The New Year’s Invitational doesn’t just start a season — it frames it. And in 2026, that statement carries even more weight as St. Petersburg Country Club prepares to host the 100th playing of one of the oldest and most respected amateur invitationals in the country.
With the calendar now at December 4, entries are still being reviewed and the final roster is not yet complete, but the outline of championship week is already clear: a world-class amateur field, three rounds with no cut, a fully rebuilt championship course playing over 7,000 yards, and a winner’s prize that reaches into the professional ranks.
This is the New Year’s Invitational in its purest form — tradition-heavy, talent-rich, and built to identify who’s ready to contend before most of the amateur world has even teed it up in 2026.
2026 Tournament Overview
The 100th New Year’s Invitational will be held January 2–4, 2026 at St. Petersburg Country Club in Saint Petersburg, Florida.
Schedule
Thursday, Jan. 1: Registration and practice roundFriday, Jan. 2: Round 1Saturday, Jan. 3: Round 2Sunday, Jan. 4: Final round and awards presentation
Format
54 holes, stroke play from the championship teesField limited to 92 contestantsNo cutCrystal and merchandise awards presented SundayLow Mid-Amateur (25 and over) finisher receives a separate crystal award
What the Champion Earns
The tournament winner will earn an exemption into the Korn Ferry Tour’s Lecom Suncoast Classic in April 2026 — a rare professional opportunity attached directly to an amateur title. That prize adds extra gravity to Sunday’s finish and makes this a meaningful early-season benchmark for the entire field.
Entry Notes
Entries are reviewed as received, with acceptance determined by WAGR ranking and competitive record. Accepted players will be notified via email and must confirm their place with payment at that time.
The $475 entry fee includes tournament rounds, a Thursday practice round, buffet breakfasts, on-course refreshments, post-round snacks, and carts for all rounds (walking is permitted). Limited private housing with club families is expected to be available, and a list of nearby hotels will be posted by the club closer to the event.
A Century of Significance
The New Year’s Invitational has been played every year at St. Petersburg Country Club since 1927. Originally contested as match play, it shifted to stroke play in 1956 and later adopted the 54-hole format that defines today’s championship.
Its champions list reflects the Invitational’s role as a talent pipeline. Past winners include Masters champion Bob Goalby, FedExCup winner Brandt Snedeker, PGA Tour winners J.B. Holmes and Gary Koch, European Tour winner Sam Horsfield, and U.S. Amateur champions Buddy Alexander and Peter Uihlein. More than 30 NYI participants have gone on to PGA Tour careers, a number that continues to grow.
The Venue: St. Petersburg Country Club, Renovated for the Modern Game
St. Petersburg Country Club is a century-old course with a newly sharpened edge for the Invitational’s centennial playing. The course opened in 1924 and was designed by Herbert Strong, whose work is known for small, elevated greens, strategic bunkering, and routing that exposes players to shifting wind directions. The club’s “butterfly” design changes wind direction on nearly every hole, placing a premium on control and adaptability.
While the original routing remains largely intact, the course underwent a full renovation in 2024, timed with the course’s own 100th anniversary. The project included new tees, fairways, and primary rough with Bimini Bermuda turf, USGA-spec greens planted with TifEagle ultra-dwarf Bermuda, and a complete bunker rebuild with modern liners and repositioning to challenge today’s longer hitters. The addition of several new tees pushed the course to over 7,000 yards from the back tees, and PGA Tour winner Gary Koch advised throughout the project.
The result should be ideal for a world-class amateur invitational: firm turf, faster greens, and more demanding angles into small targets — a test that rewards complete golf rather than one-dimensional power.
Recent Champions Set the Bar
The last two editions show exactly what it takes to win at St. Pete. In 2025, Auburn sophomore Cayden Pope shot 68-68-67 to finish 13-under 203, pulling away by six shots in windy conditions. Pope separated himself with driving accuracy and elite closing stretch scoring, playing holes 15–18 at 11-under for the week.
In 2024, Cooper Smith also finished at 13-under 203, continuing a run of collegiate champions who have used the New Year’s Invitational as a springboard into standout seasons.
With the course now longer and fully settled after renovation, expect scoring to reward those who combine controlled ball flight with disciplined strategy into the subtle St. Petersburg greens.
What to Watch as the Field Finalizes
Player spotlights will be added once the official roster is released, but several storylines are already clear one month out:
The centennial stage: A 100th playing brings a championship atmosphere from the opening tee shot.A modernized St. Pete test: New length and bunker strategy should elevate the premium on precision and trajectory control.Pro runway on Sunday: The Lecom Suncoast Classic exemption gives the champion a direct opportunity to test themselves on the Korn Ferry Tour.The Mid-Am race within the race: The low Mid-Am crystal award adds a meaningful secondary competition across all three rounds.Bottom Line
The New Year’s Invitational is not a tune-up. It’s an early-season referendum — on preparation, on trajectory, and on who belongs in bigger conversations moving forward.
A century after the first champion’s name was etched into NYI history, the formula still works: bring elite amateurs to a demanding course, play three rounds for a title that matters, and let the year’s first serious leaderboard tell the story.
This preview will be updated as final invitations are accepted, with deeper field analysis, player storylines, and full event coverage from St. Petersburg during championship week.