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How to qualify for the 2026 U.S. Amateur at Merion

A data-driven guide to the scores, sites, and strategy needed to reach Merion.

U.S. Amateur Qualifying Guide

How to qualify for the 2026 U.S. Amateur at Merion

Getting into the 126th U.S. Amateur Championship requires surviving a new two-stage, 18-hole gauntlet where only about 4.2% of entrants make it all the way into the field. With entries now open for Merion, here’s a practical, data-driven look at the numbers, site strategy, and the specific skills that matter most.

Championship Dates
Aug. 10–16
Merion Golf Club
Overall Odds
~4.2%
About 1 in 24 entrants
Handicap Limit
0.4
Max Handicap Index
Entry Fee
$190
Qualifying entry fee

The new format, introduced in 2024, replaced the old single-stage 36-hole qualifier with two separate 18-hole rounds: Local Qualifying in June and Final Qualifying in July. It is faster, more volatile, and far less forgiving. A single hot round can send you to Merion. One bad stretch can end your summer before lunch.

With entries for the 2026 championship having opened on March 18, this is the right time to study the path, compare site profiles, and build a plan that matches your game.

The numbers behind local qualifying

The USGA runs approximately 45 local qualifying sites across the United States, Canada, and Mexico each June. In 2025, 5,245 players entered, up from 4,970 in 2024, and 43 of the 45 sites filled to capacity. Fields typically range from 80 to 130 players, with the biggest numbers clustering in Texas, California, Florida, and the Southeast.

Find Your Site

View all 2026 U.S. Amateur qualifying sites

Looking for the full list of Local and Final Qualifying sites? Use our complete 2026 U.S. Amateur qualifying guide to see every venue, key dates, registration info, and how to enter.

See All Qualifying Sites

Each site advances 5 to 15 players plus two alternates, depending on field size and depth. Smaller or more remote sites often send 5–7 players onward. Mid-size sites may move 7–9. The largest and deepest sites often advance 10–15.

At the 2025 local qualifier at Beatrice Country Club in Nebraska, for example, 84 players competed for 8 spots plus 2 alternates, an advancement rate of about 9.5%. That rough 8–12% range is a useful benchmark for most local sites.

Local Qualifying SnapshotTypical RangeWhat It Means
Sites~45Wide regional variation in scoring and field strength
Field Size80–130 playersLarger metro areas tend to be deeper and more competitive
Qualifying Spots5–15 + 2 alternatesSpot allocation is one of the biggest levers in site choice
Advancement Rate~8–12%Still demanding, but far more forgiving than Final Qualifying
Typical Medalist65–68The best player at the site usually gets well under par
Last Qualifying Score69–72 most oftenEven par to 2-under is the true danger zone
Key takeaway
To feel genuinely safe at most local sites, a player usually needs to post 3-under par or better. Even par often lands you in playoff territory and can eliminate you outright at the strongest venues.

Regional scoring patterns are real

Site selection matters because scoring environments vary dramatically by region. California sites regularly produce medalists in the 62–66 range, with cutlines around 67–70, reflecting the country’s deepest amateur talent base. The Southeast is similar, often requiring 68–70 just to feel comfortable.

Other areas play very differently. At Desert Highlands in Scottsdale in 2024, the medalist shot just 71 and the cutline was 74. At Lake Arrowhead in Wisconsin in 2025, the medalist was 71 and the cutline sat around 73. Depending on where you tee it up, site choice alone can represent a 5-to-7-shot swing in the number you need.

Typical local qualifying cutline by region

Lower is harder because players must go deeper under par.
California67–70
Southeast68–70
Midwest / Mountain West70–73
Gatekeeper / Desert-style setups71–74

Final qualifying is where the funnel tightens

Players who survive local qualifying advance to one of 19 Final Qualifying sites in July. These fields are deeper and nastier. Local survivors are joined by WAGR top-600 players, state amateur champions, and other exempt competitors.

Typical Final Qualifying fields run about 78–84 players, but only 2 to 4 spots are usually available. That means an advancement rate of just 2.5% to 5%, even tougher than local qualifying.

In practice, the number to advance is usually around even par to 3-under, though the exact target depends on setup, wind, and site character. Across all sites, roughly 50–60 spots are typically filled through Final Qualifying, with the rest of the 312-player field completed by exempt entrants.

The path to Merion, simplified

Stage 1
5,245
Approx. entrants
Stage 2
Local Q
~8–12% advance
Stage 3
Final Q
~2.5–5% advance
Destination
312
Championship field

Bottom line: from initial entry to championship tee time, the full process works out to roughly 1 in 24.

How to evaluate qualifying sites like a strategist

Choosing where to qualify may be the single highest-leverage decision in the entire process. Broadly speaking, qualifying venues tend to fall into two archetypes.

Gatekeeper sites

These courses defend par with wind, rough, awkward angles, elevated greens, and tough surrounds. Here, the cutline often sits at even par or worse.

Best fit for players who thrive on bogey avoidance, patience, scrambling, and survival golf.

Scoring sites

These are more open, shorter, or simply softer. When medalists shoot 62–64 and the cutline falls near 67, you must make birdies just to stay in range.

Best fit for players with explosive scoring potential and comfort going very low.

