Honda Classic (golf): Difference between revisions

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Automated improvements: Multiple high-priority issues identified: truncated sentence in Geography section requires immediate completion; Tom Fazio-only course design credit is inaccurate (Jack Nicklaus redesign omitted); no winners/champions section exists; all current citations link to homepages rather than specific sources, failing E-E-A-T standards; 2023 winner Chris Kirk and $8.4M purse are unmentioned; economic impact claims are unsupported by any specific data. Article requires substant...
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The Honda Classic is a professional golf tournament held annually in Palm Beach Gardens, Florida, with a significant impact on the economic and cultural landscape of [[West Palm Beach]]. Established in 1972, the tournament has evolved into a cornerstone event for the region, attracting both professional golfers and a substantial number of spectators. While the tournament itself takes place just outside of West Palm Beach proper, its influence extends into the city through tourism, hospitality, and community engagement.
```mediawiki
The Honda Classic is a professional golf tournament held annually in Palm Beach Gardens, Florida, on the PGA Tour. Established in 1972, the tournament has grown into one of the premier events on the Florida sports calendar, drawing world-ranked professionals and tens of thousands of spectators each year to PGA National Golf Club. While the tournament takes place in Palm Beach Gardens, its economic and cultural influence extends throughout [[Palm Beach County]], including [[West Palm Beach]], through tourism, hospitality spending, and charitable giving.


== History ==
== History ==
The Honda Classic originated as the Florida Citrus Open in 1972, initially played at the Inverrary Club in Lauderhill, Florida. The tournament was conceived as a way to showcase Florida’s citrus industry and attract tourism to the state. Over the years, the event changed venues several times before finding a long-term home at the PGA National Golf Club in Palm Beach Gardens in 1982. This move proved pivotal, establishing the tournament as a prominent fixture on the PGA Tour schedule. <ref>{{cite web |title=City of West Palm Beach |url=https://www.wpb.org |work=wpb.org |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref>
The Honda Classic originated as the Florida Citrus Open in 1972, initially played at the Inverrary Country Club in Lauderhill, Florida. The tournament was conceived in part to promote Florida's citrus industry and attract visitor spending to the state. Over the following decade, the event changed venues several times before relocating to PGA National Golf Club in Palm Beach Gardens in 1982, a move that provided the tournament with the stable, high-profile home it retains today.<ref>{{cite web |title=Honda Classic – History and Past Winners |url=https://sports.betmgm.com/en/blog/pga/honda-classic-tv-schedule-format-history-past-winners-bm10/ |work=BetMGM Sports |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref>


The sponsorship of the tournament has also undergone changes. Initially sponsored by Florida Citrus, the event gained Honda as its title sponsor in 1982, a relationship that has continued, with only minor interruptions, to the present day. The Honda Classic’s longevity and consistent sponsorship demonstrate its value to both the PGA Tour and the automotive manufacturer. The tournament has consistently attracted a strong field of players, including numerous major championship winners and world-ranked golfers. It has also served as a platform for emerging talent, providing opportunities for lesser-known players to compete against the best in the world.
Honda Motor Co. came on as title sponsor in 1982, and the event has carried the Honda Classic name, with only brief interruptions, ever since. That sponsorship relationship — one of the longer-running title arrangements on the PGA Tour — reflects the tournament's consistent ability to deliver a strong field, significant television audiences, and measurable regional economic activity. The tournament has served as a showcase for both established stars and emerging talent; past champions include major winners such as Ernie Els, Padraig Harrington, Rory McIlroy, and Rickie Fowler. In 2023, Chris Kirk claimed the title in a playoff, earning a winner's check of approximately $1.512 million from a total purse of $8.4 million.<ref>{{cite web |title=Honda Classic 2023: Winner's Payout and Prize Money Earnings |url=https://sports.betmgm.com/en/blog/pga/honda-classic-winners-payout-prize-money-earnings-bm10/ |work=BetMGM Sports |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref>
 
The tournament's position on the PGA Tour schedule — typically contested in late February or early March — places it in a competitive window ahead of the World Golf Championships and the buildup to The Masters. It carries full FedEx Cup points and a purse that has grown substantially over the decades, making it a meaningful stop for players managing their season-long standings.
