Loading...
Loading contentLoading...
Loading content6 multi-state tours that bridge state-level play and the national circuit. Strong development tracks for players building a college recruiting résumé without (yet) the budget for full AJGA campaigns.
The largest multi-state regional junior tour in the Southeast. Year-round events across Alabama, Georgia, Florida, Mississippi, Louisiana, Tennessee, and the Carolinas. Strong college-recruiting field strength at premier events.
Largest multi-state regional junior tour outside the AJGA.
Regional junior tour covering the western United States. Mix of one-day and multi-day events at Arizona, Nevada, and California venues.
Pacific Northwest regional junior tour serving Oregon, Washington, and Idaho. Year-round events at premier venues with multi-age divisions, plus the NWJGA Championship.
Junior tour operated by the Carolinas PGA Section, separate from the CGA junior program. North + South Carolina events, hosted at PGA-section-affiliated clubs and courses across both states.
Regional junior tour serving Virginia, Maryland, DC, and the broader Mid-Atlantic. Events at top public and private courses with multi-age divisions.
Junior tour operated by the New England PGA Section. Events across MA, ME, NH, VT, RI. Affordable entry, strong development pathway for Northeast juniors.
Regional junior golf tours are multi-state circuits that sit between state association play and full national schedules. For most competitive juniors, the regional tour is the bridge — affordable enough to build tournament reps without cross-country travel, and competitive enough to earn ranking points on Junior Golf Scoreboard and feed AJGA Performance Stars.
In the Mid-Atlantic, the Middle Atlantic Junior Golf Tour (MAJGT) and PGA Junior Tours for Philadelphia, Metropolitan, and New Jersey sections run dense summer schedules across DC, Maryland, Virginia, Pennsylvania, and the New York metro. The New England PGA and MGA Junior tours anchor the Northeast circuit. In the West, the Southwest PGA Junior Tour and Northwest Junior Golf cover Arizona, Nevada, and the Pacific Northwest.
The regional tour résumé is what coaches at D2, D3, and mid-major D1 programs lean on hardest. A strong regional record plus a handful of well-placed national events — an AJGA Open or a marquee invitational like the Scott Robertson Memorial — gives recruiters the data they need without requiring a full AJGA travel budget.