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Major Shopping: Here’s What Fans are Buying at the PGA Championship

Fans this week at Aronimink Golf Club can shop in a 50,000-square-foot pavilion featuring every major golf brand and something for everyone.
John Schwarb/Sports Illustrated

NEWTOWN SQUARE, Pa. — Walking inside the front door at the 50,000-square-foot PGA merchandise pavilion, you first see a DJ—not Dustin Johnson, but a guy who is mixing music.

He’s useful here, drowning out the sounds of serious shopping.

DJs at the PGA
Here's the PGA Shops DJ ... now go buy a shirt. | John Schwarb/Sports Illustrated

When a major comes to your town for the first time in 13 years (Merion, U.S. Open, 2013) and the PGA Championship is back for the first time in 64 years (1962), that begs for a shirt, hat or a tchotchkes. Or all the things.

The sprawling pavilion—officially called “The PGA Shops,” which sounds less intimidating—brings virtually every major brand in golf under one roof to move product adorned with the 2026 Aronimink PGA logo and any number of odes to golf, Philadelphia, freedom, the Eagles, the Phillies and the highways fans drove to get here.

PGA Merchandise tent
John Schwarb/Sports Illustrated

Nike is listed as the official outfitter but other brands on the floor include FootJoy, Cutter & Buck, adidas, Dunning, Johnnie-O, Greg Norman, Under Armour, Ralph Lauren RLX, Peter Millar, Vineyard Vines, Fairway & Greene, Levelwear, lululemon, Ahead, Barstool, Straight Down and B. Draddy. We may have missed a couple—again, it’s 50,000 square feet.

And here’s what caught our eye from the massive selection.

Hats, hats and more hats

PGA merch hats
John Schwarb/Sports Illustrated
PGA merchandise hat
John Schwarb/Sports Illustrated

Big-letter hats have been a hot-button issue in golf with some straying into the absurd, but can you go wrong when the lettering is the host city?

PGA merchandise hat
John Schwarb/Sports Illustrated

The synergy of golf and the local ballclub is outstanding. And right on cue, the Phillies were back above .500 at press time.

Playing to the crowd with eagles and Liberty bells

PGA merch shirt
John Schwarb/Sports Illustrated

The Aronimink clubhouse, a Philadelphia Eagle holding a cheesesteak and a flag, walking toward the hole on a shirt with the event, year and location. Covering all the bases.

PGA merch shirt
John Schwarb/Sports Illustrated

The old-timey golf guy with a ball for a head on a green shirt adorned with “Philly” is another no-brainer.

PGA Championship merch
John Schwarb/Sports Illustrated

The Liberty Bell isn’t hard to find in the PGA Shops.

I am contractually obligated to mention this brand

PGA championship merch
John Schwarb/Sports Illustrated

My two daughters are not moved by regular Dad golf clothes but now that they know lululemon has a toe in the sport, they want all the pictures (taking pictures is also cheaper). The athleisure company's space near the middle of the PGA Shops will be cleaned out by Sunday—I’ve seen it before.

The best of the rest

PGA Championship merchandise
John Schwarb/Sports Illustrated

Riddell mini helmets are a nice touch, in Eagles green with the PGA logo on one side and "City of Champions" with the other, paying homage to Aronimink's two PGA years in 1962 and this year.

PGA Championship merch
John Schwarb/Sports Illustrated

My youngest daughter loves puzzles and this 1,000-piece puzzle features the PGA's official poster.

PGA championship merch
John Schwarb/Sports Illustrated

The Stanley drinking bottle craze is still going strong, in all sizes, styles and colors.

PGA champ merch
John Schwarb/Sports Illustrated

A commemorative glass has key city and state insignias plus “Drink Your Wooder” in the local dialect. IYKYK.

PGA Championship merch
John Schwarb/Sports Illustrated

This driver headcover is Philadelphia through and through, including pretzels, Independence Hall and Rocky Balboa.

PGA Championship merch
John Schwarb/Sports Illustrated

These small desk caddies from Swag Golf pay homage to the championship and America’s 250th birthday.

PGA Championship merch
John Schwarb/Sports Illustrated

Not sure when oversized golf balls became a thing but I’ve seen them for several years in golf merch tents.

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John Schwarb
JOHN SCHWARB

John Schwarb is a senior editor for Sports Illustrated covering golf. Prior to joining SI in March 2022, he worked for ESPN.com, PGATour.com, Tampa Bay Times and Indianapolis Motor Speedway. He is the author of The Little 500: The Story of the World’s Greatest College Weekend. A member of the Golf Writers Association of America, Schwarb has a bachelor’s in journalism from Indiana University.