USGA Championships
How USGA Amateur Qualifying Works
The USGA runs several open amateur championships you can enter directly. Here is how entry, exemptions, and qualifying work, and the handicap index each one requires.
Competitive Play · Updated July 3, 2026
These championships are open to enter
A point most golfers miss: the USGA’s amateur championships are open championships. You do not need an invitation. If you are an amateur inside the handicap limit and you meet the age and gender criteria, you can file an entry and try to qualify, the same way a future major champion did when they were unknown.
The catch is the handicap index cap. Each championship sets its own, and the fields are strong, so the cap is a floor to enter, not a realistic target for making the field. The U.S. Amateur cap in particular is low enough that only genuinely elite amateurs clear it. You can browse the full list of USGA championships and their host sites on the USGA championships page.
Handicap index caps by championship
These are the entry caps for the 2026 championships. Handicap caps are set each year and can change, so confirm the current figure on usga.org before you file:
| Championship | Who it is for | Handicap Index cap |
|---|---|---|
| U.S. Amateur | Amateurs, all ages | 0.4 |
| U.S. Mid-Amateur | Amateurs 25 and older | 3.4 |
| U.S. Women’s Amateur, Senior, and other titles | Varies by age and gender | Set per championship — check usga.org |
The verified 2026 caps above are the U.S. Amateur at 0.4 and the U.S. Mid-Amateur at 3.4 with a minimum age of 25 by the start of the championship. The women’s and senior titles each carry their own caps and age minimums; rather than risk a stale number, pull the current cap for your championship from its entry page on usga.org.
How to enter
Entry is done online through the USGA’s player portal at champ-admin.usga.org. You create a profile, link your Handicap Index, choose your qualifying site, and pay the entry fee. Entries open and close on fixed dates for each championship, usually weeks before qualifying, and late entries are not accepted, so the calendar is unforgiving.
You need an active Handicap Index that meets the cap on the entry deadline. If you do not carry one, get into the World Handicap System through a club or authorized golf association well before entries open, because it takes a number of posted scores to establish an index. The entry fee is set per championship and is separate from any qualifying-site costs.
Exemptions: who skips qualifying
Some players are fully exempt into the championship and do not have to qualify. Exemptions are published for each championship and typically reward proven results, for example past champions, players high in the World Amateur Golf Ranking, and winners of certain elite amateur events. If you are exempt you still file an entry, but you go straight into the field.
The higher your amateur ranking, the more doors open. That is one practical reason WAGR matters for the elite amateur; the guide to WAGR explains how the ranking is built and which finishes move it. For everyone else, qualifying is the path.
How qualifying works
For the U.S. Amateur, qualifying is 36 holes of stroke play in a single day at sites around the country, with a set number of spots available at each site. Shoot one of the low scores at your site and you advance to the championship. Ties for the last spots are usually settled by a playoff.
The championship proper then runs its own format. The U.S. Amateur takes its full field through 36 holes of stroke play, cuts to the low 64, and finishes with match play to crown the champion. The Mid-Amateur and other titles follow their own structures. Site lists, spot allocations, and exact dates are published per championship, so confirm them on usga.org once you know which qualifier you are entering.
Team and other amateur championships
The U.S. Amateur and U.S. Mid-Amateur get the attention, but the USGA runs a wider slate of amateur championships, and some are easier to reach than the marquee individual titles. Two categories are worth knowing:
- Team events. The U.S. Amateur Four-Ball and U.S. Women’s Amateur Four-Ball are played with a partner, and qualifying is by two-player side. Playing your best ball with a partner is a different, often more attainable test than carrying a solo card through a stroke-play qualifier.
- Age-defined events. Beyond the Mid-Amateur, there are senior and junior championships with their own age brackets and entry standards. Each sets its own handicap cap and age window.
Entry standards, age cutoffs, and handicap caps differ for every one of these, and they are adjusted year to year, so confirm the current terms for the specific championship on usga.org before you plan around it. Juniors weighing this path should also read the junior golf majors guide, which covers the U.S. Junior Amateur alongside the other events that define an elite junior record.
A realistic path in
If the U.S. Amateur cap is out of reach today, the amateur ladder still has real rungs. State amateurs and mid-amateurs carry more forgiving entry standards and are where most serious competitive amateurs actually play, and strong results there build the record and ranking that eventually open USGA doors.
The U.S. Mid-Amateur is the most attainable USGA title for the everyday competitive golfer, since its 3.4 cap and age-25 minimum are written for players with jobs and families rather than touring careers. If that is you, read the mid-amateur guide and use the tournament calendar to find the qualifying-caliber events near you.
Frequently asked questions
- What handicap do you need for the U.S. Amateur?
- The 2026 U.S. Amateur is open to amateurs with a Handicap Index not exceeding 0.4. That is the cap to enter, not a realistic scoring target for making the field, which is filled by elite amateurs. Caps are set annually, so confirm the current figure on usga.org.
- What is the U.S. Mid-Amateur handicap and age requirement?
- The 2026 U.S. Mid-Amateur is open to amateurs who are at least 25 years old by the start of the championship and carry a Handicap Index not exceeding 3.4. It is the most attainable USGA amateur title for everyday competitive golfers.
- Do you need an invitation to play a USGA championship?
- No. The USGA amateur championships are open championships. If you meet the age, gender, and handicap criteria, you can file an entry and attempt to qualify. Some players are fully exempt into the field, but qualifying is open to everyone who is eligible.
- How do you enter a USGA championship?
- Enter online through the USGA player portal at champ-admin.usga.org. You link an active Handicap Index that meets the cap, pick a qualifying site, and pay the entry fee before the deadline. Entries open and close on fixed dates and late entries are not accepted.
- What is the U.S. Amateur qualifying format?
- Qualifying is 36 holes of stroke play in a single day at sites nationwide, with a set number of advancing spots per site. The championship itself takes the field through 36 holes of stroke play, cuts to the low 64, and finishes as match play.