The U.S. Open is open to any professional, or to any amateur with a USGA Handicap Index not exceeding 0.4. Players (male or female) • Winners of the U.S. Open for the last ten years • Winner and runner-up from the previous year's
U.S. Amateur and winners of the previous year's
U.S. Junior Amateur,
Amateur Championship,
Latin America Amateur Championship, and
U.S. Mid-Amateur • The individual winner of the most recent
NCAA Division I men's golf championship • Winners of each of
Masters Tournament,
Open Championship and
PGA Championship for the last five years • Winners of the last three
Players Championships • Winner of the current year's
BMW PGA Championship • Winner of the last
U.S. Senior Open • Players who win multiple U.S.
PGA Tour events during the time between tournaments, provided the tournaments each offer 500 or more points to the winner, and are not opposite-field events. • In the year after the
Olympic golf tournament, the reigning men's gold medalist • Top 10 finishers and ties from the previous year's U.S. Open • Players who qualified for the previous year's
Tour Championship • The top 60 in the
Official World Golf Ranking (OWGR) as of two weeks before the start of the tournament • The top 60 in the OWGR as of the tournament date • The top player in the
Korn Ferry Tour points, based on
combined points from the Regular Season and Finals, from the previous season (starting in 2023). • The top two
DP World Tour players from the previous season's final Race to Dubai rankings who did not qualify through any previous exemption, as well as the top non-exempt player in the current season's Race to Dubai • Should a
LIV Golf League player not previously exempt finish in the top 3 of the individual league rankings in the previous or current season, they will qualify • Special exemptions selected by the USGA • All remaining spots after the second top 60 OWGR cutoff date filled by alternates from qualifying tournaments. The exemptions for amateurs apply only if the players remain amateurs as of the tournament date, excluding the U.S. Amateur champion; they can retain their earned exemption regardless of amateur status for the U.S. Open following a 2019 rule change. As the U.S. Open typically takes place after the college golf season has ended, it is not uncommon for top amateur players to turn professional immediately after their last collegiate event (typically the end of the NCAA championships) in order to maximize the number of FedEx Cup points they may score before the August cutoff to avoid qualifying school. Before 2011, the sole OWGR cutoff for entry was the top 50 as of two weeks before the tournament. An exemption category for the top 50 as of the tournament date was added for 2011, apparently in response to the phenomenon of golfers entering the top 50 between the original cutoff date and the tournament (such as
Justin Rose and
Rickie Fowler in 2010). Through 2011, exemptions existed for leading money winners on the PGA, European, Japanese, and Australasian tours, as well as winners of multiple PGA Tour events in the year before the U.S. Open. These categories were eliminated in favor of inviting the top 60 on the OWGR at both relevant dates. Potential competitors who are not fully exempt must enter the Qualifying process, which has two stages. Firstly there is Local Qualifying, which is played over 18 holes at more than 100 courses around the United States. Many leading players are exempt from this first stage, and they join the successful local qualifiers at the Sectional Qualifying stage, which is played over 36 holes in one day at several sites in the U.S., as well as one each in
Europe,
Canada, and
Japan. Most sectional qualifiers are held on the Monday of the week prior to the U.S. Open. Field sizes and qualifying spots on offer vary from site to site; in recent years, the USGA has placed events near scheduled
PGA Tour and
Korn Ferry Tour stops to better accommodate touring pros who did not qualify through an exemption. There is no lower age limit and the youngest-ever qualifier was 14-year-old
Andy Zhang of
China, who qualified in 2012 after
Paul Casey withdrew days before the tournament.
USGA special exemptions The USGA has granted a special exemption to 35 players 53 times since
1966. Players with multiple special exemptions include:
Arnold Palmer (1978, 1980, 1981, 1983, 1994),
Seve Ballesteros (1978, 1994),
Gary Player (1981, 1983),
Lee Trevino (1983, 1984),
Hale Irwin (1990, 2002, 2003),
Jack Nicklaus (1991, 1993, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000), and
Tom Watson (1993, 1996, 2000, 2003, 2010). Irwin won the
1990 U.S. Open after accepting a special exemption. In
2016, a special exemption was extended to former champion
Retief Goosen (2001, 2004). In
2018, a special exemption was extended to former U.S. Open champions
Jim Furyk (2003) and
Ernie Els (1994, 1997). The last special exemption was granted to three-time champion Tiger Woods to play in
2024. ==Prizes==