Payday at Quail Hollow

PGA Championship 2025: Here's the record prize money payout for each golfer at Quail Hollow Club

May 18, 2025
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Maddie Meyer/PGA of America

When Jim Barnes claimed the inaugural PGA Championship title in 1916, he earned a prize money payout of $500 from an overall purse of $2,580.

Yes, times have changed.

The PGA of America announced Saturday that the players in the 2025 PGA Championship field at Quail Hollow were playing for a record $19 million, a bump of $500,000 from a year ago at Valhalla Golf Club. That also included an increase in the first-place prize money payout. Last year Xander Schauffele banked $3.33 million for his victory.

This year, Scottie Scheffler took home $3.42 million after shooting a final-round 71 to end at 11-under-par 273 total, good for a five-shot victory over Harris English, Bryson DeChambeau and Davis Riley. Scheffler, the World No. 1, collects his third major championship—after two Masters titles—and heads to the U.S. Open at Oakmont next month as the overwhelming favorite. DeChambeau finished runner-up in the PGA for the second consecutive year. Jon Rahm was tied with Scheffler for a brief moment midway through the final round but played his last three holes in five over par—making double bogey on each of the last two holes—and tied for eighth place.

Back to the money. While a modest jump, the increase for 2025 means that the payday has jumped every year at the PGA Championship since the purse was $11 million in 2020.

As for the majors, the PGA Championship now comes in third in terms of largest purse. The U.S. Open handed out $21.5 million in 2024 while Masters increased its purse to $21 million in April. The Open Championship paid out $17 million at Royal Troon in 2024.

For perspective, here’s a look at the evolution of the prize money payout in the PGA Championship, offering a revealing glance at the trajectory of golf purses in general over the years:

Year: Winner's Pay, Total Purse
1916: $500, $2,580 (first year of the event)
1931: $1,000, $7,200 (first year winner's pay increased)
1953: $5,000, $20,700 (first year winner's pay was $5K)
1958: $5,500, $39,388 (first year of stroke play, also the winner's amount actually decreased that year)
1965: $25,000, $149,700
1978: $50,000, $300,240
1983: $100,000, $608,099
1988: $160,000, $1,000,000 (first year with a $1M total purse)
1993: $300,000, $1,702,750
1998: $540,000, $2,886,800
2000: $900,000, $5,031,100 (first year with a $5M total purse)
2003: $1,080,000, $5,938,300 (first year with $1M-plus to the winner)
2009: $1,350,000, $7,484,500
2014: $1,800,000, $9,913,000
2018: $1,980,000, $11,000,000
2021: $2,160,000, $12,000,000
2022: $2,700,000, $15,000,000
2023: $3,150,000, $17,500,000
2024: $3,300,000, $18,500,000

Quail Hollow Club
Courtesy of PGA of America
Private
Quail Hollow Club
Charlotte, NC
Few golf course projects had more national attention in recent years than Quail Hollow, mainly because its front nine was redesigned just a year before it hosted the 2017 PGA Championship. The par-4 first and par-3 second holes were completely torn up, replaced by a new long dogleg-right par-4 opening hole. Several acres of pines to the left of the fifth tee were removed to make room for a new par-3 fourth. (With its knobby green fronted by three traps, it proved to be the most frustrating hole for pros in the 2017 PGA.) More pines were removed to the left of the par-4 11th, replaced by bunkers, and even more trees chopped down on a hill left of the par-4 18th to make room for money-making hospitality boxes. There’s no question that this latest remodeling, rushed though it was, improved the course. Quail Hollow hosted the 2022 Presidents Cup (the order of the holes were rearranged to ensure the majority of matches would reach the vaunted Green Mile, 16-18) and the 2025 PGA Championship.
View Course

Here is a breakdown of the prize money payouts for every golfer who made the cut this week.

