ShopRite LPGA Classic pres. by Acer

Latest golf videos, saso: i wasn't expecting to win the us women's open.

  • Terms of Use
  • Privacy Policy
  • Your US State Privacy Rights
  • Children's Online Privacy Policy
  • Interest-Based Ads
  • About Nielsen Measurement
  • Do Not Sell or Share My Personal Information
  • Disney Ad Sales Site
  • Work for ESPN
  • Corrections

usga

Did You Know?

Oops! Something went wrong

Latest Articles

  • Copy link Link Copied

U.S. Women's Open Featured Films

image alt

The official fan club of the U.S. Open and U.S. Women's Open

Join the U.S. Open fan community and open doors to fan experiences, early access to ticket offers and packages, special merchandise offers and more.

Featured Videos

USGA Partners

Ally

  • Privacy Policy
  • About Our Ads
  • Cookie Settings
  • Terms Of Use
  • Accessibility

GET ALL OF USGA

Continuous updates, streaming, tee times, scoring, and much more.

USGA 1

© 2023 United States Golf Association. All Rights Reserved.

RBC Canadian Open

Hamilton Golf & Country Club

HOW TIGER TESTS GOLF BALLS

usa ladies golf tour

The top 25 players competing at the 2023 U.S. Women's Open, ranked

/content/dam/images/golfdigest/fullset/2023/7/us-womens-open-2023-players-ranking-image-collage.jpg

The U.S. Women’s Open makes its much-anticipated debut at Pebble Beach Golf Links this week, the first time the USGA has hosted a women’s championship at the famed course on California’s Monterey Peninsula since the 1948 U.S. Women’s Amateur. It’s one of four visits the Women’s Open is scheduled to make at “the greatest meeting of land and sea” between now and 2048.

Not surprisingly, a record 2,107 players submitted entries to try to qualify for this year’s championship , with a handful of past champions making the trip to see history up close. Michelle Wie West, the 2014 Women’s Open winner at Pinehurst, played just twice on the LPGA Tour in 2022 but the 33-year-old will make her competitive farewell this week as she has said she will retire after playing in the championship for the 18th time.

The USGA also extended three special exemptions, with two going to past World No. 1s Annika Sorenstam and So Yeon Ryu. The third recipient, Rose Zhang, no longer needed the special exemption she received after her groundbreaking victory last month in her professional debut at the Mizuho Americas Open as she vies for a major title on a course where she shot the competitive women’s scoring record (63) last fall in a college event.

Jin Young Ko, who just passed Lorena Ochoa for the most weeks ever as the No. 1 player in the Rolex World Rankings, is among the total of nine past World No. 1s vying to hoist the Harton S. Semple Trophy.

To prepare for the coming week, we poured through the entire 156 player field and ranked the 25 most likely to claim the title come Sunday.

More From Golf Digest

usa ladies golf tour

25: Jiyai Shin

Rolex Ranking: 33 Starts: 9 Best Finish: T-5, 2010 The former World No. 1, who relinquished her LPGA membership in 2014 to compete full-time on the JLPGA Tour, is making her first U.S. Women's Open start since 2019. Shin's won three times this year, making it 64 worldwide wins as a professional, including two LPGA majors (2008, 2012 Women's British Open).

24: Cheyenne Knight

Rolex Ranking: 35 Starts: 3 Best Finish: T-15, 2022 The 2023 season has been the most consistent of Knight's career, with eight top-20 finishes. She hopes that continues after having her best career major finish at last year’s Women’s Open at Pine Needles.

23: Celine Boutier

Rolex Ranking: 14 Starts: 6 Best Finish: T-5, 2019 A flaming hot start to 2023 (five top-15s in six starts) has chilled for the Frenchwoman, who has two missed cuts and one top-15 over her last five appearances.

22: Linn Grant

1472055493

Yong Teck Lim/R&A

Rolex Ranking: 23 Starts: 2 Best Finish: T-23, 2020 Grant's first stroke-play start in the U.S. since earning her LPGA membership came at Baltusrol, where she finished T-20. She's only finished outside the top 20 twice in 11 total starts on the LPGA as a member.

21: Jenny Shin

Rolex Ranking : 79 Starts: 12 Best Finish: 10, 2014 Four straight top-20s, including back-to-back top 10s, are fueling the 13-year-veteran's resurgent run of late. Shin held her own at Baltusrol and the KPMG Women’s PGA (T-8) considering her last LPGA win was the 2016 Volunteers of America Texas Shootout.

20: Carlota Ciganda

Rolex Ranking: 30 Starts: 11 Best Finish: Third, 2018 An impressive closing 64 at Baltusrol sent Ciganda soaring up the leaderboard to a T-3 finish, her third top-10 over the Spaniard's last four starts. She, too, is looking for her first LPGA victory since 2016.

19: Lydia Ko

1367717407

Douglas P. DeFelice

Rolex Ranking: 3 Starts: 11 Best Finish: T-3, 2016 A win a Pebble locks up Ko’s LPGA Hall of Fame spot, too, and it feels doable given her success at nearby Lake Merced more so than her recent form. The Kiwi won three times at the San Francisco course where as Ko has got one top-10 in eight starts in 2023.

18: Mina Harigae

Rolex Ranking: 72 Starts: 12 Best Finish: Second, 2022 If you value the person with the most experience at the course, Harigae's your pick. The Monterrey, Calif., native grew up playing Pebble Beach and has proven chops at the U.S. Women's Open with her runner-up showing last year. A victory would be the first of her 14-year LPGA career.

