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see also: NCAA Division I Women's Golf Championship, La Costa Resort and Spa - Champions Course

With no clear runaway favorite, the 2026 women’s college golf season is a battle of depth, data, and momentum
The 2026 women’s collegiate golf season is defined by parity and data-driven rankings. Stanford, USC, Florida, Texas A&M, Texas, Oregon and Arkansas each have realistic title hopes as regionals approach. Here’s everything you need to know as the road to Omni La Costa begins.
The NCAA Division I Women’s Golf Championship unfolds in two stages. First, six regional tournaments (May 11–13, 2026) send the top five teams and the low individual not on an advancing team to nationals. Those thirty qualifiers join six individuals for a 72-hole stroke-play finals at Omni La Costa Resort & Spa in Carlsbad, California (May 22–27). After four rounds, the eight best teams advance to match play to determine the national champion.
| Regional Host City | Venue |
|---|---|
| Ann Arbor, MI | University of Michigan Golf Course |
| Chapel Hill, NC | UNC Finley Golf Course |
| Simpsonville, KY | University of Louisville Golf Club |
| Stanford, CA | Stanford Golf Course |
| Tallahassee, FL | Seminole Legacy Golf Club |
| Waco, TX | Ridgewood Country Club |
The Clippd National Collegiate Golf Ranking determines seeding for the NCAA Championship. It uses adjusted scoring averages and weighted points that factor strength of field and margin of victory. As of April 23, 2026, Clippd lists Stanford, Southern California, Florida, Texas A&M and Texas as the top five women’s teams, while individuals Frances O’Keefe (Texas), Maria José Marín (Arkansas), Kiara Romero (Oregon), Pía Martín Sampedro (Stanford) and Ashley Weed (Mississippi State) occupy the top five spots in the player rankings.
The Women’s Golf Coaches Association poll concurs: Stanford remains the unanimous No. 1 after winning the Charles Schwab Women’s Collegiate; USC is No. 2 following back-to-back wins at the PING ASU Invitational and Chevron Silverado Showdown; Texas A&M holds No. 3; Florida moves to No. 4 after its Clemson Invitational title; and Oregon jumps to No. 5.
Stanford leads the rankings with six wins and an adjusted scoring average of 274.5. The Cardinal claimed the ACC Championship, Charles Schwab Women’s Collegiate, Bruin Wave Invitational, Arizona Thunderbird Intercollegiate, Nanea Invitational and their own Stanford Intercollegiate. Sophomore Pía Martín Sampedro anchors a deep roster that rarely posts high scores.
USC owns six wins, including the Chevron Silverado Showdown, PING ASU Invitational, Dr. Donnis Thompson Invitational, GameAbove Golf Invitational and Alice & John Wallace Classic, along with match-play sweeps at the Battle of LA and East Lake Cup. Seniors Kiara Romero and Amari Avery give the Trojans both firepower and experience.
Florida’s 279.4 scoring average and six victories mirror their men’s team’s success. The Gators swept the SEC Championship and won the Clemson Invitational, Gators Invitational, Sea Best Intercollegiate, The Ally and University of Oklahoma Intercollegiate. World No. 1 Frances O’Keefe leads a lineup that has seldom faltered.
With five wins and a 108-17-1 record, Texas A&M thrives in match play. They won the SEC Championship bracket, NB3 Match Play, ‘Mo’ Morial, Folds of Honor Collegiate and Carmel Cup. Depth from Zoe Slaughter and Hailee Cooper makes the Aggies a dangerous dark horse.
Texas posts a 279.8 average with two wins and high finishes at the SEC Championship, Therese Hession Regional Challenge, Nanea Invitational and Stanford Intercollegiate. Their strength lies in consistent top-10 finishes across elite fields.
Although winless, Oregon ranks sixth thanks to seven top-three finishes. The Ducks were runners-up at the Charles Schwab Women’s Collegiate and Chevron Collegiate and third at the Chevron Silverado Showdown. Kiara Romero leads a team built on consistency.
Arkansas rounds out the contenders with three wins and a 112-22-3 record. The Razorbacks triumphed at the Purdue Puerto Rico Classic, Route 66 Invitational and Blessings Collegiate Invitational and finished second at the Clemson Invitational and Betsy Rawls Invitational. Maria José Marín provides the low rounds they need.
Parity defines the 2026 season. Multiple programs own at least three victories, and the gap between the top five teams is slim. When regionals begin in May, watch for Stanford’s depth, USC’s hot streak, Florida’s balanced attack, Texas A&M’s match-play prowess and Oregon and Arkansas looking to convert podiums into wins. The road ends at Omni La Costa, where one team will emerge from stroke play and match play as national champion.

30 teams and 6 individuals not on a qualifying team make up the field for the championship of NCAA Division I women's golf. After 72 holes of stroke play, the individual champion is crowned, and the low 8 teams advance to match play to determine the ...
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