Valspar Championship

Innisbrook Resort (Copperhead)



    Money Matters

    Here are the single biggest paydays for each of the PGA Tour's winningest golfers

    October 14, 2021
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    To golf fans of a certain age, the sight of an oversize first-place check carries a certain hint of nostalgia. For years, the marketing gimmick was a ubiquitous symbol of pro golf success, even if it was literally worthless. There’s never been an actual winner’s circle that a newly crowned PGA Tour champ steps into upon victory in a tour event, but there was a four-foot long piece of cardboard they handed to you that showed you’d made it.

    Of course, times change. So too has the amount of money that golfers are playing for on the PGA Tour. If those oversize checks hadn’t gone the way of the persimmon driver and balata golf ball, they’d need to be seven-feet long in order to have room for all the zeros.

    When Justin Thomas won the Players Championship in March, he earned $2,700,000, the biggest payday any golfer has ever claimed for a single tournament finish in an official PGA Tour event. The winner of every full-status PGA Tour event makes more than a million bucks for his effort, which exceeds the career earnings of San Snead, Ben Hogan, Byron Nelson, Gene Sarazen and dozens of other legends who have spots in the World Golf Hall of Fame.

    The contrast is striking, as we noticed vividly when we went through the exercise of researching what was the largest payday for the PGA Tour’s most prolific all-time winners.

    We looked at the top 50 on the career victory list (53 players with ties) and, using the PGA Tour’s Media Guide and ShotLink database, uncovered the biggest prizes earned for each golfer.

    A couple things to note: For those players who competed before the 1960s, many of the PGA Tour’s records regarding earnings are incomplete; we're only listing what the PGA Tour records show. For instance, Walter Hagen’s winnings from his five PGA Championship titles weren’t accounted for, although cross referencing them with the PGA of America’s records indicated that they still didn’t exceed the $1,250 "The Haig" made finishing third at the 1931 St. Paul Open.

    And that’s not a typo … Hagen’s biggest payday in the PGA Tour records came from a third-place finish. As it turns out, the largest checks many players earned came not from their most famous victories but from lesser showings in events that were played later in their careers, the overall purses having risen enough to make finishing second or third more lucrative than earlier wins. Tom Watson’s earnings for his playoff loss at the 2009 Open Championship exceeded the first-place prizes in all 39 of his PGA Tour victories. And Greg Norman’s third-place finish at the 2008 Open Championship ($509,618) was bigger than anything in a PGA Tour event that Norman had ever earned.

    With that, here is the complete list (Editor's Note—this story has been updated since when it first published in April 2021):

    Sam Snead (82 career wins)
    $24,000, 1968 Milwaukee Open (finished second)

    Tiger Woods (82)
    $2,070,000, 2019 Masters

    Jack Nicklaus (73)
    $144,000, 1986 Masters

    Ben Hogan (64)
    $12,500, 1951 World Championship of Golf

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    Bettmann

    Arnold Palmer (62)
    $50,000, 1971 Westchester Classic

    Byron Nelson (52)
    $13,600, 1945 Tam O’Shanter Open

    Billy Casper (51)
    $40,000, 1973 Sammy Davis Jr. Greater Hartford Open

    Walter Hagen (45)
    $1,250, 1931 St. Paul Open (finished 3rd)

    Phil Mickelson (45)
    $2,160,000, 2021 PGA Championship

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    Stacy Revere

    Cary Middlecoff (39)
    $12,500, 1952 World Championship of Golf (finished second)

    Tom Watson (39)
    $732,603, 2009 Open Championship (finished second)

    Gene Sarazen (38)
    $10,000, 1930 Agua Caliente Open

    Lloyd Mangrum (36)
    $6,000, 1956 Los Angeles Open

    Vijay Singh (34)
    $1,350,000, 2008 WGC-Bridgestone

    Jimmy Demaret (31)
    $7,000, 1949 World Championship of Golf (finished second)

    Horton Smith (30)
    $5,000, 1929 La Gorce Open

    Harry Cooper (29)
    $3,500, 1926 Los Angeles Open

    Gene Littler (29)
    $50,000, 1975 Westchester Classic

    Lee Trevino (29)
    $125,000, 1984 PGA Championship

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    David Cannon

    Leo Diegel (28)
    $1,500, 1925 Florida Open

    Paul Runyan (28)
    $1,500, 1933 Agua Caliente Open

    Henry Picard (26)
    $2,000, 3 times

    Tommy Armour (25)
    $2,500, 1930 St. Louis Open

    Johnny Miller (25)
    $225,000 1994 AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am

    Macdonald Smith (25)
    $3,000, 1928 Los Angeles Open, 1929 Los Angeles Open

    Dustin Johnson (24)
    $2,070,000, 2020 Masters

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    JD Cuban

    Gary Player (24)
    $62,500, 1984 PGA Championship (finished second)

    James Barnes (22)
    Records incomplete

    Johnny Farrell (22)
    $5,000, 1928 La Gorce Open

    Raymond Floyd (22)
    $252,000, 1992 Doral-Ryder Open

    Davis Love III (21)
    $1,170,000, 2003 Players Championship

    Willie MacFarlane (21)
    $2,500, 1933 Miami Biltmore Open

    Lanny Wadkins (21)
    $198,000, 1991 United Hawaiian Open

    Craig Wood (21)
    $3,325, 1944 Philadelphia Inquirer (finished second)

    Hale Irwin (20)
    $225,000, 1994 MCI Heritage

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    PGA TOUR Archive

    Greg Norman (20)
    $509,618, 2008 Open Championship (finished third)

    Johnny Revolta (20)
    $2,500, 1937 Miami Biltmore Open

    Doug Sanders (20)
    $35,000, 1972 Kemper Open

    Ben Crenshaw (19)
    $396,000, 1995 Masters

    Ernie Els (19)
    $1,405,890, 2012 Open Championship

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    Ian Walton/R&A

    Doug Ford (19)
    $9,000, 1961 500 Festival Invitational, 1963 Canadian Open

    Hubert Green (19)
    $125,000, 1985 PGA Championship

    Tom Kite (19)
    $450,000, 1989 Nabisco Championship

    Bill Behlhorn (19)
    $5,000, 1930 La Gorce Open

    Rory McIlroy (19)
    $2,250,000, 2019 Players Championship

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    David Cannon

    Julius Boros (18)
    $50,000, 1955 World Championship of Golf, 1968 Westchester Classic

    Jim Ferrier (18)
    $5,500, 1960 PGA Championship (finished second)

    Ernest “Dutch” Harrison (18)
    $3,950, 1960 U.S. Open (finished third)

    Nick Price (18)
    $604,800, 2003 EDS Byron Nelson (finished second)

    Bobby Cruickshank (17)
    $3,500, 1927 Los Angeles Open

    Jim Furyk (17)
    $1,350,000, 2019 Players Championship (finished second)

    Harold McSpaden (17)
    $4,375, 1944 Los Angeles Open

    Curtis Strange (17)
    $360,000, 1988 Nabisco Championship