17: Ariya Jutanugarn

Rolex Ranking: 57 Starts: 4 Best Finish: Win, 2018 Dating to her victory at Shoal Creek, Jutanugarn has posted a top 10 in three of the last five U.S. Women's Opens. It's been an up-and-down season for the former No. 1, but the Thai star comes in off three top-20s in her last four starts, including a runner-up at the Meijer LPGA Classic.

16: Lilia Vu

Rolex Ranking: 4 Starts: 2 Best Finish: T-34, 2022 Vu is now a marquee talent coming off her two wins this season, including her major breakthrough at Chevron. But she’s also dealing with a back injury having missed the cut in her last three stroke-play starts following the Chevron victory.

15: Anna Nordqvist

Rolex Ranking: 31 Starts: 14 Best Finish: T-2, 2016 Nordqvist has an opportunity to win her fourth of the five LPGA majors. Her KPMG Women's PGA Championship weekend low 66-65 earned the 36-year-old Swede her best finish of the year at T-3, making it top 20 finishes in five of her last six tour starts.

14: Nelly Korda

Rolex Ranking: 2 Starts: 8 Best Finish: T-8, 2022 Korda's game is tailored for Pebble Beach, which will demand accuracy into pin-drop-sized greens. Can she rediscover her form following a week off after a surprising 11-over-par effort at the KPMG Women's PGA? That perplexing performance knocks her slightly down the rankings.

13: Brooke Henderson

1457757528

Julio Aguilar

Rolex Ranking: 11 Starts: 10 Best Finish: T-5, 2015 Henderson is becoming more consistent following a Tournament of Champions victory to begin the year. The Canadian's T-15 at the KPMG Women's PGA is her third-best result of 2023.

12: Ashleigh Buhai

Rolex Ranking: 15 Starts: 8 Best Finish: T-27, 2017 A T-39 at the KPMG Women's PGA ended an extended stay atop leaderboards for the South African, including her fourth win worldwide over the last 11 months at the Shoprite LPGA Classic.

11: Atthaya Thitikul

1439109721

Yoshimasa Nakano

Rolex Ranking: 7 Starts: 1 Best Finish: T-24, 2022 Thitikul missed her first cut in nearly a year at the KPMG Women's PGA, with 15 top-10s, a win, and a trip to the top of the World Rankings since not playing the weekend at last July's Trust Golf Women's Scottish Open.

10: Megan Khang

Rolex Ranking: 26 Starts: 10 Best Finish: T-4, 2021 Majors have brought the best out of Khang, with a T-9 at the Chevron and a T-3 at the KPMG Women's PGA her top results in 2023. However, over her career, she’s steadiest at the U.S. Women's Open, having posted top-10s in four of the last five.

9: Yuka Saso

Rolex Ranking: 24 Starts: 4 Best Finish: Win, 2021 Saso broke a streak of four straight missed cuts at majors with a runner-up at Baltusrol. It mirrored her recent return to form after Saso missed four consecutive cuts before top-10s at the Mizuho Americas Open (T-7) and the KPMG Women's PGA.

usa ladies golf tour

8: Hyo-Joo Kim

Rolex Ranking: 8 Starts: 7 Best Finish: Playoff Loss, 2018 Kim's T-20 at the KPMG Women's PGA is her second-worst finish of the year. Her steady season has her leading the tour in scoring (69.4).

7: Ayaka Furue

Rolex Ranking: 17 Starts: 2 Best Finish: MC, 2020, 2022 Furue keeps rolling. A T-8 at the KPMG Women's PGA marks six straight top-20s and four top-10s over that stretch. This week, she may beat her best major finish, a solo fourth at the 2021 Evian.

6: Xiyu Lin

Rolex Ranking: 9 Starts: 8 Best Finish: T-7, 2021 Lin’s rise—back-to-back T-3s coming into Pebble—correlates with her best finishes at the U.S. Women's Open, both coming in the last two years (T-11 in 2022).

5: Rose Zhang

1259061134

Darren Carroll/PGA of America

Rolex Ranking: 45 Starts: 4 Best Finish: T-40, 2022 You'll hear it plenty this week—Zhang holds the Pebble Beach women’s competitive course (63), carded during the second round of the Carmel Cup last September. She's quickly proven her transcendent amateur talent translates to the top of LPGA leaderboards, with a win in her maiden start and a T-8 at the KPMG Women’s PGA.

4: Minjee Lee

Rolex Ranking: 6 Starts: 9 Best Finish: Win, 2022 The winner a year ago at Pine Needles has four straight top-20 finishes heading into Pebble. Having won eight LPGA titles, she’s yet to defend in any of them, providing another incentive this week. She’s posted at least two top-10s at majors in each of the last three seasons, aiming to earn her first one of the season at Pebble.

3: Ruoning Yin

1501919040

Rolex Ranking: 5 Starts: 1 Best Finish: MC, 2021 Yin may prove Golf Channel commentator Grant Boone's call quite prescient when he heralded her victory at the DIO Implant LA Open, "In the shadow of Hollywood, a star may have been born." The KPMG Women's PGA winner could become the first multiple-time major champ in a season since Jin Young Ko in 2019.

