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Breaking 60 used to be like running a four minute mile, but now it happens all the time.
For the last 25 years, I've stared at more online leaderboards than I can count. I wish I had a dollar for every refresh — tournaments I was covering, qualifiers friends were playing, leaderboards I just couldn't stop watching. On a late-August afternoon in my home office in San Diego, I was scanning the LPGA's inaugural FM Championship at TPC Boston when Haeran Ryu posted a perfect card for a second-round 10-under 62. TPC Boston is no pushover. Surely, I thought, that's the round of the year.
But I couldn't say it with any authority. And that got me thinking: what are the lowest rounds ever recorded? By gender, by status, by stage — and what are the stories behind the most iconic of them? Below is the honest answer, record by record, with a few updates the golf world quietly earned along the way.
Before we get into tournament scoring — which is what most of our readers are here for — it's worth acknowledging that the lowest officially recorded round of golf on the planet didn't happen in competition. It happened on an ordinary Saturday in Oklahoma.
Gibson's round wasn't part of a formal tournament, but his playing partners witnessed and attested to every stroke. A four-time NAIA All-American at Oklahoma Christian University, Gibson has since gone on to play the Korn Ferry Tour. Guinness recognizes it. The golf world recognizes it. And no one has gone lower since.
For decades, the most iconic low round in golf belonged to Al Geiberger — the man who first cracked open the door to something most players believed was mathematically possible but practically unthinkable.
Geiberger's second round at the Danny Thomas Memphis Classic included 11 birdies and an eagle, capped by a 30-foot putt on the 18th green to seal history. The nickname followed him for the rest of his life. He embraced it — signing golf balls "Mr. 59" as a personal trademark. The round set the benchmark and inspired a generation of players to chase a number that once seemed untouchable.
And chase it they did. Since Geiberger's breakthrough, the PGA Tour has produced its own "59 Club" — a small, elite fraternity of players who have broken 60 in a sanctioned event.
Here's the update to the Geiberger legend that every golf fan should know: the PGA Tour record is no longer 59. It's 58.
Furyk's 58 at the 2016 Travelers Championship is the lowest round ever posted in PGA Tour competition — and remarkably, he made it with only one birdie over his final six holes. The ever-efficient veteran simply refused to give a shot back. Geiberger broke the door down. Furyk walked through it and closed it behind him.
Sörenstam's round at the 2001 Standard Register PING is the lowest score ever recorded on the LPGA Tour on a course with a par of at least 70. Thirteen birdies. No bogeys. No scrambling around the edges. Just a masterclass in precision and composure that has remained the benchmark in women's golf for more than two decades.
Others have come close. Jessica Korda posted a 60 at the 2021 Diamond Resorts Tournament of Champions. Linnea Ström matched it at the 2024 ShopRite LPGA Classic. But 59 remains the number to beat — and as of April 2026, no one has.
In amateur golf, the lowest round recorded in a recognized competition is 57 — a number so absurd it has been achieved only twice, by two very different players in very different settings.
Wyatt's 57 at the 2010 Alabama Boys Junior Championship was the first to stamp that number into the amateur record book. Nine years later, Alex Ross matched it at the Dogwood Invitational at Druid Hills Golf Club in Atlanta — 13 birdies and an eagle across a single afternoon on one of the Southeast's most storied amateur layouts.
For nearly 50 years, Johnny Miller's final-round 63 at the 1973 U.S. Open at Oakmont stood alone as the lowest round in men's major championship history. Phil Mickelson nearly broke it at the 2016 Open at Royal Troon — his 20-footer on 18 for a 61 lipped out. The wait finally ended a year later.
Branden Grace broke through first — a third-round 62 at Royal Birkdale in benign post-rain conditions. Six years later, the barrier fell again twice in a single day when Rickie Fowler and Xander Schauffele both shot 62 in the opening round of the 2023 U.S. Open at Los Angeles Country Club. Schauffele then did something no one had ever done: he shot a second 62 in a major, this time in the first round of the 2024 PGA Championship at Valhalla.
And two days later, Shane Lowry made it five. In the third round at Valhalla, Lowry fired his own 62 — and nearly made it a 61. His birdie putt on the 18th green slid by the edge. One lip-out from owning the record outright.
The women's major record has a beautiful symmetry to it: all three players to shoot the lowest round ever in a women's major have done it at the same event, the Evian Championship. Kim Hyo-joo fired the first of them in 2014 — as a 19-year-old, in the first round, and she went on to win the tournament. Lee Jeong-eun and Leona Maguire have since matched her number. Three players. One magical golf course. A record that has stood for over a decade and counting.
I think back to my time as a member of Sequoyah Country Club in Oakland, where Ben Hogan and other greats once competed in the Oakland Open. (Hogan's tires were slashed in the hotel parking lot before he won enough money to continue playing as a pro.)
The club pro, Don Whitt, played the PGA Tour in the '50s and '60s. One afternoon, with two holes to play on the tricky par-70 layout, Whitt was 12-under. His partner — a friendly but apparently cursed man — couldn't resist saying the thing every golfer knows never to say out loud.
As if on command, Whitt bogeyed both holes. He finished with a 10-under 60 — a Sequoyah course record that still stands today, despite modern equipment and 350-yard drives. Somewhere in an alternate timeline, Don Whitt owns the Guinness record. In this one, he owns the cautionary tale every low-round chase should end with.
Four-minute miles became routine. Sub-60 rounds followed the same path. Somewhere out there, a 57 in a major is waiting. A 54 on a long course is coming. And someone is going to shoot it.

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