How to watch the 2026 PGA Championship | UK TV channel, history & more
Everything you’ll need to know ahead of the 2026 PGA Championship.
The second major of the season is upon us this weekend as the players head to compete in the 2026 PGA Championship for the 108th edition of the tournament.
Everything is set for an exciting contest, and with it all teeing off on Thursday, find out all the information you’ll need ahead of the weekend, including how to watch and where it is this year, plus more general information about the major.
How to watch the 2026 PGA Championship?
You’ll be able to watch every moment of the action over the weekend from the moment the first group tees off till the final ball drops to the bottom of the cup on Sunday, all live on Sky Sports.
2026 PGA Championship on Sky Sports
Sky Sports is the exclusive home of the PGA Tour in the UK, so you’ll need to either be with Sky or if you already are, have a Sky Sports subscription to be able to tune in.
Live coverage of the tournament begins at 12:30pm on Thursday and Friday, at 3pm on Saturday and at 4pm on Sunday. There will also be a whole host of extra tournament coverage and programming throughout the weekend, even Tuesday and Wednesday before the actual competition begins.
Everything will be live and available to watch on Sky Sports’ dedicated golf channel, Sky Sports Golf, as well as Sky Sports Main Event.
Key times (all BST)
Thursday: 12:30pm - 12am – Day One Live
Friday: 12:30pm - 12am – Day Two Live
Saturday: 3pm - 12am – Day Three Live
Sunday: 4pm - 12am – Day Four Live
Tuesday and Wednesday will see live build-up of the competition from the course, with the latest news, interviews and updates ahead of play.
There will also be a plethora of official Sky Sports films from past PGA Championships throughout the week, including Tiger Woods and Rory McIlroy’s past victories.
History of the PGA Championship
The PGA Championship was established in 1916 and was the fourth and final major of the year every year up until the 2019 edition when it was moved from mid-August to mid-May, where it now resides as the second major of the year after the Masters.
Getting technical with its origins, the PGA Championship began life being contested in early Autumn but would vary from May to December. It also ran a match-play format, which would often see the finalists play over 200 holes in seven days.
This was changed for the 1958 edition to the standard stroke play, 72-hole with 18 played each day from Thursday to Sunday.
The trophy presented to the winner, named the Wanamaker Trophy, was named after businessman Rodman Wanamaker. The winner each year is given the trophy to keep for one year until the next contest, as well as a smaller-sized replica they get to keep - along with their prize winnings.
When is the 2026 PGA Championship?
The 2026 PGA Championship will be played from Thursday 14th - Sunday 17th May.
Where is the 2026 PGA Championship being played?
This year, the PGA Championship will be contested at Aronimink Golf Club in Newton Square, Pennsylvania, with 156 players making up the field.
About Aronimink Golf Club
Aronimink Golf Club is one of America’s most prestigious private golf clubs. Founded in 1896, the club moved to its current Donald Ross-designed course in 1928 and is renowned for its championship pedigree and classic layout.
Aronimink has hosted major tournaments including the PGA Championship on one occasion in 1962, won by the legendary Gary Player.
Known for its immaculate conditioning, tree-lined fairways, and challenging greens, the club consistently ranks among the top golf courses in the United States and remains a standout venue in professional golf.
The course par is 70 with a total length of 7394 yards, featuring four par-threes and two par-fives. The shortest hole is 171 yards (par-three fifth hole, also the only hole on the course under 200 yards), while the longest is the par-five ninth at 605 yards.
2026 PGA Championship field
As former winners are invited to compete each year for life, there are many of these past champions who are part of this year's field, including Masters champion Rory McIlroy, last year's champion and world number one Scottie Scheffler, Xander Schauffele, Justin Thomas and Collin Morikawa.
As well as them are a great collection of other top players, including the world number one former Masters champion Jon Rahm, Bryson DeChambeau, Ludvig Aberg, Viktor Hovland, Jordan Spieth, and many more.
2026 PGA Championship groupings & tee times
The groupings and tee times for Thursday and Friday have been announced. The field is split so there are two groups teeing off at almost the same time. Half the groups will tee off from the first on Thursday while the other half will start from the 10th. Those starting on the 10th will continue to the first to do the front nine after completing the back nine.