2: Leona Maguire

Rolex Ranking: 10 Starts: 4 Best Finish: T-8, 2022 Her final-round stumble after being the 54-hole leader at the KPMG Women's PGA was frustrating, but she remains in great form now with four straight top-11 finishes. A needed week off after a four-week gauntlet is likely all the refresher needed to contend again.

1: Jin Young Ko

1500900041

Christian Petersen

Rolex Ranking: 1 Starts: 6 Best Finish: T-2, 2020 It's time for the World No. 1 to take home her third major title. Ko has yet to finish outside the top 20 in her last six starts at the U.S. Women's Open, including three consecutive top-10s. On a course demanding plenty of homework to understand, Ko and her team got to Pebble early last week, winding down by watching rounds of past U.S. Opens held there.

More from Golf Digest

Trending now.

Live U.S. Women's Open leaderboard

usa ladies golf tour

Golf LPGA Tour

U.S. Women's Open

  • LPGA Amateurs
  • Become A Member
  • LPGA Foundation
  • LPGA Professionals
  • Member Login
  • Membership Information
  • LEADERBOARD
  • Race for the Card
  • Dream Chasing: All Access Series
  • Epson Alumnae List
  • Epson Tour Player Awards
  • 2024 Player Priority List (PDF)
  • TOURNAMENTS
  • Download Schedule
  • Senior LPGA Championship
  • All-Time Scoring Records
  • Miscellaneous Player Records
  • Playoff Records

Recent Videos

usa ladies golf tour

Featured Gallery

Ruixin Liu

  • About Epson Tour
  • Directory of Official Tour Partners
  • Diversity Policy
  • Sponsor or Host An Event
  • Tour Graduates
  • 2024 Epson Tour Priority List
  • 2024 Schedule PDF
  • Race for the Card Point System
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Privacy Policy
  • Anti Doping Information
  • Gender Policy
  • Player Login

Mobile Apps

  • Android App
  • News & Social

usa ladies golf tour

Notes & Interviews

  • FireKeepers Casino Hotel Championship Lindblad, Avery, and Castle Among the 15 Players Making Their Rookie Debuts
  • Race for the Card Fiona Xu Leads Race for the Card Standings
  • Gabby Lemieux Get to Know the Tournament Invites at the FireKeepers Casino Hotel Championship
  • juli-inkster Louisiana State University All-American Ingrid Lindblad Named Recipient of the 2024 Inkster Award Presented by Workday

usa ladies golf tour

U.S. Women's Open Presented by Ally

U.S. Senior Open

U.S. Amateur

U.S. Senior Women's Open

usga

8/10 • 3 - 6 PM

Did You Know?

Oops! Something went wrong

  • Copy link Link Copied

lexusicon

Quick Reads

usa ladies golf tour

The U.S. Women's Amateur: From the Best in Amateur Golf, to the Best in the World

USGA Partners

Ally

  • Privacy Policy
  • About Our Ads
  • Cookie Settings
  • Terms Of Use
  • Accessibility

GET ALL OF USGA

Continuous updates, streaming, tee times, scoring, and much more.

USGA 1

© 2023 United States Golf Association. All Rights Reserved.

LegendsoftheLPGA_Logo_Web.jpg

LEGENDS OF THE   LPGA

usa ladies golf tour

  • 54 minutes ago

Pairings, tee times announced for Woodford Legends Invitational

usa ladies golf tour

Angela Stanford Emerges Victorious in the Legends Division of the Destination Grapevine Texas Women’s Open

Angela Stanford Leads Ewing Automotive Group Legends of the LPGA Division at the Destination Grapevine Texas Women's Open After Round 1

Angela Stanford Leads Ewing Automotive Group Legends of the LPGA Division at the Destination Grapevine Texas Women's Open After Round 1

usa ladies golf tour

Stanford Stands Alone at LPGA Senior Championship

usa ladies golf tour

Kerr Tops Leaderboard After First Round of LPGA Senior Championship

usa ladies golf tour

Charlotta Sorenstam Stays Competitive Through Teaching at IMG Academy and Legends Tour

usa ladies golf tour

Major Champions Giving Back in Big Ways at the LPGA Senior Championship

usa ladies golf tour

2024 LPGA Senior Championship Featured Groups

usa ladies golf tour

Cristie Kerr Ready for Debut at Senior LPGA Championship

usa ladies golf tour

Stay in Touch

Get the latest from  Legends of the LPGA

Thank you for being a fan!

EXPERIENCE THE LEGENDS

Legends of the LPGA is the official senior tour of the LPGA providing competitive opportunities for LPGA Tour professionals and eligible amateurs, age 45 and over. The tour was founded in 2000 by 25 veteran LPGA Tour professionals with the goal of continuing to showcase the talents of some of the greatest women golfers of all time.

Legends of the LPGA members, including 15 LPGA and World Golf Hall of Fame members, have combined for over 750 LPGA Tour victories including 84 major championships.

Legends of the LPGA has helped raise nearly $24 million for charity.

  • SI SWIMSUIT
  • SI SPORTSBOOK

2024 U.S. Women's Open Final Payouts, Prize Money: Yuka Saso Wins $2.4 Million

Jeff ritter | jun 2, 2024.

Yuka Saso triumphed at Lancaster Country Club.

There's a gold rush happening in pro golf, and the USGA is on the train. This year it boosted its purse for the U.S. Women's Open to $12 million, up from $11 million at last year's event at Pebble Beach.

