The Washington D.C. area lost its spot on the US PGA Tour’s regular-season rotation with the axing of the Quicken Loans National. But according to the Washington Post‘s Barry Svrluga, golf will be returning to America’s capital in short order.

Overnight, Svrluga broke the news on Twitter that the Wells Fargo Championship, played annually at Quail Hollow in Charlotte, will make a stop in D.C. in 2021. The tournament, which is hosting the tour this week, is expected to make an official announcement later today.

The move is not unexpected. Quail Hollow and tournament sponsor Wells Fargo have been in discussions for a new five-year deal, and one of the remaining items was where the event would be held in 2021. The course is hosting the Presidents Cup that season, and though it’s not unheard for a venue to be the site of two competitions in one campaign – Pebble Beach is home to the AT&T Pro-Am and US Open in 2019 – it’s a situation the tour likes to avoid.

This is also not a new circumstance for the Wells Fargo Championship. The 2017 event moved to Eagle Point Golf Club in Wilmington, North Carolina, when Quail Hollow was preparing for the 2017 PGA Championship.

As for its temporary site farther north, it’s expected the tournament will be held at TPC Potomac at Avenel Farm [pictured]. The course, before its renovation in the 2008, was a frequent host of the Kemper Open, and hosted the Quicken Loans National in its last two years of existence.