First Program Guide
PGA Jr. League vs First Tee vs U.S. Kids Golf: Which First?
Three programs come up when a 6-to-12-year-old is ready to start. They teach different things, cost different money, and lead to different places. Here is how to pick the first one.
For Golf Parents · Updated July 4, 2026
The short answer
These three programs are not the same product, and picking by name recognition is how families end up in the wrong one. First Tee is golf plus a life-skills curriculum, taught in weekly classes at a local chapter, where kids move up through skill levels over time. PGA Jr. League is team golf: kids wear a number, play on a two-person squad, and compete against other local teams in a format built to feel like little league. U.S. Kids Golf is individual tournament golf scaled down, with age-based tees, real scorecards, and a ladder that runs from a local tour up to a World Championship.
Pick by what you want the first season to do. A true beginner who needs structure starts with First Tee. A kid who already likes golf and wants teammates leans PGA Jr. League. A competitive kid who wants to keep their own score against other players starts with U.S. Kids.
Side-by-side comparison
| Program | Ages | Format | Cost model | What it builds |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| First Tee | 7 to 18 | Class-based curriculum; kids progress through skill levels | Low-cost, mission-driven; fees vary by chapter, financial aid common | Fundamentals, etiquette, life skills |
| PGA Jr. League | 9u, 13u, 17u divisions | Two-person scramble, team match play | $120 GameChanger Club fee plus a local program fee that varies by location | Team reps, low-pressure competition |
| U.S. Kids Golf | From age 5 through the teens | Individual stroke play, age-based yardages | Modest per-event fees that vary by local tour | Real tournament experience, scorekeeping |
Fees change year to year and vary by location, so confirm current pricing on each program's own site. Our junior golf cost guide breaks down where the money actually goes.
PGA Jr. League: team golf, low pressure
PGA Jr. League runs three age divisions: 9u, 13u, and 17u. The 9u division, new for 2026, is a recreational, shortened-hole league for the youngest players. The format is a two-person scramble: both players in a pair hit drives, the better shot is chosen, and the pair plays on from there. Matches are played over nine holes split into three-hole segments, which keeps the day short and the pressure low.
That team scramble is the whole appeal. A weak shot from one kid is covered by a good shot from a teammate, so early mistakes do not sink anyone, and the setting feels social rather than exposed. It is the right pick for a kid who has swung a club a bit and wants to compete without the spotlight of solo stroke play.
Cost comes in two parts. Every player joins the GameChanger Club, listed at $120 for 2026, which covers a uniform and team kit. On top of that, the local PGA or LPGA coach sets a program fee that varies by location and is posted on each program's page, so the total depends on where you play. Confirm current pricing on pgajrleague.com before you commit.
First Tee: the softest on-ramp
First Tee is the gentlest start of the three and the most affordable. It serves ages 7 to 18 through roughly 150 local chapters, where trained coaches deliver a set life-skills curriculum alongside golf. Kids start at the entry level and advance through named levels by showing the program's core values and passing assessments, so progress is about behavior and fundamentals, not scores.
Because it is a nonprofit mission, cost is rarely the barrier here. Fees vary by chapter, and many chapters offer financial aid, so a family that cannot pay full freight can usually still enroll. Check your local chapter for its specific pricing and aid.
What First Tee does not do is build a competitive record. A kid learns to hold a club, keep etiquette, and handle themselves on a course, which is exactly the point, but there is no tournament result to show for it. Treat it as the classroom that comes before competition.
U.S. Kids Golf: individual tournament golf, scaled
U.S. Kids Golf is the one that most resembles the competitive path, because it is individual stroke play from the start. Local Tours introduce tournament golf with scaled courses and individual age groups, and yardages are set by age so a seven-year-old is not hitting driver into a full-length par 4. Players keep their own score, sign a card, and see exactly where they finished.
Above the local tours sit multi-day Regional Championships and the World Championship, held in the Pinehurst, North Carolina area for ages 5 to 12, with a separate World Teen Championship for ages 13 to 18. Per-event fees are modest and vary by local tour. Age divisions and tee assignments differ by event, so confirm the details on the tour's site or read our junior golf age divisions guide before entering.
For a kid who is ready to compete as an individual and wants to measure up against other players, this is the place to start.
Which one first
| The kid in front of you | Start with |
|---|---|
| Has barely played and needs structure and basics | First Tee |
| Already likes golf and wants teammates over solo pressure | PGA Jr. League |
| Competitive and wants to keep their own score | U.S. Kids Golf local tour |
| Shy or anxious about being watched | First Tee or PGA Jr. League, where the format shields individual results |
| Aiming at ranked junior golf later | U.S. Kids first, then step up to national tours |
These are not either-or choices, and most families do not treat them that way. Plenty of kids do First Tee and PGA Jr. League in the same year, then add U.S. Kids events when they want to compete on their own. Match the first season to the kid in front of you, not to the logo you recognize.
From here to real tournaments
All three are on-ramps, not destinations. First Tee builds the swing and the manners. PGA Jr. League adds teammates and the feel of competition without the exposure of solo stroke play. U.S. Kids Golf is where individual tournament golf begins, and it flows naturally toward the national junior tours a serious player chases later.
When your kid is ready to enter real events, the GolfNexus tournament calendar shows what is scheduled near you, and our getting started with junior tournaments guide walks through the first sign-up. If you are still deciding whether your child is ready at all, start with when to start competitive golf.
Frequently asked questions
- Is PGA Jr. League or First Tee better for a beginner?
- It depends on the kid. First Tee is the softer on-ramp: class-based, curriculum-driven, and built to teach fundamentals and etiquette from zero. PGA Jr. League assumes a kid can already move a ball and wants teammates and games, and its two-person scramble format keeps early mistakes low-stakes. A true beginner usually starts with First Tee, while a kid who already likes golf and wants to compete on a team leans PGA Jr. League.
- How much does PGA Jr. League cost?
- Cost has two parts: a national GameChanger Club membership listed at $120 for 2026, which covers a uniform and team kit, plus a separate program fee that the local PGA or LPGA coach sets. That program fee varies by location and is shown on each program's page, so the total depends on where you play. Confirm current pricing on pgajrleague.com.
- What age can a kid start these programs?
- First Tee serves ages 7 to 18. PGA Jr. League runs 9u, 13u, and 17u divisions, with the new 9u division built as a recreational, shortened-hole league. U.S. Kids Golf starts as young as age 5 on local tours, with age-based yardages so young players compete at a fair distance.
- Which program leads to competitive tournament golf?
- U.S. Kids Golf is the most direct on-ramp, because it is individual stroke play with real scorecards and a ladder up to regional and world events. First Tee and PGA Jr. League build skills and comfort but do not produce an individual tournament record. Many families use all three, then move toward national junior tours as the player gets serious.