The groups that tee off from the first tee on the Thursday will then swap to tee off from the 10th tee on the Friday.
Here’s how it looks (the following times are in BST):
Thursday 1st tee & Friday 10th tee groupings | |||
Time (Thu / Fri) | Groupings | ||
| 11:45am / 5:10pm | Braden Shattuck | Alex Fitzpatrick | Ben Griffin |
| 11:56am / 5:21pm | Francisco Bide | Harry Hall | Ryan Gerard |
| 12:07pm / 5:32pm | John Keefer | Rico Hoey | Nicolai Hojgaard |
| 12:18pm / 5:43pm | Shaun Micheel | Michael Brennan | Garrick Higgo |
| 12:29pm / 5:54pm | Y.E. Yang | Jhonattan Vegas | Matt McCarty |
| 12:40pm / 6:05pm | Lucas Glover | Tom McKibbin | Stephen Jaeger |
| 12:51pm / 6:16pm | Daniel Brown | Adrien Saddier | Harris English |
| 1:02pm / 6:27pm | Jacob Bridgeman | Bud Cauley | Alex Noren |
| 1:13pm / 6:38pm | Chris Kirk | Max Greyserman | Kristoffer Reitan |
| 1:24pm / 6:49pm | Maverick McNealy | Thomas Detry | Padraig Harrington |
| 1:35pm / 7pm | Ryan Lenahan | Ryan Fox | Kazuki Higa |
| 1:46pm / 7:11pm | Jared Jones | Michael Kim | Ryo Hisatsune |
| 1:57pm / 7:22pm | Tyler Collet | Kota Kaneko | Brandt Snedeker |
| 5:15pm / 11:50am | Andrew Novak | John Parry | Jordan Gumberg |
| 5:26pm / 12:01pm | Ben Polland | Kurt Kitayama | Nico Echavarria |
| 5:37pm / 12:12pm | Akshay Bhatia | Ricky Castillo | Michael Thorbjornsen |
| 5:48pm / 12:23pm | Luke Donald | Jesse Droemer | Stewart Cink |
| 5:59pm / 12:34pm | Hideki Matsuyama | J.J. Spaun | Max Homa |
| 6:10pm / 12:45pm | Ben Kern | J.T. Poston | Russell Henley |
| 6:21pm / 12:56pm | Adam Scott | Corey Conners | Daniel Berger |
| 6:32pm / 1:07pm | Viktor Hovland | Collin Morikawa | Shane Lowry |
| 6:43pm / 1:18pm | Chris Gotterup | Robert MacIntyre | Tommy Fleetwood |
| 6:54pm / 1:29pm | Cameron Young | Keegan Bradley | Justin Thomas |
| 7:05pm / 1:40pm | Scottie Scheffler | Matt Fitzpatrick | Justin Rose |
| 7:16pm / 1:51pm | Zach Haynes | Alex Smalley | Chandler Blanchet |
| 7:27pm / 2:02pm | Bernd Wiesberger | Sudarshan Yellamarju | Andy Sullivan |
Thursday 10th tee & Friday 1st tee groupings | |||
Time (Thu / Fri) | Groupings | ||
| 11:50am / 5:15pm | Aldrich Potgieter | Dsvid Puig | Denny McCarthy |
| 12:01am / 5:26pm | William Mouw | Chris Gabriele | Taylor Pendrith |
| 12:12pm / 5:37pm | Tom Hoge | Bryce Fisher | Joaquin Niemann |
| 12:23pm / 5:48pm | Keith Mitchell | Billy Horschel | Ian Holt |
| 12:34pm / 5:59pm | Gary Woodland | Jason Day | Sam Burns |
| 12:45pm / 6:10pm | Wyndham Clark | Cameron Smith | Brian Harman |
| 12:56pm / 6:21pm | Patrick Cantlay | Min Woo Lee | Sahith Theegala |
| 1:07pm / 6:32pm | Si Woo Kim | Derek Berg | Joe Highsmith |
| 1:18pm / 6:43pm | Ludvig Aberg | Bryson DeChambeau | Rickie Fowler |
| 1:29pm / 6:54pm | Xander Schauffele | Brooks Koepka | Tyrrell Hatton |
| 1:40pm / 7:05pm | Rory McIlroy | Jordan Spieth | John Rahm |
| 1:51pm / 7:16pm | Daniel Hillier | Ryan Vermeer | Max McGreevy |
| 2:02pm / 7:27pm | Paul McClure | Mikael Lindberg | Angel Ayora |
| 5:10pm / 11:45am | Michael Block | Rasmus Hojgaard | Dustin Johnson |
