Player
Megan Khang
USA
USA
Upcoming
- 2026-07-16The Open Championship 154th Open ChampionshipGolf Majors 2026
Past results (19)
- 2026-06-25Travelers ChampionshipGolf Majors 2026
- 2026-06-25KPMG Women's PGA ChampionshipGolf Majors 2026
- 2026-06-18U.S. Open 126th U.S. OpenGolf Majors 2026
- 2026-06-18U.S. OpenGolf Majors 2026
- 2026-06-18Meijer LPGA Classic for Simply GiveGolf Majors 2026
- 2026-06-11RBC Canadian OpenGolf Majors 2026
- 2026-06-11Dow ChampionshipGolf Majors 2026
- 2026-06-04the Memorial Tournament pres. by WorkdayGolf Majors 2026
- 2026-06-04U.S. Women's Open pres. by AllyGolf Majors 2026
- 2026-05-29ShopRite LPGA Classic powered by WakefernGolf Majors 2026
- 2026-05-28Charles Schwab ChallengeGolf Majors 2026
- 2026-05-21THE CJ CUP Byron NelsonGolf Majors 2026
- 2026-05-14PGA Championship 108th PGA ChampionshipGolf Majors 2026
- 2026-05-14PGA ChampionshipGolf Majors 2026
- 2026-05-14Kroger Queen City Championship pres by P&GGolf Majors 2026
- 2026-05-07Truist ChampionshipGolf Majors 2026
- 2026-05-07ONEflight Myrtle Beach ClassicGolf Majors 2026
- 2026-05-07Mizuho Americas OpenGolf Majors 2026
- 2026-04-09The Masters 90th Masters TournamentGolf Majors 2026
Megan Khang is an American professional golfer born on October 23, 1997, in Brockton, Massachusetts, who grew up in Rockland, Massachusetts. She competes on the LPGA Tour, where she has been a full card-holder since 2016. A four-time Solheim Cup representative for the United States (2019, 2021, 2023, 2024), Khang is one of the more consistent presences in the top 50 of the Rolex Women's World Rankings and carries particular historical significance as the first player of Hmong descent to compete on the LPGA Tour.
Khang's path to professional golf was unusually direct. Her parents arrived in the United States as refugees from Laos in the 1970s, and she learned the sport from her father. She turned professional in 2015 at age 17 without playing college golf, qualifying for her LPGA card through the Final Qualifying Tournament later that year. Her potential was evident well before that: she qualified for the 2012 U.S. Women's Open at only 14 years old. The breakthrough win many expected came in her 191st LPGA Tour start, when she defeated Ko Jin-young in a playoff at the 2023 CPKC Women's Open, a result that validated years of steady competitive play. Her best women's major finish is a tie for third at the 2023 KPMG Women's PGA Championship.
Khang is regarded as a steady ball-striker with a reliable short game who tends to perform well under match-play pressure, as her Solheim Cup record reflects. In 2025 she posted a tie for sixth at the Women's British Open, showing continued form in major championship conditions. She has accumulated 47 top-10 finishes across her LPGA career.
Follow tee times in United States time.


