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Complete Major Championship History

How Many Majors Has Scottie Scheffler Won? 4 Major Championships

Quick Answer

Scottie Scheffler has won 4 major championships: the Masters (2022, 2024), the PGA Championship (2024), and The Open Championship (2025).

Scottie Scheffler's Complete Major Championship Victories

Scottie Scheffler has rapidly ascended to become the most dominant golfer on the planet, accumulating four major championship victories in just over three years. His meteoric rise from promising young professional to world number one and multi-major champion has been one of the most remarkable stories in modern golf.

  • 2022 Masters – Augusta National, Georgia (−10, 278) — Won by 3 strokes over Rory McIlroy
  • 2024 Masters – Augusta National, Georgia (−11, 277) — Won by 4 strokes, wire-to-wire
  • 2024 PGA Championship – Valhalla Golf Club, Kentucky (−21, 263) — Won despite being arrested before his second round in a traffic incident near the course
  • 2025 Open Championship – Royal Portrush, Northern Ireland — His fourth major title and third different major championship

The 2022 Masters: A Star Is Born

Scheffler's first major victory came at the 2022 Masters, capping an extraordinary stretch where he won four times in six starts on the PGA Tour. Arriving at Augusta National as the world's number-one ranked player, Scheffler handled the pressure brilliantly despite admitting he cried before his final round out of nervousness. He built a three-shot lead heading into Sunday and held off a charging Rory McIlroy to claim the green jacket. At 25 years old, Scheffler announced himself as the game's next great champion.

2024: A Historic Double Major Year

Then came the PGA Championship at Valhalla — a tournament that will be remembered as much for the chaos off the course as Scheffler's brilliance on it. Before his second round, Scheffler was detained by police after a misunderstanding in traffic near the course entrance, where an officer was directing cars following a fatal accident. Despite being handcuffed and taken to a holding facility, Scheffler arrived at the course, warmed up quickly, and shot a stunning 66 to take the lead. He went on to win by a comfortable margin, completing a Masters-PGA double that only a handful of golfers have achieved in the same year. The charges were later dropped.

The 2025 Open Championship: Three-Quarters of the Grand Slam

Scheffler's victory at the 2025 Open Championship at Royal Portrush added a third different major to his collection and brought him within one title of the career Grand Slam. With victories at the Masters, PGA Championship, and The Open, Scheffler needs only the US Open to join the most exclusive club in golf — the career Grand Slam winners, which includes only Gene Sarazen, Ben Hogan, Gary Player, Jack Nicklaus, and Tiger Woods.

Rise to World Number One

Scheffler's ascent to the top of the world rankings has been nothing short of meteoric. After turning professional in 2018 and earning his PGA Tour card through the Korn Ferry Tour, he steadily improved each season before breaking through in spectacular fashion in early 2022. His ball-striking — particularly his iron play — is considered among the best in the game's history, and his ability to manage courses and grind out results even when not at his absolute best sets him apart from his peers. By 2024, Scheffler had established a margin of dominance in the world rankings not seen since Tiger Woods's prime.

The Grand Slam Quest

At just 28 years old with four major titles already secured, Scheffler has positioned himself as one of the greatest players of his generation. His pursuit of the career Grand Slam — needing only the US Open — adds a compelling narrative to every June. Given his consistency, his elite ball-striking, and his proven ability to perform under the most intense pressure, most observers consider it a matter of time before Scheffler completes the set. Should he do so, he would become only the sixth player in history to accomplish the feat, further cementing his place among golf's all-time greats.