2025 Women's PGA Championship

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DatesJune 19–22, 2025
LocationFrisco, Texas
33°12′47″N 96°51′11″W / 33.213°N 96.853°W / 33.213; -96.853
Course(s)PGA Frisco
Fields Ranch East
Organized byPGA of America
2025 KPMG Women's PGA Championship
Tournament information
DatesJune 19–22, 2025
LocationFrisco, Texas
33°12′47″N 96°51′11″W / 33.213°N 96.853°W / 33.213; -96.853
Course(s)PGA Frisco
Fields Ranch East
Organized byPGA of America
TourLPGA Tour
Statistics
Par72
Length6,604 yards (6,039 m)
Field156 players, 78 after cut
Cut151 (+7)
Prize fund$12,000,000[1]
Winner's share$1,800,000[1]
Champion
Australia Minjee Lee
284 (−4)
Location map
PGA Frisco is located in the United States
PGA Frisco
PGA Frisco
Location in the United States
PGA Frisco is located in Texas
PGA Frisco
PGA Frisco
Location in Texas
 2024
2026 

The 2025 KPMG Women's PGA Championship was the 71st Women's PGA Championship. It was played June 19–22 on the Fields Ranch East course at PGA Frisco in Frisco, Texas, a suburb north of Dallas. It was the first time the Fields Ranch East course hosted a LPGA major;[2] it hosted the KitchenAid Senior PGA Championship, a senior men's major, in 2023.[3]

The PGA Championship was the third of five major championships on the LPGA Tour during the 2025 season.

Minjee Lee won by three strokes over Auston Kim and Chanettee Wannasaen. It was Lee's third major championship win.[4]

The field included 156 players[5] who met one or more of the selection criteria and commit to participate by a designated deadline.[6]

1. Sponsor invitations[a][7]

2. Past winners of the Women's PGA Championship

3. Professionals who have won an LPGA major championship in the previous five years and during the current year

4. Professionals who have won an official LPGA tournament in the previous two calendar years and during the current year

5. Winners of the 2024 Dow Great Lakes Bay Invitational

6. Order of Merit winners from the Ladies European Tour, LPGA of Japan Tour, and LPGA of Korea Tour

7. Professionals who finished top-10 and ties at the previous year's Women's PGA Championship

8. Professionals ranked No. 1–60 on the Women's World Golf Rankings as of May 19, 2025

9. The top eight finishers at the 2024 LPGA Professionals National Championship

10. The top finisher (not otherwise qualified via the 2024 LPGA Professionals National Championship) at the 2025 PGA Women's Stroke Play Championship

11. Any player who did not compete in the 2024 KPMG Women's PGA Championship due to maternity[b]

12. LPGA members who have committed to the event, ranked in the order of their position on the 2025 CME Globe Points list

Round summaries

First round

Thursday, June 19, 2025

Atthaya Thitikul shot a 4-under-par 68 to lead by one stroke over Minjee Lee. The weather was hot and windy and only 15 players scored under par for the round.[8]

PlacePlayerScoreTo par
1Thailand Atthaya Thitikul68−4
2Australia Minjee Lee69−3
T3South Korea Lee So-mi70−2
United States Yealimi Noh
South Korea Ryu Hae-ran
Japan Rio Takeda
T7South Korea Bang Shin-sil71−1
Taiwan Pei-Yun Chien
South Korea Chun In-gee
South Korea Hwang You-min
Japan Chisato Iwai
United States Auston Kim
Japan Yuna Nishimura
South Korea Kumkang Park
United States Angel Yin

Second round

Friday, June 20, 2025

Atthaya Thitikul extended her lead to three strokes with a 2-uder-par round of 70. In second place were Minjee Lee and Rio Takeda. The cut came at 151 (+7), with 78 players advancing to the weekend.[9] Defending champion Amy Yang missed the cut with a +9.

PlacePlayerScoreTo par
1Thailand Atthaya Thitikul68-70=138−6
T2Australia Minjee Lee69-72=141−3
Japan Rio Takeda70-71=141
4United States Lexi Thompson72-70=142−2
T5Japan Chisato Iwai71-72=143−1
United States Auston Kim71-72=143
South Korea Lee So-mi70-73=143
T8South Korea Bang Shin-sil71-73=144E
United States Yealimi Noh70-74=144
Japan Miyū Yamashita73-71=144

Third round

Saturday, June 21, 2025

Minjee Lee shot a 3-under-par round of 69 to take a four-stroke lead over second-round leader Atthaya Thitikul who shot a 76. Lee's round was the first bogey-free round of the tournament.[10]

PlacePlayerScoreTo par
1Australia Minjee Lee69-72-69=210−6
2Thailand Atthaya Thitikul68-70-76=214−2
T3South Korea Choi Hye-jin75-70-72=217+1
United States Lexi Thompson72-70-75=217
Japan Miyū Yamashita73-71-73=217
T6Japan Chisato Iwai71-72-75=218+2
United States Nelly Korda72-74-72=218
Republic of Ireland Leona Maguire72-74-72=218
United States Yealimi Noh70-74-74=218
T10United States Auston Kim71-72-76=219+3
Australia Grace Kim73-78-68=219
South Korea Lee So-mi70-73-76=219
Thailand Chanettee Wannasaen75-72-72=219
China Yin Ruoning76-71-72=219

Final round

Sunday, June 22, 2025

Minjee Lee shot a 2-over-par round of 74 but still won by three strokes over Auston Kim and Chanettee Wannasaen. It was Lee's third major championship win.[4]

Champion
(c) = past champion
PlacePlayerScoreTo parMoney ($)
1Australia Minjee Lee69-72-69-74=284−41,800,000
T2United States Auston Kim71-72-76-68=287−1914,169
Thailand Chanettee Wannasaen75-72-72-68=287
T4Japan Chisato Iwai71-72-75-71=289+1536,635
Thailand Atthaya Thitikul68-70-76-75=289
T6Japan Miyū Yamashita73-71-73-73=290+2359,691
United States Angel Yin71-75-75-69=290
T8South Korea Choi Hye-jin75-70-72-74=291+3272,672
South Korea Lee So-mi70-73-76-72=291
T10Taiwan Hsu Wei-ling75-75-72-70=292+4226,255
France Pauline Roussin75-74-73-70=292

Notes

References

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