Yuka Saso is taking home $2.4 million, the richest first-place prize in women's golf. The 22-year-old Japanese player, born in the Philippines, won a second U.S. Women's Open to go alongside her title in 2021. In second, the only other player under par, was Hinako Shibuno, giving Japan its first 1-2 finish in a major, men's or women's

Here's the full payouts from Lancaster, Pa.

2024 U.S. Women's Open final payouts

WIN. Yuka Saso, 4 under: $2,400,000

2. Hinako Shibuno, 1 under: $1,296,000

T3. Ally Ewing, Andrea Lee; Even: $664,777.50

5. Arpichaya Yubol, 1 over: $456,375

T6. Atthaya Thitikul, Ayaka Furue, Wichanee Meechai; 2 over: $365,405.67

T9. Rio Takeda, Sakura Koiwai, Minjee Lee; 3 over: $271,732.67

T12. Hyo Joo Kim, Ruoning Yin, Miyu Yamashita, Jin Hee Im; 4 over: $205,709.25

T16. Hannah Green, A Lim Kim, Mi Hyang Lee; 5 over: $161,840.67

T19. Jenny Shin, Charley Hull, Yan Liu, Carlota Ciganda, Chisato Iwai; 6 over: $125,829

T24. Jiwon Jeon, Wei-Ling Hsu; 7 over: $99,078.50

T26. Aditi Ashok, Sophia Popov, Minbyeol Kim; 8 over: $86,542

T29 . Jin Young Ko, Sarah Kemp, Pia Babnik, Albane Valenzuela, Xiyu Lin, Jodi Ewart Shadoff, Su Ji Kim; 9 over: $68,873.14

T36. Kristen Gillman, Anna Nordqvist, Amiyu Ozeki; 10 over: $54,338.33

T39. Hyun Kyung Park, Gaby Lopez, Jiyai Shin, Yuna Nishimura, Yui Kawamoto; 11 over: $44,914.60

T44. Megan Khang, Mariel Galdiano, Alison Lee, Asterisk Talley (a), Megan Schofill (a), Nasa Hataoka, Catherine Park (a); 12 over: $31,750

T51. Gabriela Ruffels, Haeran Ryu, Sofia Garcia, Alexandra Forsterling, Yuri Yoshida, Danielle Kang, Ashleigh Buhai; 13 over: $26,209

T58. Narin An, Celine Boutier, Amelia Garvey, Alana Uriell, Alexa Pano, Emily Kristine Pedersen, Maude-Aimee Leblanc, Kim Kaufman, Jeongeun Lee6; 14 over: $23,035.89

T67. Adela Cernousek (a), Ai Suzuki; 15 over: $21,860

T69. Caroline Inglis, Madelene Sagstrom, Marissa Steen; 16 over: $21,155

Jeff Ritter

JEFF RITTER

Jeff Ritter is the Managing Director of SI Golf. He spent more than a decade at Sports Illustrated and Golf Magazine, and in 2020 joined Morning Read to help spark its growth and eventual acquisition by Arena Group, the publisher of Sports Illustrated. He has covered more than 25 major championships, and previously helped launch SI Golf Plus Digital, Golf Magazine’s first original, weekly e-magazine, and served as its top editor. He also launched Golf's “Films” division, the magazine’s first long-form video storytelling franchise, and his debut documentary received an Edward R. Murrow Award for sports reporting. His writing has earned first-place awards from the Society of American Travel Writers, the MIN Magazine Awards, and the Golf Writers Association of America, among others. He received a bachelor’s degree from the University of Michigan and a master’s from the Medill School of Journalism at Northwestern University. A native Michigander, he remains a diehard Wolverine fan and will defend Jim Harbaugh until the bitter end.

Follow jeff_ritter

The World's 10 Biggest Women's Golf Tours

The LPGA and LET are the most publicised women’s tours, but did you know that there are actually 10 significant women’s tours worldwide? We take a look at each

  • Sign up to Golf Monthly Newsletter Newsletter

Lilia Vu, Yin Ruoning, Danielle Kang, Rose Zhang ahead of 2023 Buick LPGA Shanghai

With women’s golf booming there’s never been a better time to play the game professionally. There’s more sponsorship money and more opportunities for women to play golf competitively for a living. In fact there are eight women’s tours globally. So whether you’re an aspiring professional hoping to graduate from the amateur ranks, or simply an avid supporter of the women’s game, there’s certainly a lot going on in the global competitive scene.

Ladies Professional Golf Association (LPGA)

Let’s start with the biggest and most publicised women’s golf tour in the world - the LPGA Tour. The Ladies Professional Golf Association (LPGA) began the LPGA Tour, a series of weekly golf tournaments in 1950 when 13 pioneers including Babe Zaharias, Patty Berg and Louise Suggs had a dream to provide for elite women golfers with a platform to play professional golf. The founders were elected to the World Golf Hall of Fame as a group in 2023.

The LPGA began as a tour with events just across the USA but has since expanded to have a more global presence with a handful of co-sanctioned events now held outside of the United States in Asia, Europe, Australia and Canada. Every year it goes from strength-to-strength.

In 2020 the LPGA Tour soared to new prize-fund heights breaking through the $70 million prize purse mark, making it the world’s richest tour for women. Because of that it is widely regarded as the largest and most prestigious women’s tour to play on.

