The Ladies European Tour (LET) has announced its 2026 schedule – featuring 30 events across 21 countries and five continents, including the 20th edition of the Solheim Cup.
In 2026 the tour will have a projected total prize fund of more than €39million – a record total for the LET – as well as the addition of a new event in Mauritius, the return of the Women’s Australian Open, and several new venues across the season.
In 2026, Golf Saudi builds on its commitment to the women’s game by increasing the total prize fund of the PIF Global Series events by $2million from 2025, totalling $15million. This includes the Aramco Championship in April, which will be co-sanctioned with the LPGA.
“The 2026 schedule will once again give our skilled athletes a platform to showcase their talents to the world,” said Marta Figueras-Dotti, LET Board chair. “As a global tour, we are pleased to be making an impact on five different continents and offering our players more opportunities in 2026 across 21 countries.
“It’s an exciting time with the 20th edition of the Solheim Cup on the horizon, new venues, and returning events across the season. We would like to thank our tour sponsors, partners and event promoters for their continued support as we grow the women’s game. We are looking forward to a great season ahead.”
The 2026 season kicks off on February 11 with the PIF Saudi Ladies International – held at Riyadh Golf Club for the third consecutive year – before the LET heads to Australia for a four-week stretch of co-sanctioned events with the WPGA Tour of Australasia – starting with the Ford Women’s NSW Open and Australian Women’s Classic in New South Wales. A trip to Adelaide is next for the return of the Women’s Australian Open at Kooyonga Golf Club, before the swing ends at the Australian WPGA Championship on the Gold Coast.
At the start of April, the LET heads to the United States for the Aramco Championship, which will be held at Shadow Creek Golf Club. Later that month, the tour returns to South Africa for a fortnight at two new venues – Randpark Golf Club hosting the Joburg Ladies Open, and the Investec SA Women’s Open taking place at Royal Cape Golf Club.
May will include a trip to Mauritius for the first time in LET history, with the Legend Course at Constance Belle Mare Plage setting the stage for the MCB Ladies Classic – Mauritius. After that is the Amundi German Masters in Hamburg, the Lalla Meryem Cup in Morocco, and the Jabra Ladies Open in France.
The Dutch Ladies Open and Tipsport Czech Ladies Open will take place in June followed by the Hulencourt Women’s Open in Belgium, leading into the Amundi Evian Championship – which marks the midpoint of the season.
Dundonald Links will host the ISPS HANDA Women’s Scottish Open for the fifth year in a row, before the AIG Women’s Open – the final major of the year – returns to Royal Lytham & St Annes site of Georgia Hall’s win in 2018.
August will see the Centurion Club host the PIF London Championship for the sixth consecutive season. That will be followed by the VP Bank Swiss Ladies Open, before the KPMG Women’s Irish Open takes place at the K Club for the first time.
September brings the 20th edition of the Solheim Cup at Bernardus Golf in the Netherlands, where Team Europe and the US team will battle it out under captains Anna Nordqvist and Angela Stanford. The La Sella Open, which was spectacularly won in 2025 by Anna Huang at the age of 16, will also feature, before the return of the Ladies Italian Open to Milan.
October sees the Open de France take place before the LET has its Asian swing with the Aramco Korea Championship, Hero Women’s Indian Open, Wistron Ladies Open, and Aramco China Championship. The schedule will also feature the Andalucía Costa del Sol Open de España.
A minimum of 25 events will be televised, either via highlights packages or with a full live world feed in 2026.
For the full schedule, click here.




