Tiger Woods’ Mugshot Released Following DUI Arrest in Florida: Latest Update
The Martin County Sheriff’s Office has released Tiger Woods’ mugshot, just hours after his DUI arrest in Jupiter, Florida.
The photo is the first footage of the golfer since the incident. Woods is staring into the camera with bloodshot eyes, looking disheveled and expressionless.
Tiger Woods’ mugshot after being arrested for DUI today. pic.twitter.com/jVGPH1HFpm
— GOLF.com (@GOLF_com) March 28, 2026
Woods was charged with a DUI following a car crash on Jupiter Island on Friday, March 27. According to the Jupiter Island Police Department, officers responded to a rollover crash on South Beach Road just before 2 p.m. ET. They found a pickup truck pulling a pressure cleaner trailer and a Land Rover that had rolled onto its driver’s side.
In a press release, Sheriff John Budensiek detailed the incident. The driver of the pickup was turning into a driveway when he looked in his mirror and saw a dark Land Rover overtaking him at high speed. The pickup driver tried to edge to the side of the road, but there was no shoulder for the pressure cleaner trailer. The Land Rover clipped the truck and rolled. Woods climbed out through the passenger window and was identified at the scene.
DUI investigators arrived and administered a breathalyzer, which came back at 0.00% alcohol. But based on Woods’ behavior, they suspected he was impaired by medication. As a result, the Martin County police department called the Jupiter Island police department, citing their experience with cases like this. He was then taken to the Martin County Jail. Along with the DUI charge, Woods was charged with property damage and refusal to submit to a lawful test. No one was injured in the crash.
According to Associated Press, Woods was released on bail after being held in jail for eight hours.
This is Woods’ fourth DUI case. In 2017, he was arrested in Jupiter after being found asleep in his car. A breathalyzer then also showed no alcohol, but a toxicology report later found traces of Vicodin, Dilaudid, Xanax, Ambien, and THC. Four years later, in 2021, he was involved in another single-car rollover in Los Angeles that nearly cost him his leg, though deputies did not test him for drugs at that time.
Now, the state attorney’s office will review the case to decide whether to file formal charges. Any toxicology results could play a central role in what happens next, if obtained through a warrant.