In order to earn playing rights (a tour card) to compete on the LPGA Tour, women professionals have to graduate through an annual qualifying school. This can take up to four stages to negotiate, each like a regular golf tournament with only a small number of players going on to the next stage.

The final qualifying school is over six rounds. Those successful join the leaders on the previous year’s LPGA money list/order of merit, and certain other exempt players who have maintained their playing rights, as members of the tour.

Epson Golf Tour

The Epson Tour is the LPGA’s developmental tour, it was founded in 1981. It has changed its name several time over the last two decades due to various sponsors, so you may have heard of it before as the LPGA Futures Tour, the Duramed Futures Tour or even the Symetra Tour.

Get the Golf Monthly Newsletter

Subscribe to the Golf Monthly newsletter to stay up to date with all the latest tour news, equipment news, reviews, head-to-heads and buyer’s guides from our team of experienced experts.

The tour is made up of a series of events played all over the USA (22 in 2023) culminating with a season-ending Epson Tour Championship. This tournament has been played at River Run Country Club in Davidson, North Carolina since 2020. The top 10 players on the tour’s money list earn their LPGA Tour card for the next season, and those just outside that mark (the next 24 players) get to improve their status for LPGA Tour Qualifying School.

American Auston Kim is one to watch. She has just won the 2023 Epson Tour Championship and will be hoping to make a fast-start on the LPGA next year. You don’t have to be a professional to play on the tour, it is also open to top-ranked amateurs, many of whom use it as a springboard to turn professional if they successfully earn their card.

Auston Kim winner of 2023 Epson Tour

Auston Kim, winner of the 2023 Epson Tour

Women's All Pro Tour (WAPT)

The Women’s All-Pro Tour is the official qualifying tour for the LPGA’s Epson Tour. Women may participate in the WAPT as a member or as a guest, allowing amateurs as well as professionals to compete. The beauty of this tour is that there are different entry options available. 

The women who choose to become full members pay an annual joining fee (less than $700) giving them preferential rates on the entry fees to the individual events, free range balls at tournaments, lunches and practice rounds and other perks. For those interested in competing, but not yet sure whether it’s right for them, they can pay one-off entry fees to the individual events to compete. 

In 2023 the tour also introduced a new six-event WAFT Collegiate Series, running from the end of May through to the start of August, as summer preparation before returning to compete in college.

Ladies European Tour (LET)

The Ladies European Tour (LET) was founded in 1978 and has its headquarters at the Buckinghamshire Golf Club on the outskirts of London. There are over 130 players from more than 40 countries internationally competing on the tour, which runs a full-schedule of events (29 in 2023) across five continents.

It is fair to say that the LET has had a very turbulent history, nearly collapsing through lack of sponsorship and funding in the 1980s, leading to tour members forming the Ladies European Tour Limited in 2000. 

In January 2020 the LET entered into a joint venture arrangement with the LPGA Tour with the aim of increasing the playing opportunities for female golfers in Europe. With that has come more exposure and sponsorship like the Aramco Team Series . 

The LET also organises and runs the Solheim Cup when it is in Europe. Like the LPGA, in order to gain a tour card and playing rights to compete on the LET you have to go through several stages of qualifying school, culminating in Q-School Finals.

Ladies European Tour Access Series (LETAS)

The Ladies European Tour Access Series (LETAS) is the LET’s developmental tour. It’s been running since 2010 and in that time has produced some notable graduates including English winners Lily May Humphreys and Meghan MacLaren who have both gone onto win on the LET.

The top six players on the LETAS Order of Merit earn LET membership for the Ladies European Tour. Those that just miss out but finish in spots 7-20 get to skip the first stage of the qualifying event and progress straight to Q-School finals.

You don’t have to be a professional golfer to play on LETAS, it’s open to amateur golfers also, as long as you are over the age of 18 and have a handicap of two or better. There were 16 events played in 12 countries across Europe in 2023 with a total tour prize fund purse of just over £720,000.

Sofie Kibsgaard Nielsen from Denmark won the 2023 LETAS

Sofie Kibsgaard Nielsen from Denmark won the 2023 LETAS

LPGA Of Japan Tour

The LPGA of Japan Tour is a women’s professional golf tour organised by the Japan Ladies Professional Golfers’ Association. It has been running since 1968 and has the second biggest prize purse in women’s golf, just behind the LPGA with $60 million. 

There were 38 events played in 2023 all across Japan. Women’s World Golf Hall of Famer Hisako “Chako” Higuchi holds the record for the most prolific wins on the JLPGA of all time with 69 victories spanning over two decades from 1968-1990.

LPGA Of Korea Tour

The KLPGA Tour was catapulted into the global golf spotlight back in 2020 coming out of Covid-19 pandemic, as the KLPGA Championship was the first professional golf event, in the men’s or women’s game to be played since we went into lockdown.

The Korean Ladies Professional Golf Association Tour (KLPGA) is a women’s tour played mainly in South Korea, with one event each played in Vietnam, Taiwan and China. The tour began in 2008 and every year grows in size and popularity with upwards of 30 events on the schedule, the highlight being the KLPGA Championship.

With more than a handful of the world’s top 20 players, a seemingly endless supply of title contenders, including over 30 major winners all hailing from Korea, it’s fair to say that the Korea Tour certainly produces some fine female golfers. 

