First played in 1920, the RBC Canadian Open is the third oldest continuously running tournament on the PGA Tour.
Continue reading for all you need to know about the tournament, including start date, schedule, how to watch, course information, history and more.
The 2025 tournament schedule has yet to be released. In 2024, the tournament began on the last Thursday in May.
The 2025 RBC Canadian Open schedule has yet to be released. This page will be updated once information becomes available.
In Canada, the tournament has been shown on TSN4 and TSN5, with streaming available on TSN+.
In the United States, the tournament has been aired on Golf Channel and CBS (Saturday and Sunday only), with streaming available via PGA Tour Live on ESPN+, Peacock, and Paramount+.
Broadcast information specific to the 2025 tournament is not yet available, and this page will be updated once that information is available.
In 2025, the RBC Canadian Open will be held at the renovated North Course at TPC Toronto at Osprey Valley.
The course is located in Caledon, Ontario, about 40 minutes outside of Toronto.
The 7,445-yard course has recently been renovated and will become the 38th course to host the tournament in its history, as well as being just the eighth different course to host the tournament since 1977.
The North Course has been renovated to challenge elite golfers, and it is a par-70 course.
The eighth and 13th holes have been converted to par-4s, and the 585-yard par-5 18th-hole has been made more challenging with a short grass runoff area in front of the green.
The 2025 tournament's purse & prize money information is not yet available. Robert MacIntyre, the 2024 winner, earned $1.69 million for his first-place finish.
Robert MacIntyre got his first PGA Tour win at the 2024 RBC Canadian Open, with the Scottish golfer posting a -16 score over four rounds with his father as his caddie.
Canadian Nick Taylor won the 2023 RBC Canadian Open at Oakdale Golf & Country Club, defeating Tommy Fleetwood by sinking an incredible 72-foot eagle putt on the fourth playoff hole.
Rory McIlroy technically won back-to-back tournaments in 2022 and 2019 (2020 and 2021 tournaments were cancelled due to COVID-19 pandemic).
American Leo Diegel holds the record for most wins with four (1924, 1925, 1928, 1929).