Walking On
How to Walk On to a College Golf Team
What walking on to a college golf team really involves, the difference between a walk-on and a preferred walk-on, and how to find a program with a spot for you.
College Recruiting · Updated July 3, 2026
What walking on actually means
A walk-on earns a roster spot without an athletic scholarship. In golf, where most players receive only partial money anyway, the line between a walk-on and a scholarship player can be thinner than in other sports, and a walk-on who earns a spot in the traveling lineup competes in the same events as everyone else on the roster.
Walking on is a legitimate path, not a lesser one, but it takes the same preparation as a scholarship recruit: you still have to reach coaches, prove your scoring, and earn the spot. The difference is you are competing for a place on the roster rather than for money, and you often decide later in the process.
Walk-on vs preferred walk-on vs recruited walk-on
The term covers a few different situations, and knowing which one you are in tells you how secure your spot is.
- Preferred (or recruited) walk-on: the coach has recruited you and guaranteed a roster spot, just without scholarship money. This is the strongest position. You are on the team from day one and can earn money later based on performance.
- Tryout walk-on: you are invited to try out or qualify for an open spot but are not guaranteed to make the roster. You have to earn it against current players and other hopefuls.
Always ask a coach directly which one they are offering. "We have a spot for you" and "you are welcome to try out" are very different commitments, and the answer should shape whether you count that school as a real option.
How roster limits changed the walk-on math
One current reality worth knowing: the 2025 House v. NCAA settlement introduced hard roster limits, set at 9 players for Division I golf, for schools that opt into revenue sharing. Where a team once carried a deeper roster with several walk-ons practicing but not traveling, those extra developmental spots are squeezed under a strict cap.
The practical effect is that pure tryout walk-on spots at capped DI programs are scarcer than they used to be. It makes the preferred walk-on, where a coach commits a roster spot in advance, more valuable and worth negotiating for. It also strengthens the case for looking at D2, D3, NAIA, and JUCO programs, where roster math is different and walk-on and open-tryout opportunities are more common. The scholarship side of this change is covered in our golf scholarship guide.
The tryout and qualifying process
Most college golf teams run internal qualifying to set the lineup for each tournament, and that is exactly where a walk-on proves the case. Rather than a one-day tryout, you are typically asked to play qualifying rounds against the roster, and your scores decide whether you travel. Golf is unusually honest that way: the number on the card is the tryout.
If a coach offers a tryout, ask how qualifying works, how many rounds, what scores have made the traveling squad, and when it happens. Show up fit, prepared, and able to post a competitive number cold, because you may not get many chances. Preparation and course management matter as much as raw talent here; our training resources can help you arrive ready to score.
Finding teams that need players
The best walk-on opportunities are at programs that have a genuine roster need: a graduating senior class, a smaller school still building depth, or a team below its roster cap. Those needs are not advertised, so you find them by asking. A direct email to a coach that says you understand you would be walking on and asks whether they have an open spot or a qualifying opportunity is a completely normal, well-received message.
Cast a wider net than scholarship recruits do, and weight it toward programs where your average would contribute. Pull coach contacts from our coach directory, where program details are open to everyone and direct contact details unlock with a free account, and use the templates in our coach email guide to make the ask cleanly.
Making your walk-on case
A walk-on pitch is the same as any recruiting pitch, with one addition: you make it easy for the coach to say yes at no cost to their scholarship budget. Lead with your scoring average across real fields, show a clear video, and be explicit that you are prepared to walk on and earn a spot. Coaches value players who add depth and push the lineup in qualifying without spending scholarship money.
Be realistic about fit. If your average is well outside a program's range, walking on there is not a workaround for that gap. Match your number to the right level first, working through is my kid good enough for college golf, then target programs where a walk-on can genuinely contribute.
Frequently asked questions
- What is the difference between a walk-on and a preferred walk-on?
- A preferred, or recruited, walk-on has been recruited by the coach and is guaranteed a roster spot without scholarship money, so they are on the team from day one and can earn money later on performance. A tryout walk-on is invited to try out or qualify for an open spot but is not guaranteed to make the roster. Always ask a coach which one they are offering.
- How does a college golf walk-on tryout work?
- Most teams run internal qualifying rounds against the roster to set each tournament's lineup, and that is where a walk-on proves the case. Instead of a single tryout day, your scores over qualifying rounds decide whether you travel. Ask the coach how many rounds, what scores have made the traveling squad, and when qualifying happens.
- Are walk-on spots harder to get now?
- At Division I programs that opted into the 2025 House settlement, yes. Those teams now work to a strict 9-player roster limit for golf, which squeezes the extra developmental spots that used to hold walk-ons. Preferred walk-on offers are more valuable as a result, and D2, D3, NAIA, and JUCO programs often have more open walk-on and tryout opportunities.
- How do I find college golf teams that need players?
- Look for programs with a graduating senior class, smaller schools building depth, or teams below their roster cap, and email coaches directly to ask whether they have an open spot or qualifying opportunity. These needs are not advertised, so you find them by asking. Cast a wider net than scholarship recruits and weight it toward levels where your average contributes.