| 5:21pm / 11:56pm | Mark Geddes | Steven Fisk | David Lipsky |
| 5:32pm / 12:07pm | Sungjae Im | Astin Hurt | Casey Jarvis |
| 5:43pm / 12:18pm | Andrew Putnam | Michael Kartrude | Matt Wallace |
| 5:54pm / 12:29pm | Martin Kaymer | Elvis Smylie | Davis Riley |
| 6:05pm / 12:40pm | Jason Dufner | Haotong Li | Jimmy Walker |
| 6:16pm / 12:51pm | Nick Taylor | Rasmus Neergard-Petersen | Jordan Smith |
| 6:27pm / 1:02pm | Emiliano Grillo | Patrick Reed | Pierceson Coody |
| 6:38pm / 1:13pm | Brian Campbell | Adam Schenk | Christian Bezuidenhout |
| 6:49pm / 1:24pm | Marco Penge | Sepp Straka | Patrick Rodgers |
| 7pm / 1:35pm | Aaron Rai | Travis Smyth | Sami Valimaki |
| 7:11pm / 1:46pm | Sam Stevens | Jayden Schaper | Garrett Sapp |
| 7:22pm / 1:57pm | Timothy Wiseman | Matti Schmid | Austin Smotherman |
2026 PGA Championship prize money
The 2025 PGA Championship purse is yet to be announced, although it is expected to be similar to that of last year’s, which was $19m.
Defending champion Scheffler took home $3.42m for winning last year. That is significantly up from the $500 Jim Barnes, the first-ever championship winner, won in 1916 (even with inflation that’s only worth $14,327).
PGA Championship winners
There have been numerous players who have won multiple PGA Championship titles, with the most being five by Walter Hagen and Jack Nicklaus.
There have been (unsurprisingly) a great number more American winners than any other nationality, with the last non-US winner being Jason Day in 2015.
Altogether, there have been 73 unique winners of the PGA Championship.
Past 10 winners
The last five tournaments have seen only one unique winner in Morikawa. Koepka won two back-to-back in 2018 and 2019 and then his third in last year's edition, making him another tournament favourite this year.
Thomas’ two wins are his only two major wins on the tour and came six years apart. The only player with a bigger gap between wins than that was 2021 champion Phil Mickelson, who won his first one in 2005, 16 years before his second.
2025 - Scottie Scheffler
2024 - Xander Schauffele
2023 - Brooks Koepka (3)
2022 - Justin Thomas (2)
2021 - Phil Mickelson (2)
2020 - Colin Morikawa
2019 - Brooks Koepka (2)
2018 - Brooks Koepka
2017 - Justin Thomas
2016 - Jimmy Walker
All-time records
Most wins
Jack Nicklaus (stroke play) & Walter Hagen (match play) – 5
Youngest winner
Gene Sarazen: 20 years, 174 days (1922)
Oldest winner
Phil Mickelson: 50 years & 11 months (2021)
Most consecutive wins
Match play: Walter Hagen, 4 (1924-1927)
Stroke play: Tiger Woods & Brooks Koepka, 2 (Woods achieved twice – 1999 & 2000, 2006 & 2007) (Koepka achieved once – 2018 & 2019)
Biggest winning margin (stroke play)
Rory McIlroy: 8 strokes (2012)
Lowest score over 72 holes
Brooks Koepka: 264 (-16)
Most strokes under par for 72 holes
Jason Day: 268 (-20) (joint-record under par score in all majors)
Championship record (18-hole score)
Xander Schauffele: 62 (2024)







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