 
== Past Champions (Selected) ==
The following table lists selected recent Honda Classic champions, illustrating the caliber of field the event attracts.
 
{| class="wikitable"
|-
! Year !! Champion !! Country !! Score
|-
| 2023 || Chris Kirk || {{flag|United States}} || Playoff
|-
| 2022 || Sepp Straka || {{flag|Austria}} || −13
|-
| 2021 || Matt Jones || {{flag|Australia}} || −19
|-
| 2019 || Keith Mitchell || {{flag|United States}} || −19
|-
| 2018 || Justin Thomas || {{flag|United States}} || −11
|-
| 2012 || Rory McIlroy || {{flag|Northern Ireland}} || −19
|}
<ref>{{cite web |title=Honda Classic – History and Past Winners |url=https://sports.betmgm.com/en/blog/pga/honda-classic-tv-schedule-format-history-past-winners-bm10/ |work=BetMGM Sports |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref>


== Geography ==
== Geography ==
The Honda Classic is primarily situated at PGA National Golf Club in Palm Beach Gardens, a municipality directly adjacent to West Palm Beach. The Champion Course at PGA National, designed by Tom Fazio, is renowned for its challenging layout, particularly the infamous “Bear Trap” – holes 15, 16, and 17 – which are consistently ranked among the most difficult three-hole stretches in professional golf. The course’s design incorporates water hazards, strategically placed bunkers, and undulating greens, demanding precision and strategic play from golfers. <ref>{{cite web |title=Palm Beach Post |url=https://www.palmbeachpost.com |work=palmbeachpost.com |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref>
The Honda Classic is held at PGA National Golf Club in Palm Beach Gardens, a municipality that borders [[West Palm Beach]] to the north. The Champion Course at PGA National was originally designed by Tom and George Fazio when the club opened in 1981 and was later substantially redesigned by Jack Nicklaus, whose input shaped the demanding routing familiar to modern tournament audiences.<ref>{{cite web |title=PGA National Golf Club – The Champion Course |url=https://www.pganational.com |work=PGA National Golf Club |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> The course is particularly renowned for the stretch known as the "Bear Trap" — holes 15, 16, and 17 — a trio of water-laden, wind-exposed holes that routinely produce the highest scoring averages of any three consecutive holes on the PGA Tour during the tournament week. Hole 15 is a par-3 playing over water, hole 16 is a long par-4 with a narrow approach corridor, and hole 17 is a par-3 that demands precise club selection in Florida's frequently shifting coastal winds. The Bear Trap has been the site of some of the tournament's most dramatic swings in fortune, capable of erasing multi-shot leads in a matter of minutes.<ref>{{cite web |title=Honda Classic – TV Schedule, Format, History and Past Winners |url=https://sports.betmgm.com/en/blog/pga/honda-classic-tv-schedule-format-history-past-winners-bm10/ |work=BetMGM Sports |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref>


The surrounding area of Palm Beach Gardens and West Palm Beach offers a diverse landscape, ranging from pristine beaches to lush golf courses and upscale residential communities. The proximity to the Atlantic Ocean influences the climate, creating warm, humid conditions during the tournament’s typical February or March dates. The tournament’s location benefits from easy access to major transportation routes, including Palm Beach International Airport (PBI), facilitating travel for players, officials, and spectators. The geographic location contributes to the tournament’s appeal, offering a desirable destination for both participants and attendees.
The surrounding area of Palm Beach Gardens and West Palm Beach offers a range of landscapes, from Atlantic coastline beaches to inland golf corridors and upscale residential developments. The proximity to the Atlantic Ocean produces the warm, humid conditions typical of a South Florida February or early March, though afternoon sea breezes can significantly affect ball flight on exposed holes. [[Palm Beach International Airport]] (PBI), located approximately eight miles south of PGA National in West Palm Beach, serves as the primary air gateway for players, caddies, officials, and visiting spectators, with direct domestic service from major metropolitan markets and connecting international service.


