Early career In 2011, at the age of 20, Reed turned professional after the NCAA Championship. In June of that year, he played in his first PGA Tour event, the
FedEx St. Jude Classic, where he missed the cut. Reed played two more events in 2011, earning just over $20,000. He played two events on the
Nationwide Tour and earned just over $5,000. He made seven cuts and earned over $300,000. He finished T-22 at the
PGA Tour Qualifying Tournament, after entering at the First Stage, to earn his PGA Tour card for 2013. At the 2014
Humana Challenge, Reed set the PGA Tour record for most strokes under par after 54 holes. His rounds of 63-63-63, were 27-under-par. The tournament's first three rounds are played on three different courses. The previous record was 25-under-par, set by
Gay Brewer at the 1967
Pensacola Open and tied by
Ernie Els at the 2003
Mercedes Championships,
Pat Perez at the 2009
Bob Hope Classic (the previous name of the Humana event) and
Steve Stricker at the 2010
John Deere Classic. All four other players won those tournaments. It was also the first time in PGA Tour history that a player opened a tournament with three rounds of 63 or better. Reed won the tournament by two strokes over
Ryan Palmer. On March 9, Reed won the
WGC-Cadillac Championship at
Trump National Doral in
Miami, Florida. He earned $1.53 million with the one-shot win over
Bubba Watson and
Jamie Donaldson. Reed became only the fifth golfer to earn three PGA Tour wins before his 24th birthday since 1990, joining
Tiger Woods,
Phil Mickelson,
Rory McIlroy and
Sergio García.
Jordan Spieth subsequently achieved that feat. Reed is the youngest winner of a WGC event, and the victory also moved him to 20th in the
Official World Golf Ranking. Reed was also the first PGA Tour golfer to have three wins before playing in his first major, the
2014 Masters. Also in 2014, Reed finished 5th at the
Volvo World Match Play Championship. On January 12, Reed won his fourth PGA Tour title at the
Hyundai Tournament of Champions by defeating
Jimmy Walker in a sudden death playoff. He became just the fourth player in the last two decades to win four times on the PGA Tour before his 25th birthday, the other three were
Tiger Woods,
Rory McIlroy, and
Sergio García. The win moved Reed to a career-best OWGR ranking of 14th. Also, he finished second at the
Valspar Championship, third at the
Hero World Challenge, and seventh at the
Honda Classic. Reed also joined the European Tour for the 2015 season. On August 28, Reed won the first
FedEx Cup playoff event,
The Barclays played at
Bethpage Black. This was his fifth victory on the PGA Tour and first FedEx Cup event win. He went into the final round in the last grouping, one stroke behind the leader
Rickie Fowler. He carded a final round of one-under-par to take a one stroke victory over
Emiliano Grillo and
Sean O'Hair. The win vaulted Reed to the top of the FedEx Cup standings from 7th position ahead of
Jason Day. He also automatically qualified for the
Ryder Cup team with this victory. After the second FedEx Cup playoff event, the
Deutsche Bank Championship, Reed extended his lead to 556 points over Day, with a top-10 finish. He finished third in the final FedEx Cup standings behind
Dustin Johnson and FedEx Cup champion
Rory McIlroy. On the final day of the
PGA Championship, Reed had three birdies on the back to get to within a shot of the lead, but bogeyed the 18th after finding a fairway bunker off the tee and tied for second, two strokes behind winner
Justin Thomas. Reed shot 69–66 to lead the
2018 Masters Tournament by two strokes after two rounds. He followed up that performance with two eagles on the back nine for a 67 on Saturday. Entering the final round, he led the Masters by three strokes over
Rory McIlroy. On Sunday April 8, 2018, McIlroy faltered and Reed fought off the final round comeback bids of
Jordan Spieth and
Rickie Fowler to win the green jacket, shooting 71 (−1) for a tournament total of 273 (−15). Reed moved up to No. 11 in the world rankings and collected a paycheck of $1.98 million.In September 2018, Reed qualified for the U.S. team participating in the
2018 Ryder Cup. Europe beat the U.S. team 17 1/2 points to 10 1/2 points at
Le Golf National outside of Paris, France. Reed finished 1–2–0. He lost two fourball matches with
Tiger Woods but won his singles match against
Tyrrell Hatton. After the event, Reed was enveloped in controversy. Late on Sunday September 30, 2018, Karen Crouse of
The New York Times published an article with quotes from Reed. In the article, Reed questioned
Jordan Spieth and U.S. captain
Jim Furyk about the breakup of the previously successful Reed-Spieth Ryder Cup pairing. Reed was quoted as saying "The issue's obviously with Jordan not wanting to play with me . . . I don't have any issue with Jordan. When it comes right down to it, I don't care if I like the person I'm paired with or if the person likes me as long as it works and it sets up the team for success." Reed also described the Ryder Cup pairing decision-making process as "a buddy system" that ignores the input of all but a few select players. Reed also made it clear to Crouse that he lobbied Furyk to keep playing with Spieth, his "first choice." He expected it and was blindsided when he found out Spieth was playing with
Justin Thomas. Reed told Crouse "For somebody as successful in the Ryder Cup as I am, I don't think it's smart to sit me twice." Reed implied that Tiger Woods was his "second choice". He told Crouse that after he and Woods lost their first match against
Tommy Fleetwood and
Francesco Molinari, Woods apologized to Reed for letting him down. Reed said he told Woods, "We win together as a team and we lose together as a team." Reed told Crouse that "very day [in the team room], I saw 'Leave your egos at the door,'". Referring to the Europeans, he added, "They do that better than us." There has been concern expressed that Reed's public flaming of his teammates and captain will negatively impact on his ability to play on future Ryder Cup and President Cup teams. This was the first leg of the
2019 FedEx Cup Playoffs. In February 2020, Reed won his second World Golf Championship when he won the
WGC-Mexico Championship at the
Club de Golf Chapultepec. Reed shot a final round 4-under 67 to win by one shot over
Bryson DeChambeau. In January, Reed won the
Farmers Insurance Open at
Torrey Pines Golf Course in
La Jolla, California. Reed won by five strokes after a final round 4-under 68. In August, Reed was admitted to hospital having been diagnosed with
bilateral pneumonia which forced him to miss the first two
FedEx Cup Playoff events. He returned to action in early September at the
Tour Championship in the hope that by proving his fitness he might gain a captain's pick for the
Ryder Cup; he finished the tournament in 25th place. When the 12-man USA team was announced by
Steve Stricker the following week, Reed, who had finished 11th in the points standings, was not selected.
LIV Golf On June 11, 2022, it was announced that Reed had joined
LIV Golf. On June 29, it was confirmed that he had resigned from the PGA Tour.
Return to PGA Tour In January 2026, Reed announced plans to leave LIV Golf and return to the PGA Tour. At the time, Reed was ranked 29th in the
Official World Golf Ranking. He is eligible to return on August 25, 2026. For 2027, Reed's nine tour victories earned him past champion status on the PGA Tour and for the fall of 2026 the possibility of sponsors' invitations or Monday qualifiers. After leaving LIV Golf, Reed played on the
European Tour, now named DP World Tour, as an Honorary Lifetime Member. He achieved immediate success with two wins and a playoff loss before the end of February 2026, lifting him to the top of the Race to Dubai rankings. == Controversies ==