Zalewska Wins LET QSchool, 20 Players Earn Full Status for 2026

The 20 LET players who earned full stats for the 2026 season pose after Qualifying School.
The 20 LET players who earned full stats for the 2026 season pose after Qualifying School. Tristan Jones / LET.

Tis the season for Qualifying School, and the Ladies European Tour’s just wrapped up in Morocco this weekend.

You may wonder why the LET’s QSchool happens in Morocco. I had the same question when I played in 2016. Turns out, the Moroccan royal family – the Alawi dynasty – is a big fan of golf. The tournament is called the Lalla Aicha Qualifying School in honor of King Mohammed V’s late daughter.

Lalla Aicha QSchool has grown since my playing days. There are now four different pre-qualifiers golfers can choose from to earn their way to the final stage in Morocco. The Final Qualifying took place at Royal Golf Morocco, the second-oldest golf course in the country and the late King Hassan II’s favorite, and Al Maaden Golf Marrakech.

155 players from 40 countries competed in the pre-qualifiers, with 90 advancing to the Final Qualifying this past week. 20 earned full status for the 2026 LET season.

Like the LPGA and Epson Tour setup, the LET has the LET Access (LETAS) Tour to help golfers earn their card through a season’s worth of tournaments. Some of those LETAS players also competed this week to better their status going into 2026. Some players were able to earn their spots in the LET Final Qualifying through the LPGA Final Qualifying.

You’ll recognize some of the names below from the LPGA Q-Series. European players especially want to have enough status on both the LET and LPGA Tours in order to give themselves the best chance of earning a spot on the 2026 Solheim Cup team.

Meet the 2026 LET Rookies and Returning Players

Poland’s Dorota Zalewska won Lalla Aicha Qualifying School at 19-under for the week.

“I’m feeling incredible,” Zalewska said. “Dreams coming true, basically. To be honest it’s hard to even speak right now. My ability to score again this week was really good. It’s something I have been struggling with the past two years on tour. Especially this year, I was hitting it well but couldn’t score. This week, it all clicked. Patience paid off and I didn’t give up.

1. Dorota Zalewska – Poland

2. Anna Morgan – USA

3. Alexandra Swayne – U.S. Virgin Islands

4. Ana Belac – Slovenia

T5. Hannah Darling – Scotland

T5. Aine Donegan – Ireland – 

T5. Georgia Oboh – Nigeria

T5. Emma Grechi – France

T9. Carolina Lopez Chacarra – Spain

T9. Julia Lopez Ramirez – Spain

T9. Carla Tejedo Mulet – Spain

T9. Roberta Liti – Italy

T9. Caley McGinty – England

T9. Justice Bosio – Australia

T9. Agatha Laisne – France

T16. Amy Lee – USA

T16. Meghan MacLaren – England

T16. Ana Dawson – Isle of Man

T16. Caitlyn Macnab – South Africa

T16. Marta Sanz Barrio – Spain

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