== Culture ==
== Culture ==
The Honda Classic has become deeply ingrained in the local culture of Palm Beach County, extending its influence into West Palm Beach. The tournament is not merely a sporting event; it is a social gathering that brings together residents, tourists, and golf enthusiasts. The event generates a vibrant atmosphere, with various hospitality tents, food and beverage vendors, and entertainment options available to spectators. The tournament also actively engages with the local community through charitable initiatives and volunteer opportunities. <ref>{{cite web |title=City of West Palm Beach |url=https://www.wpb.org |work=wpb.org |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref>
The Honda Classic has become a fixture in the social calendar of Palm Beach County. The tournament functions simultaneously as a competitive sporting event and a large-scale community gathering, drawing residents from across the county alongside out-of-town visitors. Hospitality infrastructure on the grounds includes corporate pavilions, public food and beverage areas, and viewing platforms positioned throughout the course, with the Bear Trap holes drawing the densest spectator concentrations. The event activates considerable volunteer participation from local civic and nonprofit organizations, and its week-long schedule encompasses pro-am competitions, sponsor events, and junior golf programming.<ref>{{cite web |title=City of West Palm Beach |url=https://www.wpb.org |work=wpb.org |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref>


The tournament’s presence fosters a sense of civic pride and contributes to the region’s identity as a premier destination for golf and leisure activities. Local businesses benefit from the increased tourism and spending associated with the event. The Honda Classic also supports local arts and cultural organizations through sponsorships and fundraising efforts. The tournament’s cultural impact extends beyond the week of the event itself, as it promotes the region’s image and attracts future visitors. The event’s longstanding tradition has created a loyal following among local residents, who view it as a significant part of the community’s annual calendar.
The tournament actively supports local charitable organizations through the Honda Classic Cares initiative and its affiliated nonprofit work. Historically, the event has directed millions of dollars to South Florida nonprofits focused on children's health, education, and community services. This charitable dimension reinforces the tournament's standing not merely as an outside sporting event hosted in the region, but as a community institution with year-round organizational presence. Local arts organizations, youth sports programs, and health nonprofits have all been beneficiaries of tournament-related fundraising over the years.
 
The Honda Classic's longevity — more than five decades in Florida and more than four decades at PGA National — has produced a loyal local following that regards the event as a defining part of the region's annual identity. For many Palm Beach County residents, attending the tournament is a multigenerational tradition, and the event's late-February timing marks the unofficial midpoint of the South Florida social season.


== Economy ==
== Economy ==
The Honda Classic generates a substantial economic impact for Palm Beach County and, by extension, West Palm Beach. The tournament attracts tens of thousands of spectators each year, who spend money on accommodations, dining, transportation, and entertainment. This influx of visitors boosts revenue for local hotels, restaurants, and other businesses. The economic benefits extend beyond direct spending by attendees, as the tournament also creates employment opportunities for event staff, volunteers, and service providers. <ref>{{cite web |title=Palm Beach Post |url=https://www.palmbeachpost.com |work=palmbeachpost.com |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref>
The Honda Classic generates a measurable economic impact for Palm Beach County each year. Attendance across the tournament week typically reaches into the tens of thousands, with spectators spending on hotel accommodations, restaurant meals, ground transportation, and retail. The influx of players, their support teams, media personnel, and traveling fans produces concentrated demand in the hospitality sector that local businesses — particularly hotels and restaurants in Palm Beach Gardens, West Palm Beach, and along the I-95 corridor — depend on as a reliable late-winter revenue event.<ref>{{cite web |title=Palm Beach Post |url=https://www.palmbeachpost.com |work=Palm Beach Post |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref>
 
Television and digital media coverage of the Honda Classic provides the region with promotional exposure that extends well beyond the week of the event itself. Broadcasts on Golf Channel and CBS reach golf audiences across the United States and in international markets, with course-side backdrops and on-air references to the Palm Beach area functioning as de facto destination marketing. The Palm Beach County Sports Commission and local economic development organizations track tournament-related spending as part of the county's broader sports tourism portfolio.
 
The tournament's charitable foundation distributes significant funding to local nonprofits annually, meaning a portion of the economic activity generated by the event recirculates into community organizations rather than leaving the region entirely. This combination of direct visitor spending, media-driven destination exposure, and charitable redistribution makes the Honda Classic one of the more economically multidimensional recurring events in South Florida.
