During the 2026 U.S. Women’s Open at The Riviera Country Club in Pacific Palisades, California, you’re going to hear the name kikuyugrass quite a bit, but most golfers have probably never played on this grass or even seen it firsthand. At Riviera, however, this seldom-used grass has been the preferred option on fairways and rough for decades. So, let’s learn more about a grass that is seen as a weed by many but can provide championship playing conditions for the best golfers in the world.
The basics
Kikuyugrass is a warm-season grass that came to the United States from Kenya. Most of the time, it is viewed as a weed that spreads aggressively into desired grasses once it gains a foothold. Kikuyugrass is very difficult to eradicate from other warm-season grasses such as bermudagrass, which has led some golf courses to adopt it as their desired turf. In Southern California and other warm areas around the world, a handful of golf courses choose to promote kikuyugrass, including USGA championship venues like Riviera and Torrey Pines.
Why would anyone want kikuyugrass on their golf course?
Kikuyugrass is versatile. It can tolerate a wide variety of mowing heights and is often used as both fairway and rough, which is the case at Riviera. That means if you want to adjust fairway and/or rough lines, you simply mow the kikuyugrass lower or let it grow higher and after a short period of adaptation to the new height, a new line is born. This flexibility is extremely helpful in a championship context because we often want to adjust mowing lines for elite players and then put them back to normal for everyday play.
Kikuyugrass also provides a dense fairway canopy and excellent lies. The ball sits up beautifully in kikuyugrass fairways, which is why golfers often become attached to this “weed” even if it wasn’t the intended fairway turf. Kikuyugrass is drought tolerant, which helps in areas like Southern California where water is at a premium. It also has moderate to high salt tolerance which allows it to function well on courses that have lower-quality water sources and limited rainfall – a common situation in the southwestern U.S.