In August, U.S. President Donald Trump's Scottish golf property will host a European tour competition.
The circuit added Trump International Golf Links Scotland to its 2025 itinerary on Tuesday, and the Scottish Championship will take place there from August 7 to August 10.
Trump owns two courses in Scotland, including the Aberdeen course. Trump Turnberry is one of ten courses that host the Open Championship, the oldest of the four major men's golf tournaments, but it hasn't done so since 2009.
This will mark the inaugural occasion that Trump International has hosted an event on the European Tour, although the course has previously hosted tournaments on the Seniors' Tour in 2023 and 2024 and is scheduled to do so again this year, the week preceding the Scottish Championship.
The Trump Organization's executive vice president, Eric Trump, called holding consecutive events at Trump International a "significant milestone."
The European tour's most recent Scottish Championship match took place in October 2020.
Events are also held at Donald Trump's clubs on the breakaway LIV Golf circuit.
Since 2009, when Stewart Cink defeated 59-year-old Tom Watson in a playoff, Turnberry has not won the major, mostly due to logistical and infrastructure problems, according to the R&A, which oversees the Open Championships.
Martin Slumbers, the R&A's then-CEO, said in 2021 that the Open would not return to Turnberry until they were certain that the players, the championship, and the course itself would be the main focus. He said that they did not think the scenario was possible under the current conditions, which may have been a reference to Trump's ownership of the course.
Mark Darbon, the recently appointed CEO, stated last month that his company was "doing some feasibility work" on a possible return to Turnberry, suggesting that the R&A's position has loosened.
Near Aberdeen Beach in northern Scotland, Trump International offers a broad perspective of offshore wind turbines.
Trump was upset that the Scottish government had approved the wind farm because he thought the turbines were "unsightly" and spoiled the vistas from his opulent golf course nearby.