Women’s World top 30 player Min-Ji Park was the tour’s most prolific winner in 2023, with six victories amassing her over $1.4million. Women’s World Number 15 Jiyai Shin had a record-breaking nine victories from 18 starts on the KLPGA Tour in 2007 while still a teenager. Also, reigning Olympic champion Inbee Park , a 7-time Major champion, is one of the South Korean golfers who made a successful start to her career on the KLPGA before graduating to the big-money earning LPGA Tour.

Inbee Park

7-time Major winner Inbee Park began her career on the KLPGA

WPGA Tour Of Australasia

Formerly known as the ALPG Tour, as the name suggests, the WPGA Tour of Australasia is a professional golf tour for women which is based in Australia. It was founded in 1972 by the Ladies Professional Golf Association of Australia, although in the early years there were only a handful of events and the tour struggled, it has since gone onto be a big success with over 150 members.

There were 18 tournaments played this season (2022/23) over the Australian summer (between November and March) including the ANZ Ladies Masters, MFS Australian Open and New Zealand Women’s Open, all three co-sanctioned with the LET.

The tour’s most famous graduate is former women’s world number one Karrie Webb , a Golf World Hall of Famer, who was a prolific winner on the WPGA and then subsequently the LPGA - a real global face in women’s golf.

China LPGA Tour

The China LGPA Tour is a professional golf tour for women organised by the China Ladies Professional Golfers’ Association, which has been running since 2008. Although there are only a handful of events played on the China LPGA Tour (13 on the 2023 schedule) thanks to the opportunity to co-sanction many of these with the bigger tours, Chinese golf gets put into the annual spotlight. 

In total there are four events co-sanctioned with the LET and one each with the LPGA Tour, the ALPG Tour and the LAGT. Although the number of events is low the prize funds are rich. In fact, in the 2023 Buick LPGA Shanghai event, players were competing for a massive $2.1 million purse. The winner, double Major champion in 2023 American Lilia Vu, took home the top prize of £315,000 along with the champion's trophy.

Sunshine Ladies Tour

The Sunshine Ladies Tour was founded in 2014 with the goal of changing the face of golf in Africa by making the sport more accessible and inclusive to all women. It’s open to professionals and low handicap amateurs and over the last 10 years has consistently provided a pipeline of talent for the world stage. 

Through its co-sanctioned events with the Ladies European Tour (LET) and the Sunshine Ladies Tour, a six-week summer swing at the start of the year allows women from over 40 countries worldwide to get their season underway in South Africa. Thanks to the tour’s longstanding partnership with Investec, the top three professionals in the order of merit gain automatic entry into the following year’s Investec South African Women’s Open and the winner receives a bonus prize worth R200,000.

Carly Frost is one of the golf industry’s best-known female writers, having worked for golf magazines for over 20 years. As a consistent three-handicapper who plays competitive club golf at Parkstone and the Isle of Purbeck courses in Dorset every week, Carly is well-versed in what lady golfers love. Her passion for golf and skill at writing combine to give her an unbeatable insight into the ladies game.  

Carly’s role at Golf Monthly is to help deliver thorough and accurate ladies equipment reviews, buying advice and comparisons to help you find exactly what you are looking for. So whether it’s the latest driver, set of irons, golf ball, pair of shoes or even an outfit, Carly will help you decide what to buy. Over the years Carly has been fortunate to play some of the greatest courses in the world. Her view ‘from the ladies tee’ is invaluable. She ranks Sea Island, Georgia, USA, where she met her husband, world-renowned golf coach Dan Frost, among her favourite golf resorts. Their aptly-named eight-year-old son Hogan is already hitting the ball as far as Mum and will undoubtedly be a name to watch out for in the future. Carly is a keen competitor and her list of golfing achievements are vast. She is a former winner of the South West of England Ladies Intermediate Championship, a three-time winner of the European Media Masters and she once beat an entire start-sheet of men to the title of Times Corporate World Golf Champion. She has played for both the Dorset and Surrey County Ladies first teams and is known for her excellent track record at matchplay.

Carly holds the ladies course record (68) at her home club Parkstone and her lowest competition round (seven-under-par 65) was carded in the pro-am of the Irish Ladies Open at Killeen Castle, playing alongside Solheim Cup superstar Anna Nordqvist. Although her current handicap index has crept up to 3.7 since Covid she has her sights firmly set on achieving that elusive scratch handicap and hopefully playing for her country when she’s 50.

Carly’s current What's In The Bag? 

Driver: Callaway Epic Max, 10.5° 

Fairway wood: TaylorMade SIM2, 15° 

Hybrids: Titleist TS2, 19°, 21°, 24° 

Irons: Mizuno JPX900, 5-PW 

Wedges: Cleveland RTX, 52°, 56° and 58° 

Putter: Scotty Cameron Futura X5

Ball: 2021 Callaway Ladies SuperSoft 

Golfer doing exercises for The Insurance Emporium advertorial shutterstock_2276430253 (1).jpg

Wise golfers may do some simple exercises to improve their play and reduce their chance of mishap

By In association with The Insurance Emporium Published 5 June 24

Bryson DeChambeau takes a shot at the PGA Championship

The LIV Golf star has opened up on the pressures of professional golf

By Mike Hall Published 5 June 24

Nelly Korda takes a shot at the Mizuho Americas Open

You would expect the women’s World No 1 golfer to top the charts in each performance category, but detailed analysis throws up some surprising stats

By Carly Frost Published 5 June 24

Lydia Ko with the trophy after winning the 2015 Evian Championship GettyImages-488039026.jpg

Golf is a game where knowledge and experience are valuable attributes, but these teenage sensations proved they're not the be all and end all...