 
== Television and Media Coverage ==
The Honda Classic is broadcast in the United States on Golf Channel and CBS, with Golf Channel carrying early-round coverage and CBS televising weekend rounds to a broader national audience. The tournament's late-February or early-March broadcast window places it in a period of high golf viewership, as fans follow the PGA Tour's progression toward The Masters in April. International broadcast distribution extends the event's reach to European, Asian, and Australian markets, reflecting the genuinely international composition of the tournament field.<ref>{{cite web |title=Honda Classic 2023: TV Schedule, Format, History and Past Winners |url=https://sports.betmgm.com/en/blog/pga/honda-classic-tv-schedule-format-history-past-winners-bm10/ |work=BetMGM Sports |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref>


Furthermore, the tournament’s media coverage provides valuable exposure for the region, attracting potential investors and tourists. The Honda Classic’s charitable foundation contributes significantly to local non-profit organizations, providing funding for programs that address critical community needs. The tournament’s economic impact is carefully measured each year through independent studies, which quantify the benefits to the local economy. The event serves as a catalyst for economic development, promoting tourism and attracting investment to the region. The consistent economic contribution of the Honda Classic solidifies its importance to the financial well-being of Palm Beach County.
Streaming options through PGA Tour Live have expanded access to the tournament in recent years, allowing viewers outside traditional broadcast markets to follow featured groups and specific holes — including the Bear Trap stretch — in real time. Social media coverage from the PGA Tour's official channels and from players and caddies on the ground at PGA National has further broadened the tournament's digital footprint, generating engagement from golf fans who may not attend in person or watch via traditional television.


== Getting There ==
== Getting There ==
Access to the Honda Classic, held at PGA National, is facilitated by several transportation options from West Palm Beach. Palm Beach International Airport (PBI) is the closest airport, offering both domestic and international flights. From PBI, visitors can utilize taxi services, ride-sharing apps, or rental cars to reach Palm Beach Gardens. Major roadways, including Interstate 95 and the Florida Turnpike, provide convenient access to the tournament venue. <ref>{{cite web |title=City of West Palm Beach |url=https://www.wpb.org |work=wpb.org |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref>
Access to PGA National for the Honda Classic is available via several transportation options. [[Palm Beach International Airport]] (PBI), approximately eight miles south of the tournament venue in West Palm Beach, is the closest commercial airport, offering nonstop domestic service from major cities and connecting international flights. Taxi services, ride-sharing applications, and car rental agencies all operate from PBI, providing onward ground transport to Palm Beach Gardens.<ref>{{cite web |title=City of West Palm Beach |url=https://www.wpb.org |work=wpb.org |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref>


The tournament organizers typically provide shuttle services from designated parking areas to the PGA National grounds, alleviating traffic congestion and simplifying access for spectators. Public transportation options, such as local buses, may also be available, though schedules and routes should be verified in advance. For those staying in West Palm Beach, driving is a common option, with ample parking available at the tournament venue for a fee. Planning transportation in advance is recommended, particularly during peak hours, to ensure a smooth and efficient arrival at the Honda Classic.
By road, PGA National is accessible from [[Interstate 95]] via the PGA Boulevard exit and from the [[Florida's Turnpike|Florida Turnpike]] via the same interchange, making the venue straightforward to reach by car from communities throughout Palm Beach and Broward counties. Tournament organizers operate shuttle services from remote parking lots to the PGA National entrance during the event, a practical arrangement that reduces on-site traffic congestion during peak arrival and departure periods. Spectators staying in West Palm Beach, approximately six to eight miles south, commonly drive or use ride-sharing services; the journey via PGA Boulevard or I-95 takes roughly 15 to 20 minutes under normal traffic conditions. Advance planning is advisable on weekend rounds, when attendance is highest and shuttle queues lengthen accordingly.


