Abstract We probe the spatial coherence properties of a magnetically trapped Bose gas. Two matter wave beams are extracted from two spatially separated regions of the trap and overlap outside the trapping region. The visibility of the resulting interference pattern measures the phase coherence between the regions of extraction. By varying the spatial separation between the two regions the first-order spatial correlation function of the trapped Bose gas can be measured. The location of the minima of the interference pattern is reproducible, which experimentally confirms that the trapped Bose-Einstein condensate is not fragmented into individual condensates.