By Roderick Easdale Published 5 June 24

Cailyn Henderson

Sifting through hundreds of golf influencers, here are those that beginner golfer Lauren Katims admires most

By Lauren Katims Published 4 June 24

Yuka Saso holds the Women's US Open trophy

Here's what keen-to-improve amateur golfers can learn from US Women's Open champion Yuka Saso

By Jess Ratcliffe Published 4 June 24

Aramco Team Series Experience Centurion GC

Knowing how to introduce kids to pro golf watching is a challenge, here's how GM Editor Neil Tappin approached it

By Neil Tappin Published 3 June 24

Alison Root with club

PGA Professional Emma Booth puts the game of golf into context to help stop unnecessary worrying

By Emma Booth Published 29 May 24

Callaway Top Golf El Segundo

We caught up with Women's Golf Week founder Elisa Gaudet to hear about her success story and what the future holds

By Katie Dawkins Published 28 May 24

Enjoying a glass after my round with my pal

Katie Dawkins shares her vision of the perfect golf club

By Katie Dawkins Published 23 May 24

  • Contact Future's experts
  • Terms and conditions
  • Privacy policy
  • Accessibility statement
  • Cookies policy
  • Advertise with us

Golf Monthly is part of Future plc, an international media group and leading digital publisher. Visit our corporate site . © Future Publishing Limited Quay House, The Ambury, Bath BA1 1UA. All rights reserved. England and Wales company registration number 2008885.

Rankings as of 2024-06-03

  • LPGA Newsletters
  • LPGA Travel
  • Women's Network
  • LPGA Professionals
  • Members Only
  • Lesson Zone
  • Membership Information
  • Find A Teacher
  • Professionals Job Board
  • Events Calendar
  • LPGA Amateurs
  • Become A Member
  • Member Login
  • LPGA Foundation
  • LEADERBOARD
  • Changing The Face of Golf
  • C-Me Action Plan
  • Diversity Policy
  • Diverse Supplier Opportunity
  • Celebrating the Green
  • All Access Series
  • Instruction
  • Live Stream
  • Award Winners
  • Hall of Fame
  • ROLEX FIRST TIME WINNERS
  • ROLEX ANNIKA MAJOR AWARD
  • 2024 Player Priority List (PDF)
  • TOURNAMENTS
  • Download Schedule
  • Completed Tournaments
  • Drive On Championship
  • Solheim Cup
  • 2024 Olympics
  • CME Group Tour Championship
  • QUALIFYING SERIES (Q-SCHOOL)
  • LPGA Local Qualifying Rounds
  • Hilton Grand Vacations TOC
  • LPGA Senior Championship
  • Print Schedule
  • RACE TO CME GLOBE
  • Season Standings
  • Past Winners
  • Explanation and Points Breakdown
  • Projected Points Standing
  • CME Group Cares Challenge - Score 1 for St. Jude
  • Aon Risk Reward Challenge
  • KPMG Performance Insights

acer logo

  • Charitable Solicitation Disclosures
  • Corporate Sponsors
  • LPGA History
  • LPGA International
  • Sponsorship Opportunities
  • Legends of the LPGA

Fan Feature

  • LPGA Women's Network
  • ADA Act Request
  • Anti-Doping Information
  • Feedback Form
  • Gender Policy
  • Integrity Program Information
  • Media - Press Site
  • Player Login
  • Privacy Policy
  • Professionals Member Login
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Ticket Terms and Conditions

Global Tour

  • International TV Distribution

Mobile Apps

  • Android App
  • Top Stories

usa ladies golf tour

IMAGES

  1. US Women's Open Golf Tournament: What to Know

    usa ladies golf tour

  2. Team USA Brings Home the Solheim Cup

    usa ladies golf tour

  3. The Top 10 Hottest Women on the LPGA Tour

    usa ladies golf tour

  4. Swann Swims Upstream

    usa ladies golf tour

  5. Only 24 percent of golfers are women. 18Birdies, LPGA Tour partner to

    usa ladies golf tour

  6. Meet the LPGA and PGA Pros Competing at the KPMG Women’s PGA

    usa ladies golf tour

VIDEO

  1. First Round Highlights

  2. First Round Highlights

  3. Open Ladies Golf Tour

  4. Top Shots

  5. Justice Bosio

  6. 2017 Senior LPGA Championship ~ Round 1 (Part 1/2)

COMMENTS

  1. Home

    Official website of the Ladies Professional Golf Association, offering news, tournament information, player profiles, and more.

  2. Results

    Pos Player Scores Total To Par Prize Money Star; My Leaderboard: Full Leaderboard. 1: Yuka Saso : 68 - 71 - 69 - 68 276-4: $2,400,000.00: Add

  3. U.S. Women's Open pres. by Ally 2024

    Yuka Saso won the U.S. Women's Open for a second time Sunday. She became the first Filipina to win in 2021, and after switching citizenship before turning 21, she's now the first Japanese golfer ...

  4. U.S. Women's Open Golf Championship Home page

    Official home of the 79th U.S. Women's Open golf championship at Lancaster Country Club (Pa.), from May 28 - June 2, 2024. Find tickets, follow your favorite players, view highlights, leader board, and more!