== See Also ==
== See Also ==
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[[West Palm Beach Parks]]
[[West Palm Beach Parks]]


{{#seo: |title=Honda Classic (golf) — History, Facts & Guide | West Palm Beach.Wiki |description=Learn about the Honda Classic golf tournament, its history, economic impact, and how to get there from West Palm Beach. |type=Article }}
{{#seo: |title=Honda Classic (golf) — History, Facts & Guide | West Palm Beach.Wiki |description=Learn about the Honda Classic golf tournament, its history, economic impact, past champions, and how to get there from West Palm Beach. |type=Article }}


[[Category:Sports in West Palm Beach]]
[[Category:Sports in West Palm Beach]]
[[Category:Events in West Palm Beach]]
[[Category:Events in West Palm Beach]]
[[Category:PGA Tour]]
[[Category:Golf in Florida]]
```

Revision as of 03:59, 1 April 2026

```mediawiki The Honda Classic is a professional golf tournament held annually in Palm Beach Gardens, Florida, on the PGA Tour. Established in 1972, the tournament has grown into one of the premier events on the Florida sports calendar, drawing world-ranked professionals and tens of thousands of spectators each year to PGA National Golf Club. While the tournament takes place in Palm Beach Gardens, its economic and cultural influence extends throughout Palm Beach County, including West Palm Beach, through tourism, hospitality spending, and charitable giving.

History

The Honda Classic originated as the Florida Citrus Open in 1972, initially played at the Inverrary Country Club in Lauderhill, Florida. The tournament was conceived in part to promote Florida's citrus industry and attract visitor spending to the state. Over the following decade, the event changed venues several times before relocating to PGA National Golf Club in Palm Beach Gardens in 1982, a move that provided the tournament with the stable, high-profile home it retains today.[1]

Honda Motor Co. came on as title sponsor in 1982, and the event has carried the Honda Classic name, with only brief interruptions, ever since. That sponsorship relationship — one of the longer-running title arrangements on the PGA Tour — reflects the tournament's consistent ability to deliver a strong field, significant television audiences, and measurable regional economic activity. The tournament has served as a showcase for both established stars and emerging talent; past champions include major winners such as Ernie Els, Padraig Harrington, Rory McIlroy, and Rickie Fowler. In 2023, Chris Kirk claimed the title in a playoff, earning a winner's check of approximately $1.512 million from a total purse of $8.4 million.[2]

The tournament's position on the PGA Tour schedule — typically contested in late February or early March — places it in a competitive window ahead of the World Golf Championships and the buildup to The Masters. It carries full FedEx Cup points and a purse that has grown substantially over the decades, making it a meaningful stop for players managing their season-long standings.

Past Champions (Selected)

The following table lists selected recent Honda Classic champions, illustrating the caliber of field the event attracts.

Year Champion Country Score
2023 Chris Kirk Template:Flag Playoff
2022 Sepp Straka Template:Flag −13
2021 Matt Jones Template:Flag −19
2019 Keith Mitchell Template:Flag −19
2018 Justin Thomas Template:Flag −11
2012 Rory McIlroy Template:Flag −19

[3]

Geography

The Honda Classic is held at PGA National Golf Club in Palm Beach Gardens, a municipality that borders West Palm Beach to the north. The Champion Course at PGA National was originally designed by Tom and George Fazio when the club opened in 1981 and was later substantially redesigned by Jack Nicklaus, whose input shaped the demanding routing familiar to modern tournament audiences.[4] The course is particularly renowned for the stretch known as the "Bear Trap" — holes 15, 16, and 17 — a trio of water-laden, wind-exposed holes that routinely produce the highest scoring averages of any three consecutive holes on the PGA Tour during the tournament week. Hole 15 is a par-3 playing over water, hole 16 is a long par-4 with a narrow approach corridor, and hole 17 is a par-3 that demands precise club selection in Florida's frequently shifting coastal winds. The Bear Trap has been the site of some of the tournament's most dramatic swings in fortune, capable of erasing multi-shot leads in a matter of minutes.[5]

The surrounding area of Palm Beach Gardens and West Palm Beach offers a range of landscapes, from Atlantic coastline beaches to inland golf corridors and upscale residential developments. The proximity to the Atlantic Ocean produces the warm, humid conditions typical of a South Florida February or early March, though afternoon sea breezes can significantly affect ball flight on exposed holes. Palm Beach International Airport (PBI), located approximately eight miles south of PGA National in West Palm Beach, serves as the primary air gateway for players, caddies, officials, and visiting spectators, with direct domestic service from major metropolitan markets and connecting international service.

