President Joe Biden broke cover Friday to play a round of golf with his grandson Hunter during his holiday break on St. Croix in the U.S. Virgin Islands.
Biden was captured on the course of the Buccaneer Hotel wearing a bright blue baseball hat, a white polo shirt and navy shorts.
The golf outing marks his 20th round since becoming president.
At this point, former President Donald Trump - who owns a number of golf courses in the U.S. and abroad - had played 108 rounds of golf.
The president, first lady, daughter Ashley Biden, her husband Howard Krein and grandkids Hunter and Natalie arrived on St. Croix Tuesday and will stay through the new year.
The Bidens are staying at the St Croix home of billionaire Democratic donors Bill and Connie Neville, according to the White House.
The Nevilles were among the 300 people invited to Biden's state dinner with French President Emmanuel Macron on December 1.
The Bidens are not paying rent but staying as 'guests' at the home on Solitude Bay, a private community with its own beach. Houses there can sell for around $3million, according to property websites.
A luxury family vacation rental on St Croix can run up to $5,000 a night, according to vacation websites.
The house has its own pool along with gorgeous views of the Caribbean.
It also has private beach access.
The president has laid low since his arrival, using social media to publicize Thursday night that he had signed the 4,000-page, $1.7 trillion omnibus package to fund the government through September 2023.
The bill had to be flown to Biden commercially from Washington.
'Today, I signed the bipartisan omnibus bill, ending a year of historic progress. It'll invest in medical research, safety, veteran health care, disaster recovery, VAWA funding – and gets crucial assistance to Ukraine. Looking forward to more in 2023,' the president shared on Instagram.
Congress passed the massive budget bill last week but then it had to go through a complicated enrollment process that involves printing the text of the bill on parchment paper, with a certificate page that is signed by the speaker of the House and the president pro temp of the Senate.
After that is completed, it is transferred to the White House for the president's signature. It would have gone to the staff secretary's office, which is responsible for all the paperwork the president must sign.
It's not the first time a piece of legislation has flown commercial to the president's location.
In May, a $40billion US package of assistance for Ukraine was sent with a staffer on a commercial flight to South Korea, when Biden was in Seoul for meetings with Asian leaders.