Scottie Scheffler of the United States during the Memorial Tournament at Muirfield Village Golf Club in Dublin, Ohio. GETTY IMAGES

The Memorial golf tournament will return to its regular date, according to the US PGA Tour's 2025 schedule unveiled on Wednesday.

In total, the tour will feature 39 events. It will begin from 2-5 January in Hawaii and end with next year's Tour Championship at East Lake in Atlanta from 21-24 August.

The Jack Nicklaus Memorial was moved this year to the week before the US Open in a revised schedule due in part to the Paris Olympics.

The circuit's biggest change of location affects the Truist Championship, from 8-11 May, which moves from Quail Hollow (Charlotte) to the Philadelphia Cricket Club for a year so the North Carolina course can host the 2025 PGA Championship the following week.

The second leg of next year's playoffs, the BMW Championship, will be played at Caves Valley in suburban Baltimore, which last hosted the event in 2021.



After a strong debut in 2024, the circuit will once again offer eight tournaments with smaller fields and bigger prize money.
These tournaments begin with The Sentry and include the Pebble Beach Pro-Am, the Genesis Invitational, the Arnold Palmer Invitational, the Heritage, the Truist and the Memorial.

Last on the list is the Travelers Championship, which takes place right after the US Open at Oakmont, from 12-15 June. "The new schedule and competitive changes introduced in 2024 were significant steps toward creating the best version of the PGA Tour for our fans and players," said Jay Monahan, PGA Tour commissioner.

"The fields were significantly stronger across the board, while the signature events provided fans with more opportunities to see the PGA Tour's best competing head-to-head."

The schedule also includes the Players Championship, March 13-16, the Houston Open and the Texas Open, before the Masters, from 10-13 April at Augusta National. Next year's final Major, the British Open, will be held from 17-20 July at Royal Portrush in Northern Ireland.