FedEx Cup. PGA Tour

We’re down to the final regular season event, the Wyndham Championship, with this one last tournament left to qualify for the 2023 FedEx Cup Playoffs and get the chance to win the FedEx Cup title.

The season-long FedEx Cup points standings largely determine who keeps their PGA Tour cards, who’ll be eligible for the Playoffs come August and who will have invites to the PGA Tour’s designated events in 2024.

The 2022-23 season includes 44 regular-season events before the start of the three-event playoff series that ends at the Tour Championship August 24-27. For all regular-season PGA Tour events, 500 FedEx Cups are awarded to the winner, with points also being earned by every player making the cut. In World Golf Championship and other “designated” events, 550 FedEx Cup points goes to the winner, while 600 points are given to the champion of the four majors and the Players. Lastly, 300 points are given to the winner of any event played in the same week as a major or “designated” event.

Here is the updated FedEx Cup points list through the 3M Open. All players inside the top 70 at the end of the regular season earn their PGA Tour cards for the 2024 season and get into the playoffs. The top 50 players after the first Playoff event, the FedEx St Jude Championship in Memphis at TPC Southwind, advance to the second event, the BMW Championship outside Chicago at Olympia Fields. Those players also qualify for the majority of the PGA Tour’s designated events for 2024. The top 30 after the BMW advance to the Tour Championship at East Lake in Atlanta where they compete for the FedEx Cup title and $75 million overall purse, with $18 million going to the eventual winner.

Following the core FedEx Cup season, official PGA Tour events will be conducted in the fall, where all players with status for the 2022-23 FedEx Cup season will be eligible to compete. Those outside of the top-70 will compete for FedEx Cup points to secure playing status for 2024.

Top 70
RANK, PLAYER, POINTS
1: Jon Rahm, 3,320
2: Scottie Scheffler, 3,146
3: Rory McIlroy, 2,304
4: Max Homa, 2,128
5: Wyndham Clark, 1,944
6: Brian Harman, 1,827
7: Viktor Hovland, 1,795
8: Keegan Bradley, 1,774
9: Rickie Fowler, 1,732
10: Tony Finau, 1,655
11: Jason Day, 1,506
12: Nick Taylor, 1,463
13: Patrick Cantlay, 1,443
14: Tom Kim, 1,422
15: Sepp Straka, 1,413
16: Xander Schauffele, 1,406
17: Tyrrell Hatton, 1,381
18: Si Woo Kim, 1,351
19: Sam Burns, 1,284
20: Emiliano Grillo, 1,275
21: Collin Morikawa, 1,246
22: Kurt Kitayama, 1,216
23: Adam Schenk, 1,209
24: Tommy Fleetwood, 1,184
25: Denny McCarthy, 1,179
26: Chris Kirk, 1,161
27: Taylor Moore, 1,156
28: Seamus Power, 1,133
29: Corey Conners, 1,103
30: Jordan Spieth, 1,099
31: Justin Rose, 1,088
32: Sahith Theegala, 1,065
33: Lee Hodges, 1,052
34: Russell Henley, 1,051
35: Matt Fitzpatrick, 1,049
36: Sungjae Im, 1,047
37: Adam Svensson, 934
38: Patrick Rodgers, 914
39: Adam Hadwin, 908
40: Eric Cole, 899
41: Tom Hoge, 897
42: Brendon Todd, 893
43: Harris English, 893
44: Mackenzie Hughes, 890
45: Cameron Young, 889
46: Andrew Putnam, 889
47: Alex Smalley, 864
48: Nick Hardy, 839
49: JT Poston, 827
50: Taylor Montgomery, 823
51: Thomas Detry, 808
52: Byeong Hun An, 796
53: Davis Riley, 768
54: Brandon Wu, 758
55: Hayden Buckley, 754
56: Hideki Matsuyama, 742
57: Keith Mitchell, 698
58: Mark Hubbard, 697
59: Matt Kuchar, 680
60: Sam Stevens, 670
61: Aaron Rai, 670
62: Sam Ryder, 660
63: Beau Hossler, 658
64: Stephan Jaeger, 641
65: Matt NeSmith, 637
66: Vincent Norrman, 631
67: JJ Spaun, 619
68: Ben Griffin, 617
69: Cam Davis, 605
70: Austin Eckroat, 594