LIV Golf to Give Big Increase to Team Payouts
© Raymond Carlin III-Imagn Images

LIV Golf is ramping up its money game — again. Starting in 2026, weekly purses on the upstart tour will balloon to $30 million, with a $5 million boost going straight to the team competition, according to a new report from Sports Business Journal. That marks a significant leap from the current $25 million structure and sends yet another shot across the bow at the PGA Tour.

Here’s How it Breaks Down: $20 million will still be on the line for individual stroke play, but teams will now be battling for $10 million. That is a 100% increase in team prize money. In a sport built on individual stardom, LIV is doubling down on its signature team format, giving even more financial weight to its squad-based model.

LIV Golf Compared to the PGA Tour

LIV Golf Compared to the PGA Tour
© Raymond Carlin III Imagn Images

The PGA Tour’s biggest payouts don’t even come close. Their eight so-called “signature events” offer $20 million each, and even the crown jewel — The Players Championship — taps out at $25 million. LIV Golf just put the entire PGA field on notice.

But the money isn’t just going into prize pools. The entire LIV team model is evolving. According to SBJ, the 13 LIV teams will operate more like franchises — with captains running independent operations, signing their own commercial deals, and essentially acting as player-managers. It’s a shake-up that could permanently alter how talent flows in the pro golf world.

And don’t expect those jaw-dropping signing bonuses to come back anytime soon. LIV’s early days were marked by massive checks to lure stars like Dustin Johnson, Brooks Koepka, and Phil Mickelson. But now? Teams and captains are in charge of recruiting, shifting the pressure, and giving the league a more decentralized — and arguably more sustainable — approach.

The message is clear: LIV Golf isn’t just sticking around — it’s scaling up. With more cash, more autonomy, and more ambition, it’s putting the PGA Tour in a corner. And 2026 is shaping up to be the most high-stakes battle yet in golf’s ongoing civil war.

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Austin Rickles