2027 AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am: What Golfers Should Know Before Tee Time Returns to Pebble Beach
By TeeTimePhotos.com | Professional On-Course Photography at Pebble Beach Golf Links
Mark your calendar: the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am returns to Pebble Beach Golf Links and Spyglass Hill Golf Course February 1–7, 2027, bringing the PGA Tour's most storied event back to the Monterey Peninsula for the fourth year as a Signature Event. If you're a golfer planning a Pebble Beach trip around tournament week — or simply inspired to book your own round after watching the pros play it — here's what you need to know.
A Tournament Unlike Any Other in Golf
The AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am traces its roots to the 1930s, when Bing Crosby gathered friends for a few rounds of golf to raise money for charity — an event that became known as The Crosby Clambake and quickly grew into a favorite among golfers, celebrities, and spectators alike. Decades later, it remains one of the most beloved weeks on the PGA Tour calendar.
The format is unique among professional golf: 80 professionals are paired with 80 amateurs, with two-person teams playing a better-ball format across Pebble Beach and Spyglass Hill on the first two days, while professionals also compete in an individual stroke-play format. On the final two rounds, only the professionals advance to play the closing rounds at Pebble Beach Golf Links.
Last Year's Drama Sets the Bar for 2027
At the most recent event, Collin Morikawa surged into contention with a brilliant third-round 62 — his best PGA Tour round in over a year — before closing things out with a final-round 67 to finish at 22-under par, fending off a crowded leaderboard to secure his seventh career Tour victory and his first win since 2023. World No. 1 Scottie Scheffler made things interesting by playing his opening seven holes in seven-under par and closing with an eagle, ultimately finishing one shot behind Morikawa's winning total.
That kind of leaderboard chaos is exactly why this tournament has stayed relevant for nearly 80 playings.
A Tournament That Gives Back
This isn't just great theater for golf fans — it's a major economic engine for the Central Coast community. The tournament's host organization, the Monterey Peninsula Foundation, has surpassed $250 million in lifetime giving, distributing millions annually to over 200 nonprofits across Monterey, San Benito, and Santa Cruz counties. Every dollar spent on tickets, hospitality, and tee times during tournament week ripples back into the community that makes the Monterey Peninsula special.
The tournament has also led on sustainability — it became the third North American golf tournament to receive Golf Environment Organization certification in 2019, earning the distinction again in 2020 and 2022.
What This Means If You're Planning a Trip
Whether you're coming to watch the pros or planning your own bucket-list round, here's what to keep in mind:
Book early. Tournament week brings a surge of visitors to the Monterey Peninsula. Hotels, restaurants, and tee times at nearby courses fill up months in advance. If you want to play Pebble Beach Golf Links or Spyglass Hill around the tournament dates, start planning now.
The courses you can actually play. The tournament rotates between Pebble Beach Golf Links and Spyglass Hill Golf Course — both of which are open to the public outside of tournament week. If you can't snag tickets to watch the pros, you can still walk the exact same fairways yourself.
Consider visiting just before or after tournament week. The Peninsula is at its liveliest leading up to the tournament, but course conditions and crowds are far more manageable for your own round in the weeks just before or after the event.
Capture it properly. If you're making the trip to play Pebble Beach or Spyglass Hill around this iconic week, don't leave your memories to a shaky phone photo. This is the same ground Morikawa, Scheffler, and McIlroy have walked — your round deserves images that match the moment.
Why Golfers Hire TeeTimePhotos.com for Their Pebble Beach Round
At TeeTimePhotos.com, we've spent 20 years photographing golfers on the Monterey Peninsula's most iconic courses. Tournament week reminds everyone why Pebble Beach and Spyglass Hill are considered among the most beautiful golf courses on Earth — and we know exactly where to stand, when to shoot, and how to capture the moments that matter most during your round.
Whether you're playing the week of the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am or planning your trip for a quieter month, a professional photo caddie turns your round into a lifelong keepsake.
Book your Pebble Beach photography session at TeeTimePhotos.com →
Further Reading
AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am Official Tournament Site — tickets, schedule, and player field for 2027
AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am Player Commitments — see who's confirmed for the 2027 field
Pebble Beach Resorts — AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am — tournament history and Monterey Peninsula Foundation giving impact
AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am on Wikipedia — full tournament history and format details
TeeTimePhotos.com | Professional On-Course Photography | Pebble Beach Golf Links & Spyglass Hill | Monterey Peninsula, California