A month on from the drama of Aronimink Golf Club and the PGA Championship, all eyes turn to New York and Shinnecock Hills for the 2026 U.S. Open.
Aaron Rai took the second major of the year in a dramatic edition of the PGA Championship, going five-under on the final day to beat Jon Rahm and Alex Smalley by three strokes.
He will be looking to continue that momentum into the final major of the year on American soil.
After a gruelling edition of the competition last year, in which J.J. Spaun won his first major with a score of just one-under, the action returns to the only course with a higher winning score in the past decade.
Shinnecock Hills on the outskirts of New York hosted the 2018 edition of the U.S. Open, with Brooks Koepka winning the second of his two titles with a score of one-over.
He will be there looking to capitalise on his winning experience again, although his participation is in doubt after suffering a hand injury, while Tommy Fleetwood, who finished runner-up eight years ago by a single stroke is hoping to go one better and finally secure his first major crown.
And, of course, Spaun returns as defending champion and World No.1 golfer Scottie Scheffler looks to complete his career Grand Slam.
- Zach Johnson wins PGA Tour Champions event at home in Iowa
- Bud Cauley, 36, wins Canadian Open, his first PGA Tour title
When and where is the US Open
The 126th edition of the U.S. Open will get underway on Thursday, June 18 and will run through until Sunday, June 21.
This year, the action returns to Shinnecock Hills, a course that will host its sixth U.S. Open, putting it behind only Baltusrol and last year's location, Oakmont for times hosting the third major of the year.
Located in Southampton on Long Island, New York, Shinnecock Hills has typically been a difficult course over the years.
The four winning scores have been: -1, E, -4 and +1, since the competition moved to stroke play, with the first US Open at Shinnecock Hills taking place in 1896.
How to watch in UK
Subscribers in the UK can catch every shot on Sky Sports Golf, who will be live from 11:30 a.m. on Thursday and Friday.
At the weekend, live coverage will begin at 3 p.m. and the US Open will remain on air for some time after the winner is crowned on Sunday.
The action will also be simulcast live on Sky Sports Main Event at 7 p.m. on Thursday, Friday and Sunday and at 10 p.m. on Saturday.
All times in BST
Thursday, June 18
Round 1: 11.30 p.m. - Sky Sports Golf
Friday, June 19
Round 2: 11.30 p.m. - Sky Sports Golf
Saturday, June 20
Round 3: 3 p.m. - Sky Sports Golf
Sunday, June 21
Round 4: 4 p.m. - Sky Sports Golf
Prize money
This will be announced in the week before the U.S. Open gets underway but in 2025, the prize money was as follows:
1st place: $4,300,000
2nd place: $2,322,000
3rd place: $1,459,284
4th place: $1,023,014
5th place: $852,073
6th place: $755,520
7th place: $681,131
8th place: $610,034
9th place: $552,103
10th place: $507,118
Tee times
FINAL ROUND:
7:45 a.m. -- Dylan Wu, James Nicholas
7:56 a.m. -- Peter Uihlein, Russell Henley
8:07 a.m. -- Patrick Rodgers, (a) Eric Lee
8:18 a.m. -- Neal Shipley, Hideki Matsuyama
8:29 a.m. -- Adrien Dumont de Chassart, Nico Echavarria
8:40 a.m. -- Caleb Surratt, Ben James
8:51 a.m. -- Jackson Van Paris, Spencer Tibbits
9:02 a.m. -- Kurt Kitayama, Max Greyserman
9:18 a.m. -- (a) Marek Fleming, Jacob Bridgeman
9:29 a.m. -- Johnny Keefer, Ludvig Åberg
9:40 a.m. -- Ryan Fox, Angel Hidalgo
9:51 a.m. -- (a) Miles Russell, (a) Jackson Koivun
10:02 a.m. -- Robert MacIntyre, Chris Gotterup
10:13 a.m. -- Harry Higgs, Andrew Putnam
10:24 a.m. -- Michael Brennan, Jordan Spieth
10:35 a.m. -- Bud Cauley, Ben Kohles
10:51 a.m. -- Cameron Young, Joaquín Niemann
11:02 a.m. -- Laurie Canter, Justin Thomas
11:13 a.m. -- William Mouw, Niklas Nørgaard
11:24 a.m. -- Max McGreevy, Justin Rose
11:35 a.m. -- Ben Griffin, Tyrrell Hatton
11:46 a.m. -- Pierceson Coody, Dustin Johnson
11:57 a.m. -- Ryo Hisatsune, Gary Woodland
12:13 p.m. -- Akshay Bhatia, Rory McIlroy
12:24 p.m. -- Maverick McNealy, Brian Harman
12:35 p.m. -- Zac Blair, Aaron Rai
12:46 p.m. -- John Parry, J.T. Poston
12:57 p.m. -- Sungjae Im, Michael Kim
1:08 p.m. -- (a) Ryder Cowan, Alex Fitzpatrick
1:19 p.m. -- Corey Conners, Keegan Bradley
1:35 p.m. -- Matt Fitzpatrick, Collin Morikawa
1:46 p.m. -- Tommy Fleetwood, Xander Schauffele
1:57 p.m. -- Sam Burns, Keith Mitchell
2:08 p.m. -- Emiliano Grillo, Sam Stevens
2:19 p.m. -- Tom Kim, Sahith Theegala
2:30 p.m. -- Scottie Scheffler, Wyndham Clark
All times ET
(a) denotes amateur
