Getting Started
Getting Your Kid Into Competitive Golf
The step from playing for fun to playing tournaments is smaller than it looks, and taking it in the wrong order is what scares kids off. Here is the on-ramp from recreational rounds to a first competitive event.
For Golf Parents · Updated July 3, 2026
The bridge from rec to competitive
Recreational and competitive golf are the same game with a few things turned on. In a tournament, every stroke counts, the rules are enforced, the tees move back, and there is pressure a casual round never has.
A kid who plays well with friends can still be rattled the first time all four of those arrive at once. The goal is to introduce them gradually, so the first tournament feels like a small step rather than a cliff.
Signs your kid is ready
A junior is usually ready for competition when they can play the holes without help, know the basic rules and etiquette, can keep an honest score, and actually want to compete.
Wanting it is the one that matters most. A kid who asks to enter an event is ready in a way that a kid signed up to satisfy a parent is not. If you are unsure about timing, our guide on when to start competitive golf goes deeper on readiness.
The lowest-stress first events
Start where the stakes are smallest. Local one-day events, First Tee programs, and U.S. Kids Golf on-ramps are built for exactly this moment: short courses, forward tees, and a supportive field of other beginners.
These cost little, sit close to home, and let a kid learn tournament rhythm without a long drive or a big entry fee riding on it. Our low-cost getting-started guide maps the cheapest first-event paths in more detail.
Choosing a first tour
Resist the urge to buy field strength before your kid is ready to use it. A local or state junior tour is almost always the right first home, and national tours can wait until the player has a few events and a real scoring record behind them.
The choice at this stage is less about prestige than about fit and cost. Our comparison of the major junior tours lays out what each one is for and when it earns its price.
The basics to nail before teeing it up
A first-timer does not need to know the whole rulebook, but a handful of basics keep a good round from unraveling on a technicality. Know how to mark and putt out, how to take a drop, what to do with a lost or out-of-bounds ball, and how to keep an accurate scorecard. Most first events have officials happy to answer a question, and asking is never a penalty.
Etiquette matters as much as the rules at this stage. Keep pace with the group ahead, stay quiet and still while others play, repair the course, and treat playing partners well. A kid who plays ready golf and keeps up earns a good reputation fast, and pace of play is one of the few things a junior can control completely on a hard day.
The first tournament itself
Set the expectation before you get there: the first tournament is about learning how a tournament works, not about the score. Expect a higher number than a casual round, expect nerves, and treat both as normal.
Get the player there early enough to warm up without rushing, make sure they know the day's format and pace-of-play expectations, and then step back. Our first-tournament checklist covers what to pack and how the day runs.
Building from there
One event is a test, not a commitment. Let the kid tell you whether they want another, and add events at the pace their enjoyment and readiness support rather than the pace of your ambition.
As the schedule grows, the GolfNexus tournament calendar shows what is coming up near you, and the schedule-building guide helps you sequence a season without overloading it.
Frequently asked questions
- How do I get my kid into competitive golf?
- Introduce the elements of tournament golf gradually, then start with a small, local, low-stakes event when the player can complete the holes, knows the basic rules, keeps an honest score, and wants to compete. Local one-day events and U.S. Kids or First Tee programs are the natural first step.
- What is a good first tournament for a beginner?
- A local one-day event or a U.S. Kids or First Tee program, played from forward tees on a shorter course against other beginners. These cost little, stay close to home, and let a kid learn tournament rhythm without a big entry fee or a long drive riding on it.
- Should my kid start on a national tour like AJGA?
- Rarely at first. National tours are worth their cost once a player has a few events and a real scoring record. A local or state junior tour is almost always the right first home, because it fits the player's stage and costs far less while they learn to compete.
- How many tournaments should a beginner play?
- Start with one and let the child decide whether to play another. Add events at the pace their enjoyment and readiness support, not the pace of a parent's ambition. Overloading an early schedule is a common way to turn a kid off competition before it takes.
- What should I expect from my kid's first tournament score?
- Expect it to be higher than a casual round, and expect nerves. The first event is about learning how a tournament works, not about the number. Treat a rough score as a normal part of the first experience rather than a verdict on the player.