Over the coming weeks, the DP World Tour will make visits to both new and returning venues.
After a two-week summer break in the 2025 Race to Dubai schedule, the Nexo Championship will take place at Trump International Golf Links Scotland in Aberdeenshire from August 7-10.
It will be the first time the Tour has visited the venue, which is hosting the Staysure PGA Seniors Championship on the Legends Tour this week.
Following the Nexo Championship, the Closing Swing - the fifth and final Global Swing which forms phase one of the DP World Tour’s 2025 season - will conclude with the Danish Golf Championship at Furesø Golf Klub.
Established in 1974, Furesø Golf Club was designed by Jan Cederholm, with a renovation in 2015 by Tom Mackenzie.
It is one of the country's largest golf clubs with 1,800 members, including DP World Tour professional Rasmus Neergaard-Petersen who was named an Honory Member last year after playing at the club since a young age.
Not only will the venue be staging a DP World Tour event for the first time, it will be a first visit to the capital for a tournament which was first staged in 2014.
As the final event of the Closing Swing, it provides players one final opportunity to qualify for the ‘Back 9’, the second phase of the DP World Tour’s season.
At the midway point of the ‘Back 9’, the FedEx Open de France, continental Europe’s oldest national Open, moves to Golf de Saint-Nom-La-Bretèche for its 107th edition due to work taking place at Le Golf National.
It is the first time the tournament has been played there since 1982 when Seve Ballesteros was triumphant, while it marks the DP World Tour’s return to the venue for the first time since the 2013 Seve Trophy.
Another returning venue before the season reaches a climax is the historic Delhi Golf Club, which this year is hosting the inaugural DP World India Championship.
Co-sanctioned with the Professional Golf Tour of India, the tournament will be the penultimate event of the ‘Back 9’ and marks the DP World Tour’s return to the venue for the first time since staging the Hero Indian Open in 2016.
Originally established in the 1930s, the Lodhi Championship Course hosted the inaugural Indian Open in 1964 and was redesigned by Peter Thomson in 1977, with further enhancements by Gary Player Design in 2019.
The venue for the Genesis Championship, a DP World Tour and KPGA Tour co-sanctioned event, which will bring the 'Back 9' to a close is to be announced in due course.