Rounds of golf played at U.S. courses climbed to another all-time high in 2025, extending one of the most sustained periods of elevated play the game has ever seen. For the sixth consecutive year, Americans played more than 500 million rounds nationally — a streak unmatched in golf history and further evidence the post-pandemic surge has proven more durable than some initially expected.

At first glance, the current run invites comparisons to the early-2000s “Tiger boom,” when the sport rode a wave of popularity fueled by Tiger Woods’ dominance. But today’s record-setting levels are fundamentally different — and more impressive — than those achieved two decades ago. This is not an apples-to-apples comparison. Current play levels are being achieved with as many as 2,000 fewer golf courses than existed during the earlier 2000s peak, meaning demand is being absorbed by a significantly smaller supply of green-grass facilities. For more on the 1986-2005 building boom and the subsequent market correction, click here.
Despite that constraint, play in 2025 edged past 2024’s previous high, marking the fourth record total in five years. Overall rounds were up just over 1% from 2024, with relatively stable public-course activity offset by a modest increase in private-facility play — enough to push the national total into record territory once again.
NGF members can click here to access the new 2026 U.S. Rounds-Played overview for the 2025 season.




