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Sudden Death

Sudden death is a golf playoff format used to break a tie for the lead, in which the players play extra holes one at a time, and the first player to score lower than everyone else on a single hole wins the tournament.


What is sudden death in golf?

When two or more players finish a tournament tied for the lead, the event needs a way to name one winner. Sudden death is the quickest method golf has for doing that. The tied players return to a designated hole and play it as they would any other, and whoever posts the lowest score on that hole wins on the spot.

If the players match each other’s score, no one wins yet. They move to the next designated hole and play again, and the process repeats until someone comes out ahead on a single hole. Because the win can arrive on the first extra hole, sudden death is fast and decisive, which is why the PGA Tour and most professional events rely on it. According to Golf News Net, it is the most common playoff format in golf.

How a sudden-death playoff works

Every player who enters the playoff starts the first extra hole even, no matter what they shot in regulation. The total score that got them into the tie no longer counts. From that point, only the score on each playoff hole matters.

The lowest score on a hole wins the tournament outright, and play stops immediately. If the players tie the hole, they carry on to the next one. When three or more players are involved, anyone who fails to match the low score is eliminated, and the survivors keep going until one of them wins a hole alone.

There is a quirk in how the rules record all this. As Golf News Net notes, players entering a playoff are officially logged as tied for the position behind first place rather than tied for first, and the playoff exists to identify the champion from that group.

Most sudden-death playoffs end within a hole or two. They can run much longer, though. The PGA Tour record stands at 11 holes, set at the 1949 Motor City Open, where Lloyd Mangrum and Cary Middlecoff were declared co-champions after darkness made further play impossible, according to the PGA of America.

Sudden death vs. aggregate playoff

Golf has a second main tiebreaker, the aggregate playoff. Instead of deciding things one hole at a time, an aggregate playoff runs over a fixed set of holes, usually two to four. Players add up their scores across those holes, and the lowest total wins. If players are still tied at the end of the set, the playoff converts to sudden death.

The difference comes down to timing and feel. Sudden death can end the instant one player wins a hole, which makes it abrupt and high-pressure. An aggregate playoff plays out like a short extra round, giving a player who stumbles on one hole the chance to recover on the next.

Sudden deathAggregate playoff
Holes playedOne at a time until decidedA fixed set, usually two to four
How the winner is decidedLowest score on a single holeLowest combined score over the set
When it endsThe moment one player wins a holeAfter the full set, then sudden death if still tied
Typical useMost PGA Tour events, the MastersU.S. Open, PGA Championship, The Open

Which tournaments and majors use sudden death

Most regular PGA Tour events settle ties with sudden death. The four men’s majors each handle it differently, and only one of them goes straight to sudden death.

The Masters uses sudden death, alternating between the 18th and 10th holes until a winner emerges. Rory McIlroy won the 2025 Masters this way, beating Justin Rose on the first extra hole to complete the career Grand Slam, as reported by Today’s Golfer. The other three majors begin with an aggregate playoff and fall back to sudden death only if the players cannot be separated.

ChampionshipPlayoff format
The MastersSudden death, alternating holes 18 and 10
U.S. OpenTwo-hole aggregate, then sudden death if still tied
PGA ChampionshipThree-hole aggregate (holes 16, 17, 18), then sudden death
The Open ChampionshipFour-hole aggregate, then sudden death if still tied
Most PGA Tour eventsSudden death

The U.S. Open moved to its two-hole aggregate format in 2018, retiring the 18-hole Monday playoff it had used for decades, per Golf Channel.

Why it’s called sudden death

The name comes from the wider world of sport, where a sudden-death contest ends the instant one side gains the advantage. Football and hockey use it for overtime that finishes the moment a team scores. In golf, that advantage is a lower score on a hole. The win lands the instant a player posts it, and a tie that looked settled after 72 holes can be over within minutes of the playoff starting.

Related Golf Terms

Frequently Asked Questions

Is sudden death the same as a playoff?

Sudden death is one type of playoff. A playoff is any set of extra holes used to break a tie, and sudden death is the version decided one hole at a time.

How many holes does a sudden-death playoff last?

As few as one. Most end within a hole or two, though they can run longer. The PGA Tour record is 11 holes, set at the 1949 Motor City Open.

What happens if players tie on the first playoff hole?

They move to the next designated hole and play again. Their scores reset to even, and the process repeats until one player wins a hole on their own.

Do regulation scores carry into sudden death?

No. Once the playoff begins, only the score on each playoff hole counts, and every player starts the first extra hole even.

Sources

  • Golf News Net. “What is a sudden-death playoff in golf, and what does that mean?” Accessed June 2026.
  • PGA of America. “What’s the Longest Sudden-Death Playoff in PGA Tour History?” Accessed June 2026.
  • Golf Channel. “What is the U.S. Open playoff format in men’s golf?” Accessed June 2026.
  • Today’s Golfer. “What’s the 2025 PGA Championship playoff format?” Accessed June 2026.
  • NBC Sports. “What is the 2025 PGA Championship playoff format at Quail Hollow?” Accessed June 2026.
  • USGA. “Rules of Golf.” Accessed June 2026.
Written by
Jason Miller

Jason Miller is a PGA Teaching Professional and golf equipment analyst with more than 15 years of experience in coaching, competitive golf, and equipment testing. Based in Scottsdale, Arizona, Jason has worked with golfers of all skill levels—from beginners picking up their first clubs to competitive amateurs looking to lower their handicap.

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