Other filters matter too: field size versus qualifying spots, regional talent density, grass type, altitude, weather, and practice-round access. A player who putts poorly on Bermuda should think twice about Southern sites. A player who has never played at elevation needs to respect how dramatically club selection can change in the Mountain West.

A closer look at eight 2026 qualifying sites

SiteProfileBest Fit
KickingBird GC
Edmond, Oklahoma
Par 70, rating 74.8, wind-exposed, renovated, demanding on paper but still has produced qualifying scores of 68–69.Strong players who can handle wind and like generous spot allocations.
Soldier Hollow Silver
Midway, Utah
Slope 142, altitude around 5,700 feet, 6-6-6 routing, huge club-selection adjustments.Utah and Mountain West players comfortable recalibrating distances.
Streamsong Black
Bowling Green, Florida
Par 73, wide fairways, links-style wind, massive greens where three-putts become the separator.Players comfortable reading huge contours and handling links visuals.
Mid Pines
Southern Pines, North Carolina
Short by modern standards, but Ross greens, firm turf, and short-game pressure make it tricky.Players with elite approach control and imaginative short games.
Cedar Crest
Dallas, Texas
Short par 70, but small greens, thick Bermuda rough, and limited easy birdies.Accurate iron players and wedge specialists over bombers.
Oakcreek CC
Sedona, Arizona
Moderate rating, shorter effective yardage at elevation, bentgrass greens, strategic but playable.Controlled players looking for a friendlier setup.
Neshanic Valley
New Jersey
Public, fair, and sturdy. Rotation of nines matters, but generally rewards the best all-around player.Balanced ball-strikers who want a straightforward test.
Moon Valley CC
Phoenix, Arizona
Final Qualifying site, smaller field but far stronger, only 2–4 spots, private-club mystery factor.High-level players ready for elite-field pressure and desert heat.

One-round qualifying demands a different mental playbook

The move to 18-hole qualifying changed the math. There is no second round to recover. No slow climb up the board. If you open with a double bogey, the entire day suddenly becomes emergency management.

The dominant theme from players and coaches is simple: bogey avoidance beats birdie hunting. In this format, eliminating doubles and keeping bogeys to two or three is more valuable than chasing an extra birdie with high-risk decisions.

The practical formula is conservative target selection with selective aggression. Pick two or three holes where your game can press safely. Play the other 15 to smart targets, stay out of penalty areas, and accept boring pars as a winning skill.

Single-round qualifying scorecard goals

Greens in Regulation
12+
Roughly 67% or better
Three-Putts
0
Mandatory on big USGA greens
Penalty Strokes
0
The fastest way to miss
Big Number Limit
0 doubles
Or fewer, obviously

Preparation matters more than players admit

In a one-round shootout, small edges matter. A practice round, local caddie knowledge, a smarter warm-up, and basic equipment discipline can each be worth fractions of a shot. Stack those fractions and you can create the 2-to-3-shot margin that often separates qualifiers from alternates.

Preparation ItemWhy It Matters
Arrive 60–75 minutes earlyGives you enough time to calibrate green speed, loosen up dynamically, and avoid a rushed start.
Warm up in sequenceStart with putting, then short game, then range. It mirrors how feel, contact, and speed build most naturally.
Vary clubs on the rangeRandomized rehearsal is more tournament-like than beating the same club over and over.
Clear out non-matching golf ballsOne-ball rule mistakes are still among the simplest ways to get disqualified.
Stay on site after your roundSudden-death playoffs and alternate playoffs can happen if scores bunch at the number.

Eligibility, registration, and the path to Merion

To enter the 2026 U.S. Amateur, a player must have a Handicap Index not exceeding 0.4 and must maintain amateur status under USGA and R&A rules. There are no age restrictions, and there are no citizenship or residency requirements.

Roughly 45 players are fully exempt into the championship, including past champions, recent match-play finishers, Walker Cup participants, major amateur title winners, the NCAA individual champion, and top WAGR players. Golfers ranked in the top 600 of WAGR skip Local Qualifying and enter directly at the Final Qualifying stage.

Important 2026 dates

DateMilestone
March 18, 2026Registration opens at 9:00 a.m. ET
May 27, 2026Entries close
June 1–30, 2026Local Qualifying window
July 13–22, 2026Final Qualifying window
August 10–16, 2026126th U.S. Amateur Championship at Merion

Conclusion: maximize the decisions you can control

The path to Merion is narrow, but it is not random. Three controllable decisions carry most of the weight.

First: site selection is strategy. A score of 70 can be a comfortable qualifier at one venue and nowhere near enough at another.

Second: one-round qualifying rewards discipline over flair. Conservative targets, no penalty shots, and no doubles beat reckless birdie-chasing.

Third: preparation compounds. Practice access, warm-up structure, local knowledge, and equipment cleanup each add up to the tiny margin that often decides who qualifies and who becomes first alternate.

AmateurGolf.com Rankings
2025 season — official results & points
PosPlayerFromPoints
Final 16Josh DuangmaneeVA500
Final 16Preston StoutTX500
Final 16Paul (Rui) ChangChina500
+61 more — Premium members see every point earnedFull Men's National Ranking

AmateurGolf.com Staff

Editorial Team

Reporting and analysis from the AmateurGolf.com editorial team.