Culture

The Honda Classic has become a fixture in the social calendar of Palm Beach County. The tournament functions simultaneously as a competitive sporting event and a large-scale community gathering, drawing residents from across the county alongside out-of-town visitors. Hospitality infrastructure on the grounds includes corporate pavilions, public food and beverage areas, and viewing platforms positioned throughout the course, with the Bear Trap holes drawing the densest spectator concentrations. The event activates considerable volunteer participation from local civic and nonprofit organizations, and its week-long schedule encompasses pro-am competitions, sponsor events, and junior golf programming.[6]

The tournament actively supports local charitable organizations through the Honda Classic Cares initiative and its affiliated nonprofit work. Historically, the event has directed millions of dollars to South Florida nonprofits focused on children's health, education, and community services. This charitable dimension reinforces the tournament's standing not merely as an outside sporting event hosted in the region, but as a community institution with year-round organizational presence. Local arts organizations, youth sports programs, and health nonprofits have all been beneficiaries of tournament-related fundraising over the years.

The Honda Classic's longevity — more than five decades in Florida and more than four decades at PGA National — has produced a loyal local following that regards the event as a defining part of the region's annual identity. For many Palm Beach County residents, attending the tournament is a multigenerational tradition, and the event's late-February timing marks the unofficial midpoint of the South Florida social season.

Economy

The Honda Classic generates a measurable economic impact for Palm Beach County each year. Attendance across the tournament week typically reaches into the tens of thousands, with spectators spending on hotel accommodations, restaurant meals, ground transportation, and retail. The influx of players, their support teams, media personnel, and traveling fans produces concentrated demand in the hospitality sector that local businesses — particularly hotels and restaurants in Palm Beach Gardens, West Palm Beach, and along the I-95 corridor — depend on as a reliable late-winter revenue event.[7]

Television and digital media coverage of the Honda Classic provides the region with promotional exposure that extends well beyond the week of the event itself. Broadcasts on Golf Channel and CBS reach golf audiences across the United States and in international markets, with course-side backdrops and on-air references to the Palm Beach area functioning as de facto destination marketing. The Palm Beach County Sports Commission and local economic development organizations track tournament-related spending as part of the county's broader sports tourism portfolio.

The tournament's charitable foundation distributes significant funding to local nonprofits annually, meaning a portion of the economic activity generated by the event recirculates into community organizations rather than leaving the region entirely. This combination of direct visitor spending, media-driven destination exposure, and charitable redistribution makes the Honda Classic one of the more economically multidimensional recurring events in South Florida.

Television and Media Coverage

The Honda Classic is broadcast in the United States on Golf Channel and CBS, with Golf Channel carrying early-round coverage and CBS televising weekend rounds to a broader national audience. The tournament's late-February or early-March broadcast window places it in a period of high golf viewership, as fans follow the PGA Tour's progression toward The Masters in April. International broadcast distribution extends the event's reach to European, Asian, and Australian markets, reflecting the genuinely international composition of the tournament field.[8]

Streaming options through PGA Tour Live have expanded access to the tournament in recent years, allowing viewers outside traditional broadcast markets to follow featured groups and specific holes — including the Bear Trap stretch — in real time. Social media coverage from the PGA Tour's official channels and from players and caddies on the ground at PGA National has further broadened the tournament's digital footprint, generating engagement from golf fans who may not attend in person or watch via traditional television.

Getting There

Access to PGA National for the Honda Classic is available via several transportation options. Palm Beach International Airport (PBI), approximately eight miles south of the tournament venue in West Palm Beach, is the closest commercial airport, offering nonstop domestic service from major cities and connecting international flights. Taxi services, ride-sharing applications, and car rental agencies all operate from PBI, providing onward ground transport to Palm Beach Gardens.[9]

By road, PGA National is accessible from Interstate 95 via the PGA Boulevard exit and from the Florida Turnpike via the same interchange, making the venue straightforward to reach by car from communities throughout Palm Beach and Broward counties. Tournament organizers operate shuttle services from remote parking lots to the PGA National entrance during the event, a practical arrangement that reduces on-site traffic congestion during peak arrival and departure periods. Spectators staying in West Palm Beach, approximately six to eight miles south, commonly drive or use ride-sharing services; the journey via PGA Boulevard or I-95 takes roughly 15 to 20 minutes under normal traffic conditions. Advance planning is advisable on weekend rounds, when attendance is highest and shuttle queues lengthen accordingly.

See Also

PGA National Golf Club Palm Beach Gardens West Palm Beach Parks ```