
Round 1 of the The Masters Tournament begins Thursday, April 9 at 7:40 a.m. EDT, as the world’s best golfers return to one of the most iconic stages in sports. Each spring, the pursuit of the green jacket brings together an impressive field, but winning at Augusta National Golf Club requires more than just talent.
Augusta is a course defined by precision, patience, and punishment. Its beauty can be deceiving with rolling fairways, blooming azaleas, and pristine greens that mask the challenge ahead. From subtle elevation changes to lightning-fast putting, every hole presents a new test. Even the most experienced players find themselves humbled year after year.
Here’s a closer look at the course, and why it continues to challenge even the game’s greatest.
A Breakdown of Holes 1- 5 at Augusta National Golf Club
Here’s a summary of each hole at Augusta National according to The Masters:
- Hole No. 1 – Tea Olive: The 445 yard par 4 is a slight dogleg right to open the round, but the right side is treacherous. The undulating green demands precision. Anything less often leads to a difficult two-putt.
- Hole No. 2 – Pink Dogwood: This 585 yard hole is a reachable par 5 that bends left, but danger lurks. Greenside bunkers punish aggressive second shots, and misses left can quickly derail a scoring opportunity.
- Hole No. 3- Flowering Peach: This 350 yard par 4 might be short, but that doesn’t mean it’s easy. Four bunkers guard the green, and a narrow funnel punishes imprecision. Architect Alister MacKenzie once considered it nearly perfect. Because of that, it remains largely unchanged.
- Hole No. 4-Flowering Crab Apple: This long 240 yard par 3 sees wind act as a major factor. Misses often find one of the two front bunkers, making par a solid result.
- Hole No.5- Magnolia: The 495 yard par 4 is an uphill dogleg left that demands strategy. Tiger Woods famously emphasized one goal here: hit the center, take your par, and move on.
Holes 6-10 at The Masters
- Hole No. 6- Juniper: The 180 yard par 3 boasts a dramatic elevation change on the green that creates one of the toughest at Augusta. Here, distance control is everything.
- Hole No.7-Pampas: The 450 yard par 4 has five bunkers surrounding the hole, with three guarding the green. Approach shots must be exact.
- Hole No.8- Yellow Jasmine: The 570 yard par 4 requires accuracy. While the green lacks bunkers, the approach is shaped by mounds that can deflect errant shots.
- Hole No. 9- Carolina Cherry: The 460 yard par 4 boasts a steeply sloped green from back to front that makes distance control vital. The right side offers the safest path in.
- Hole No. 10- Camellia: The 495 par 4 has a dramatic downhill tee shot that sets up a challenging approach. A massive fairway bunker splits decision-making, with the left side offering the better angle.
Amen Corner Holes 11, 12, & 13 at Augusta National
Coined during the 1958 Masters by journalist Herbert Warren Wind, “Amen Corner” remains one of golf’s most iconic, and punishing stretches.
- Hole 11- White Dogwood: The 520 yard par 4 kicks off Amen Corner. The long, demanding hole sees water guarding the left side of the green and a bunker waiting.
- Hole 12- Golden Bell: The 155 yard par 3 is deceptively short and famously difficult. Swirling winds and Rae’s Creek punish indecision. The Ben Hogan Bridge adds to its legacy.
- Hole 13- Azalea: At the 545 yard par 5, we see risk-reward at its finest. Jordan Spieth once noted how easily players can be lured into mistakes chasing an eagle.
A Breakdown of Holes 14 & 15
- Hole 14: Chinese Fir- The 440 yard par 4 is the only bunkerless hole at Augusta, though that doesn’t make it easy. Precision still rules.
- Hole 15: Firethorn- The 550 yard par 5 is known to be reachable in two, but only when the winds are in a players favor. A bunker guards the greens left side, requiring an over the pond shot to avoid it.
Closing Stretch- Holes 16, 17 & 18
- Hole 16: Redbud- The 170 yard par 3 plays beautifully over water, but with three bunkers surrounding the green. Sunday pin placements here are legendary.
- Hole 17: Nandina- The 450 yard par 4 acts as an uphill test with a complex green that slopes in multiple directions. Once home to the famous Eisenhower Tree.
- Hole 18: Holly- The 465 yard par 4 is one of golf’s most iconic finishing holes. A demanding uphill dogleg right, where a precise drive sets up a challenging approach to a narrow, well-guarded green.
Augusta National doesn’t just test a golfer’s skill. The Masters Tournament tests discipline, decision-making, and mental toughness. That’s what makes a victory so special. Surviving all 18 holes, four days in a row, against both the field and the course itself is no easy task, even for the best in the world.
Masters 2026: A Breakdown of Each Hole at Augusta National