  5. U.S. Women's Open: Home

    Pine Needles Lodge & Golf Club, Southern Pines, N.C. JUNE 2-5, 2022. data. The official home of the 2022 U.S. Women's Open Championship, played at Pine Needles Lodge & Golf Club in Southern Pines, N.C., June 2-5. Videos, photos, scoring, news and more.

  6. Full Final Round

    Welcome to the official YouTube channel of the LPGA Tour. Here you can find everything you need to stay up to date with all of the action featuring some of t...

  7. U.S. Women's Open

    The U.S. Women's Open, one of 15 national golf championships conducted by the United States Golf Association (USGA), is the oldest of the LPGA Tour's five major championships, which includes the Chevron Championship, Women's PGA Championship, Women's Open Championship, and The Evian Championship.. Established 78 years ago in 1946, the U.S. Women's Open is the only event to have been recognized ...

  8. The top 25 players competing at the 2023 U.S. Women's Open, ranked

    The former World No. 1, who relinquished her LPGA membership in 2014 to compete full-time on the JLPGA Tour, is making her first U.S. Women's Open start since 2019.

  9. Overview

    Format: 72 holes. Purse: $12,000,000. Par: 70. History: The U.S. Women's Open is solely conducted by the USGA. This event began in 1946 and is the longest-running tournament currently on the LPGA ...

  10. U.S. Women's Open schedule 2024

    Here's how to watch day-to-day TV coverage of the 2024 U.S. Women's Open. U.S. Women's Open schedule 2024. The 2024 U.S. Women's Open will air on multiple networks throughout the four-day event.

  11. Live U.S. Women's Open leaderboard, Golf LPGA Tour

    Help: U.S. Women's Open leaderboard service offers scores, U.S. Women's Open final results and statistics. Follow U.S. Women's Open leaderboard, latest golf results and all major golf tournaments around the world. U.S. Women's Open scores refresh automatically without delay. You don't need to refresh the scoreboard. Livesport.com U.S. Women's ...

  12. Home

    Home | Epson Tour. News. Get to Know the Tournament Invites at the FireKeepers Casino Hotel Championship. News. Pennsylvania Native and LPGA Mom Rachel Rohanna Hits First Tee Shot at USWO. Press Release. Golf Space Collective Teams Up with Epson Tour to Debut Exclusive Video Series. News. Field Breakdown: 2024 FireKeepers Casino Hotel Championship.

  13. 2025 U.S. Women's Open Golf Championship: Tickets

    Join the Victory Club. Become part of the official club of U.S. Open and U.S. Women's Open fans for free, today! Membership will open doors to special promotions, events, content and more. JOIN NOW. Ticket packages for the 2025 U.S. Women's Open Golf Championship, to be played at Erin Hills Club, in Hartford, Wisconsin, May 26 - June 1.

  14. ANNIKA Women's All Pro Tour

    The ANNIKA Women's All Pro Tour's mission is to develop the next generation of the LPGA by providing professionals the strongest competition possible. Through the ANNIKA WAPT, we provide a clear Path of the Pros for those aspiring to encompass the meaning of the word "professional" on and off the course. ... Get Golfing Women's Golf ...

  15. Five Things to Know About the US Womens Open

    Qualifying. There were 1,897 entries received for this year's U.S. Women's Open, just over a hundred shy of the record of more than 2,000 entries submitted last year, with the championship ...

  16. 2024 U.S. Women's Amateur Golf Championship

    The official home of the 2024 U.S. Women's Amateur Golf Championship at Southern Hills Country Club, in Tulsa, Okla.. Watch the best amateur players in the world compete from August 5-11. See the full leader board, highlights, stories and more from the 124th U.S. Women's Amateur!

  17. Legends of the LPGA

    The tour was founded in 2000 by 25 veteran LPGA Tour professionals with the goal of continuing to showcase the talents of some of the greatest women golfers of all time. Legends of the LPGA members, including 15 LPGA and World Golf Hall of Fame members, have combined for over 750 LPGA Tour victories including 84 major championships.

  18. 2024 U.S. Women's Open Final Payouts, Prize Money: Yuka Saso Wins $2.4

    This year it boosted its purse for the U.S. Women's Open to $12 million, up from $11 million at last year's event at Pebble Beach. Yuka Saso is taking home $2.4 million, the richest first-place ...

  19. The World's 10 Biggest Women's Golf Tours

    LPGA Of Japan Tour. The LPGA of Japan Tour is a women's professional golf tour organised by the Japan Ladies Professional Golfers' Association. It has been running since 1968 and has the second biggest prize purse in women's golf, just behind the LPGA with $60 million. There were 38 events played in 2023 all across Japan.

  20. Home

    Yuka Saso Emotional After Securing Second Major Title at 79th U.S. Women's Open. us womens open. Yuka Saso Wins Second U.S. Women's Open at Lancaster Country Club. Andrea Lee. LPGA Tour Winner ...

  21. Rolex Women's World Golf Rankings

    1.99. 109.49. 55. Rankings as of 2024-05-27. Rolex Rankings, the first-ever comprehensive world rankings system for professional women's golf by Rolex. Discover the latest scores.

  22. LPGA

    The Amundi Evian Championship Evian-les-Bains, France. Top Stories