Thursday, 14 May 2026

PGA Championship tickets are surprisingly cheap one day ahead of Thursday's opening round

PGA Championship tickets at Aronimink Golf Club are reselling below face value despite being sold out, offering fans food and drinks included.


PGA Championship tickets are surprisingly cheap one day ahead of Thursday's opening round

Tickets for the PGA Championship have been sold out since July, according to Front Office Sports, but resale prices on SeatGeek (the Official Ticketing Provider of the event) dropped below face value for all four tournament rounds as of Wednesday afternoon.

The get-in prices, according to the ticket resale platform, were: $176 for Thursday's opening round (including all fees), $170 for Friday, $223 for Saturday and $243 for Sunday's final round.

That's especially notable because face value for Championship+ general admission tickets ranged from $199 for Thursday to $299 for weekend rounds, before taxes and fees, according to a PGA of America spokesperson who spoke with Front Office Sports.

In other words, fans can currently get into any of the four rounds for below face value and, in some cases, for much less than the tickets originally cost. That's particularly true of Saturday's third round where ticket prices are roughly $75 cheaper. And resale prices above include fees and taxes, while the face-value prices are pre-fee and pre-tax, so the true all-in difference is actually larger.

That's a pretty big deal.

Axios reported that the operation at Aronimink includes breakfast items like doughnuts, fruit, yogurt bars and chicken biscuits, plus lunch options such as hot dogs, chicken sandwiches, ham sandwiches, cheeseburgers, Italian sausages, plant-based burgers and Mediterranean salads with falafel.

The entire food operation is massive. Roughly 200,000 spectators are expected during the week, and Axios reported the tournament's caterer prepared for the event by staffing 60 chefs, 170 managers, around 800 food-service employees, 10 on-site kitchens and 600,000 square feet of food-service space. Fans are forecast to consume 124,000 burgers, 88,000 hot dogs and 372,000 bottles of water during the week.

So, yes, paying in the neighborhood of $200 to walk around a golf course is still expensive. But compared to plenty of other major sporting events, where fans' wallets can quickly be destroyed by ticket prices and then get hit again at the concession stand, the PGA Championship ticket comes with legitimate added value. It's even more added value for a golf tournament, where fans might spend eight hours (or more) inside the venue. That's unlike other sporting events, like football or baseball, where the average game lasts around three hours.

Maybe buyers simply overestimated demand when tickets sold out last summer. Maybe the Philadelphia-area market has only so much appetite for several days of golf at major-championship prices (especially with the World Cup starting in June). Or maybe fans realized they could wait out the secondary market.

Whatever the reason, the math is pretty simple: The PGA Championship is sold out, the tickets include food and non-alcoholic drinks, and resale prices are still sitting below face value.

That's not something fans see very often.

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