Invitations to compete in the 2025 Augusta National Women’s Amateur were sent in January and 65 players thus far have been confirmed for the Championship, which will be held April 2-5 in Augusta, Ga.
Included in the field are each of the top-50 eligible players from the final World Amateur Golf Ranking of 2024. Players representing 18 different countries and five continents will compete in the Championship, including three of the last four champions: Tsubasa Kajitani (2021), Anna Davis (2022) and defending champion Lottie Woad, the top-ranked amateur in the world. A current listing of the confirmed field is available here.
Beginning the week prior to the 89th Masters Tournament, the international field of 72 players will compete across 54 holes of stroke play with a cut to 30 players and ties taking place after 36 holes. The first two rounds will take place on the Island and Bluff nines at Champions Retreat Golf Club on Wednesday, April 2 and Thursday, April 3. The entire field will then play Augusta National for an official practice round on Friday, April 4. The final round, featuring competitors who made the cut, will take place on Saturday, April 5 at Augusta National.
The first and second rounds of the Augusta National Women’s Amateur will be broadcast live on Golf Channel (1:30-3:30 p.m. ET) from Champions Retreat Golf Club. NBC Sports will produce and broadcast three hours (Noon-3 p.m. ET) of live final-round coverage of the event at Augusta National. Additionally, Golf Channel’s “Live From the Masters” will commence on Friday, April 4 at Augusta National to provide coverage of the Augusta National Women’s Amateur, the Drive, Chip and Putt National Finals and the Masters Tournament.
The Augusta National Women’s Amateur, which has hosted the top women amateurs in golf since 2019, will celebrate its sixth Championship in 2025. The inaugural edition was won by future major champion Jennifer Kupcho in 2019 before the 2020 Championship was canceled due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Kajitani kickstarted a historic April in 2021, capturing the first title for Japan at Augusta National eight days prior to Hideki Matsuyama’s win at the Masters Tournament. In 2022, 16-year-old Davis became the event’s youngest winner after a final-round 69. Coming off of nearly three years as the top-ranked amateur in the world, Rose Zhang put a bow on her amateur career with a playoff victory at the 2023 Augusta National Women’s Amateur. Last year, England’s Woad became the first European champion of the event in dramatic fashion with birdies at Nos. 17 and 18 to win by one stroke.
Tickets to the Augusta National Women’s Amateur are sold out following an online ticket application process. No tickets will be available at the gates. For more information, please visit ANWAgolf.com and follow the event’s official social media channels (@ANWAgolf) across Facebook, Instagram, X, YouTube and TikTok