When will Tiger Woods make his return to pro golf? It’s one of the biggest unanswered questions for the 2026 season. Woods is working his way back from his latest surgery and has largely kept quiet about his progress.
That changed on Sunday night, when Woods answered a direct question about when he’ll return to the course. But rather than clear things up, Tiger’s cryptic response instead opened up more questions.
Here’s what you need to know.
Woods talks Masters return at TGL match
Last October, Woods underwent his seventh back surgery, putting his return to pro golf in doubt.
As a result, Tiger did not play the 2026 Cognizant Classic, which ended on Sunday, and he hasn’t teed it up on the PGA Tour at all in 2026. But Woods did make a televised appearance at competition involving pro golfers on Sunday: his Jupiter Links TGL team’s latest match.
Tiger didn’t play in the match Sunday night. Instead, he was there to cheer on his team. The support didn’t seem to help much, as Jupiter lost to Boston Common Golf Club 7-6. Currently ranked fifth out of six teams, Tiger’s squad is at risk of missing the playoffs for the second-straight year.
At one point during the match, Tiger was interviewed on the ESPN broadcast. Eventually, the question was posed to the 15-time major winner: how close are you to returning to competitive golf?
That’s when Tiger offered up his confusing response.
“Playing a Member-Guest, I’m good to go,” Woods said, smiling.
Given the confident way Tiger delivered his remark, you may think he was implying his return is imminent. But his “Member-Guest” reference alters that conclusion. Given the timing of his comments Sunday, Woods could be referring to the Seminole Pro-Member, an exclusive event he regularly plays in that is going down Monday.
Here’s the problem: Tiger is not in the field at this year’s Seminole-Pro Member. So if he was referring to that event when he said “Member-Guest,” that would suggest he is not yet “good to go.”
When Tiger Woods could make his pro golf return in 2026
The most likely place Woods will make the first start of his return is the 2026 Masters. Tiger has returned from injury at the Masters in the past. And as a five-time Masters champion, it’s widely understood that if he is healthy enough to play the Masters, he will. If he does, it will be his first pro start since the 2024 Open Championship.
Woods provided an earlier update on his health during a different TGL match in late January.
“I’m moving up to short irons, so that’s about it,” Woods said. “I need a little bit more than that to be able to play [on TGL]. At my speed right now, I could probably play the Stinger hole. Just kind of roll it off the tee. But no, I’m progressing, which is nice. I’m getting there and getting stronger. It’s just one of those things where it just takes so much time for the bone to heal and the bone to set.”
Then two weeks ago at the Genesis Invitiational, which he hosts, Woods gave more detail on his progress.
“It’s just one of those things where each and every day, I keep trying, I keep progressing, I keep working on it, trying to get stronger, trying to get more endurance in this body and trying to get it at a level at which I can play at the highest level again,” Woods said at Riviera.
The Masters gets underway Thursday, April 9, which would give Woods four more weeks to prep his body and game to make the start. As a past champion, he has an automatic invite to play the Masters for the rest of his life. That means he doesn’t technically need to commit until right before the tournament begins.
It’s highly unlikely he decides play a PGA Tour event before the Masters. But the PGA Tour Champions is another question.
Rumors have swirled that Woods could play on the senior tour in 2026 now that he’s 50 years old and eligible. A big benefit of the PGA Tour Champions for Tiger is that he would be permitted to use a golf cart, which would be easier on his body.
After this week, there are only two PGA Tour Champions events left on the schedule before the 2026 Masters: the Cologuard Classic from March 20-22 in Arizona and the Hoag Classic from March 27-29 in Rhode Island.
This article originated on Golf.com























Leave a comment