Win: Scottie Scheffler, -11/273, $3,420,000

T-2: Bryson DeChambeau, -6/278, $1,418,666.67

T-2: Harris English, -6/278, $1,418,666.67

T-2: Davis Riley, -6/278, $1,418,666.67

T-5: Jhonattan Vegas, -5/279, $694,700

T-5: Taylor Pendrith, -5/279, $694,700

T-5: J.T. Poston, -5/279, $694,700

T-8: Jon Rahm, -4/280, $454,781.11

T-8: Si Woo Kim, -4/280, $454,781.11

T-8: Keegan Bradley, -4/280, $454,781.11

T-8: Matt Fitzpatrick, -4/280, $454,781.11

T-8: Joe Highsmith, -4/280, $454,781.11

T-8: Denny McCarthy, -4/280, $454,781.11

T-8: Ryan Gerard, -4/280, $454,781.11

T-8: Ben Griffin, -4/280, $454,781.11

T-8: Joaquin Niemann, -4/280, $454,781.11

T-17: Alex Noren, -3/281, $290,925

T-17: Matt Wallace, -3/281, $290,925

T-19: Tony Finau, -2/282, $193,442.22

T-19: Adam Scott, -2/282, $193,442.22

T-19: Cam Davis, -2/282, $193,442.22

T-19: Harry Hall, -2/282, $193,442.22

T-19: Taylor Moore, -2/282, $193,442.22

T-19: Aaron Rai, -2/282, $193,442.22

T-19: Beau Hossler, -2/282, $193,442.22

T-19: Corey Conners, -2/282, $193,442.22

T-19: Sam Burns, -2/282, $193,442.22

T-28: Alex Smalley, -1/283, $115,820

T-28: Viktor Hovland, -1/283, $115,820

T-28: Marco Penge, -1/283, $115,820

T-28: Xander Schauffele, -1/283, $115,820

T-28: Ryan Fox, -1/283, $115,820

T-33: Max Greyserman, E/284, $89,192.50

T-33: Maverick McNealy, E/284, $89,192.50

T-33: Thorbjorn Olesen, E/284, $89,192.50

T-33: Daniel Berger, E/284, $89,192.50

T-37: Lucas Glover, +1/285, $75,422.50

T-37: Ryo Hisatsune, +1/285, $75,422.50

T-37: J.J. Spaun, +1/285, $75,422.50

T-37: Richard Bland, +1/285, $75,422.50

T-41: Matthieu Pavon, +2/286, $60,676.67

T-41: Michael Thorbjornsen, +2/286, $60,676.67

T-41: Eric Cole, +2/286, $60,676.67

T-41: Nico Echavarria, +2/286, $60,676.67

T-41: Tommy Fleetwood, +2/286, $60,676.67

T-41: Nicolai Hojgaard, +2/286, $60,676.67

T-47: Robert MacIntyre, +3/287, $49,190

T-47: Cameron Young, +3/287, $49,190

T-47: Rory McIlroy, +3/287, $49,190

T-50: Wyndham Clark, +4/288, $40,674

T-50: Tom McKibbin, +4/288, $40,674

T-50: Christiaan Bezuidenhout, +4/288, $40,674

T-50: Collin Morikawa, +4/288, $40,674

T-50: Kevin Yu, +4/288, $40,674

T-55: Garrick Higgo, +5/289, $32,138

T-55: Rafael Campos, +5/289, $32,138

T-55: Michael Kim, +5/289, $32,138

T-55: Brian Campbell, +5/289, $32,138

T-55: Chris Kirk, +5/289, $32,138

T-60: David Puig, +6/290, $27,014.29

T-60: Tyrrell Hatton, +6/290, $27,014.29

T-60: Max Homa, +6/290, $27,014.29

T-60: Luke Donald, +6/290, $27,014.29

T-60: Sam Stevens, +6/290, $27,014.29

T-60: Justin Lower, +6/290, $27,014.29

T-60: Brian Harman, +6/290, $27,014.29

T-67: Rasmus Hojgaard, +7/291, $24,926.67

T-67: Austin Eckroat, +7/291, $24,926.67

T-67: Sergio Garcia, +7/291, $24,926.67

70: Stephan Jaeger, +8/292, $24,240

71: Tom Kim, +9/293, $23,940

T-72: Elvis Smylie, +10/294, $23,655

T-72: Bud Cauley, +10/294, $23,655

74: Byeong Hun An, +13/297, $23,420

Players missing the cut and turning in a 36-hole score were be paid $4,000 each.

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