Future Sites

U.S. Senior Women's Open

2026
Barton Hills

Barton Hills Country Club

Ann Arbor, Mich. August 20-23, 2026

Barton Hills Country Club, in Ann Arbor, Mich., will host its third USGA championship when the 2026 U.S. Senior Women's Open is contested there. The Donald Ross design opened for play in 1922. Revisions were done to the layout by Ron Pritchard in 2012. Grace Park claimed the 1998 U.S. Women's Amateur at Barton Hills, defeating Jenny Chuasiriporn, 7 and 6, a couple of months after Chuasiriporn nearly defeated Se Ri Pak in a 20-hole Monday playoff at the U.S. Women's Open at Blackwolf Run. Park went on to win six times on the LPGA Tour. In 2008, Joan Higgins became the oldest winner of the U.S. Women's Mid-Amateur at age 52 with a 1-up victory over Lynn Simmons. The club also has hosted three Michigan Women's Amateurs and five Michigan Amateurs. 

2027
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Tacoma Country and Golf Club

Lakewood, Wash. August 19-22, 2027

Tacoma Country & Golf Club was founded in 1894 by a group of Scotsmen and Englishmen who sought to play the game of their homeland. By 1896, the original 18-hole course and an additional nine-hole course were built on pastureland. Tacoma Country & Golf Club was one of the founding clubs of the Pacific Northwest Golf Association, the fifth-oldest golf association in North America.

2028
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SentryWorld

Stevens Point, Wis. TBD

SentryWorld, a Robert Trent Jones II design that opened in 1982, is set to host its fourth USGA championship in 2028 with the playing of the U.S. Senior Women's Open. Co-designers Jay Blasi and Bruce Charlton also did extensive work on the layout that was renovated in 2013, six years prior to the 2019 U.S. Girls' Junior (Lei Ye). The daily-fee course also hosted a U.S. Women's Amateur Public Links in 1986 won by future LPGA Tour player Cindy Schreyer. in 2023, Bernhard Langer beame the oldest winner of the U.S. Senior Open at age 66 while also surpassing five-time USGA champion Hale Irwin with the most victories on the PGA Tour Champions. Following the 2028 U.S. Senior Women's Open, SentryWorld, which is operated by USGA corporate partner Sentry Insurance, will host the 2034 U.S. Senior Open. The parkland layout is known for the Flower Hole, the par-3 15th, where more than 10,000 flowers are planted each year. The course is part of a sports complex that includes indoor tennis courts, banquet space and restaurants. 

2030
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Spyglass Hill Golf Course

Pebble Beach, Calif.

Spyglass Hill Golf Course, designed by Robert Trent Jones Sr., has often been used as a stroke-play co-host for U.S. Amateurs contested at nearby Pebble Beach Golf Links. But now Spyglass gets a chance to play host to its first two USGA championships (the 2030 U.S. Senior Women's Open also will be contested on the layout). The course officially opened in 1966 after six years of planning, design and construction. The first six holes meander near the Pacific Ocean and 17-mile drive before weaving its way through the Del Monte Forest. The course has been part of the rotation for the PGA Tour's annual AT&T National Pro-Am.

2031
Plainfield CC

Plainfield Country Club

Edison, N.J.

Plainfield Country Club, a classic Donald Ross design located at the highest point in Middlesex (N.J.) County, will host its first U.S. Senior Open and fifth USGA championship in 2038. The club originally opened as the Hillside Tennis Club in 1890 with a nine-hole course opening five years later. The current 18-hole layout designed by Ross opened for play in 1921. Gil Hanse began an extensive renovation in the late 1990s, and during the early 2000s, every teeing ground, fairway and green was restored, along with a tree removal plan that opened up playing angles. John Cook won the 1978 U.S. Amateur at Plainfield and nine years later, Laura Davies won the U.S. Women's Open in a weather-delayed 18-hole playoff. Two other USGA championships are scheduled prior to the 2038 U.S. Senior Open: the 2025 U.S. Amateur Four-Ball and 2031 U.S. Senior Women's Open.

2032
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Prairie Dunes Country Club

Hutchinson, Kan.

Located 50 miles northwest of Wichita, Kan., Prairie Dunes Country Club was founded in the mid-1930s by salt magnate Emerson Carey and his sons. The first nine holes were designed by Perry Maxwell and opened for play in 1937. Maxwell’s son, Press, was the architect of the second nine holes 20 years later. Prairie Dunes is a links-style course that reflects the common traits of rural Kansas, including sand dunes, native prairie grasses, yucca plants, cottonwoods and constant wind. Allen Doyle successfully defended his U.S. Senior Open title at Prairie Dunes in 2006, holding off eight-time major champion and Kansas native Tom Watson. Prairie Dunes also was the site of the first of three consecutive U.S. Women's Amateur victories for Juli Inkster, who returned in 2002 to claim the U.S. Women's Open. This will be the club's ninth USGA championship. It will host a 10th USGA event in 2032 when the U.S. Senior Women's Open is contested there.