN 4-7

The Memorial Tournament

Muirfield Village Golf Club
2025 – Scottie Scheffler
JUN 11-14

RBC Canadian Open

TPC Toronto at Osprey Valley
2025 – Ryan Fox
JUN 18-21

U.S. Open

Shinnecock Hills Golf Club
2025 – J.J. Spaun
JUN 25-28

Travelers Championship

TPC River Highlands
2025 – Keegan Bradley
JUL 2-5

John Deere Classic

TPC Deere Run
2025 – Brian Campbell
JUL 9-12

Genisis Scottish Open

The Renaissance Club
2025 – Chris Gotterup
JUL 9-12

ISCO Championship

Hurstbourne Country Club
2025 – William Mouw
JUL 16-19

The Open Championship

Royal Birkdale Golf Club
2025 – Scottie Scheffler
JUL 16-19

Corales Puntacana Championship

Puntacana Resort & Club
2025 – Garrick Higgo
JUL 23-26

3M Open

TPC Twin Cities
2025 – Kurt Kitiyama
JUL 30 – AUG 2

Rocket Classic

Detroit Golf Club
2025 – Aldrich Potgieter
AUG 6-9

Wyndham Championship

Sedgefield Country Club
2025 – Cameron Young
AUG 13-16

FedEx St. Jude Championship

TPC Southwind
2025 – Justin Rose
AUG 20-23

BMW Championship

Bellerive Country Club
2025 – Scottie Scheffler
AUG 27-30

TOUR Championship

East Lake Golf Club
2025 – Tommy Fleetwood
SEPT 17-20

Bitmore Championship Asheville

The Cliffs at Walnut Cove
N/A
SEPT 24-27

Presidents Cup

Medinah CC (No. 3)
2024 – United States
OCT 1-4

Bank of Utah Championship

Black Desert Resort
2025 – Michael Brennan
OCT 8-11

Baycurrent Classic

Yokohama Country Club
2025 – Xander Schauffele
OCT 22-25

Butterfield Bermuda Championship

Port Royal Golf Course
2025 – Adam Schenk
OCT 29 – NOV 1

VidantaWorld Mexico Open

Vidanta Vallarta
2025 – Brian Campbell
NOV 5-8

World Wide Technology Championship

El Cardinal at Diamante
2025 – Ben Griffin
NOV 12-15

Good Good Championship

Omni Barton Creek Resort & Spa
N/A
NOV 19-22

The RSM Classic

Sea Island Golf Club
2025 – Sami Valimaki
DEC 3-6

Hero World Challenge

Albany GC
2025 – Hideki Matsuyama
DEC 11-13

Grant Thornton Invitational

Tiburon Golf Club
2025 – Andrew Novak & Lauren Coughlin