US Open · 2026

The US Open

Golf's toughest test — the United States Open Championship is organised by the USGA and is known for demanding course setups with narrow fairways, thick rough, and lightning-fast greens that push even the world's best players to their limits.

Major Upcoming

US Open 2026

Oakmont Country Club, Oakmont, Pennsylvania, USA

Dates
June 18–21, 2026
Venue
Oakmont Country Club
Purse (approx)
$21,500,000
2025 Champion
To be confirmed
Where to Watch in the UK
Sky Sports Golf BBC Sport

Sky Sports Golf is the primary UK broadcaster for the US Open. BBC Sport may carry some coverage depending on rights arrangements for the year. Check both broadcasters for exact scheduling closer to the tournament.

Oakmont note: One of the hardest courses in the world and the most frequent US Open host. Known for its lightning-fast greens and the famous Church Pew bunkers between holes 3 and 4.

About the US Open

The United States Open Championship — universally known as the US Open — was first played in 1895, making it one of the oldest golf majors in existence. It is organised by the United States Golf Association (USGA), the governing body of golf in the United States and Mexico.

The defining characteristic of the US Open is the USGA's deliberate and infamous course setup. Each year, the association prepares the host venue to be as demanding as possible: fairways are narrowed to penalise even slight misses off the tee, rough is grown thick and deep to punish errant approach shots, and greens are firmed and quickened to make distance control critical. The philosophy is to identify the best player in the world, not the most fortunate.

The tournament also lives up to its name with genuinely open qualifying. Any professional or amateur golfer who meets the USGA's handicap requirements (scratch or better for amateurs) can attempt to qualify through a two-stage qualifying process. This makes the US Open one of the most inclusive majors in terms of access, even if its setup remains the most exclusive.

Key Facts
Founded 1895
Organiser USGA
Format 72-hole stroke play
Cut 36-hole cut
Setup Narrow fairways, thick rough
Entry Open qualifying

Oakmont Country Club — 2026 Venue

Founded: 1903
Location: Oakmont, Pennsylvania, USA
US Opens hosted: Most of any venue

Oakmont Country Club is the most storied US Open venue in history, having hosted more US Opens than any other course. Founded in 1903 by Henry Clay Fownes and his son William, the course was designed from the outset to be as demanding as possible — Fownes famously declared that "a shot poorly played should be a shot irrevocably lost."

The course is renowned for two things above all else: its greens and its bunkers. The greens at Oakmont are among the fastest in the world when the USGA has finished with them for US Open week. Putts from above the hole can accelerate dramatically, and even the shortest of downhill putts demands respect. Reading the greens correctly is half the battle at Oakmont.

The Church Pew bunkers — a series of long, parallel grass ridges running through the expanse of sand between the 3rd and 4th holes — are one of the most recognisable features in major championship golf. Finding them from the tee demands precise recovery play and can rapidly turn a promising round into a difficult one.

Previous US Opens at Oakmont

Year Champion Score
2016 Dustin Johnson -4
2007 Angel Cabrera +5
1994 Ernie Els +5
1983 Larry Nelson +4
1973 Johnny Miller -5

Over par winning scores are common at Oakmont, illustrating just how demanding the course is even for the world's best players.

Recent US Open Champions

Year Champion Score Venue Notes
2025 To be confirmed Oakmont Country Club, PA Verify at usga.org
2024 Bryson DeChambeau -6 Pinehurst No. 2, NC Second US Open title; dramatic final round
2023 Wyndham Clark -10 Los Angeles CC, CA First major; edged Rory McIlroy
2022 Matt Fitzpatrick -6 The Country Club, Brookline, MA First major for the Englishman
2021 Jon Rahm -6 Torrey Pines, CA Drained final-hole birdie putt to win
2020 Bryson DeChambeau -6 Winged Foot GC, NY Won by six shots; dominant display
2019 Gary Woodland -13 Pebble Beach Golf Links, CA Held off Brooks Koepka & Rory McIlroy
2018 Brooks Koepka -1 Shinnecock Hills, NY Back-to-back US Open titles
Most US Open Titles
Willie Anderson 4 wins
Bobby Jones 4 wins
Ben Hogan 4 wins
Jack Nicklaus 4 wins
Brooks Koepka 3 wins

British & Irish Champions at the US Open

The US Open has been won by several British and Irish players over the years, making it a tournament UK fans follow closely beyond simply the home challenge:

Matt Fitzpatrick
England — 2022, The Country Club, Brookline

The Sheffield-born Fitzpatrick won his maiden major at the same course where he had won the 2013 US Amateur title as a teenager. He held off Will Zalatoris and Scottie Scheffler in a dramatic final round, holing a clutch bunker shot on the 18th to seal victory.

Justin Rose
England — 2013, Merion Golf Club

Justin Rose became the first Englishman to win the US Open since Tony Jacklin in 1970, holding on at Merion Golf Club in Pennsylvania. Rose shot a final-round 70 to win by two shots and claim his first and, to date, only major championship title.

Rory McIlroy
Northern Ireland — 2011, Congressional CC

McIlroy won his first major with a record-breaking performance at Congressional, winning by eight shots with a 72-hole score of -16. At age 22 it announced him as a generational talent. He has contended at several subsequent US Opens but is yet to add a second title.

Tony Jacklin
England — 1970, Hazeltine National

Jacklin's 1970 US Open victory at Hazeltine came just a year after his 1969 Open Championship win at Royal Lytham, making him the first British player since Max Faulkner (1951) to hold two majors simultaneously. He remains one of Britain's greatest ever major champions.

How to Watch the US Open in the UK

Sky Sports Golf

Sky Sports Golf is the main UK broadcaster for the US Open, carrying live coverage of all four competitive rounds. Available via Sky subscription or NOW TV passes. Streaming also available through the Sky Sports app and website.

BBC Sport

BBC Sport may carry highlights and some live coverage of the US Open depending on rights arrangements in a given year. Check BBC Two, BBC Sport website, and BBC iPlayer around tournament week for the latest schedules.

Full TV Guide