Scottie Scheffler, the leader in the FedEx Cup standings heading into this week’s Tour Championship, holds a 3,769-point advantage over No. 2 Rory McIlroy after winning the BMW Championship on Sunday. To put that into context, that’s more than double the number of points McIlroy has earned all year.

And yet that massive lead will mean nothing at Atlanta’s East Lake Golf Club, as Scheffler is set to start the season finale at even par, the same as the other 29 golfers in the field. In May, the PGA Tour Policy Board made the decision to let everybody playing in the season finale have the same chance of winning the tournament, claiming the FedEx Cup title and cashing a $10 million first-place prize money payout.

It was a decision that Scheffler was in agreement with, having said on numerous occasions that he didn’t like the previous format where the leader in points entering the Tour Championship got to start the tournament at 10 under par.

But it was one made with a very important trade off. While the finish at East Lake determines for history where a player falls in the final FedEx Cup points standings for 2025, it won’t decide how much every player gets from the $100 million FedEx Cup bonus pool. Instead, the PGA Tour rebalanced the bonus distributions, handing out various amounts at the end of the PGA Tour regular season and after last week’s BMW Championship.

Since Scheffler was No. 1 in points entering the FedEx Cup Playoffs, he earned $10 million. And by being No. 1 again after the BMW, he cashed in another $5 million. If he can win the Tour Championship, he’ll then earn the remaining $10 million of the $25 million previously distributed to the FedEx Cup champion.

Here’s how the FedEx Cup bonus money has been handed out so far:

Scottie Scheffler, $15,000,000

Rory McIlroy, $7,500,000

J.J. Spaun, $3,195,000

Tommy Fleetwood, $2,000,000

Justin Rose, $1,800,000

Ben Griffin, $1,500,000

Sepp Straka, $1,785,000

Russell Henley, $1,700,000

Justin Thomas, $1,165,000

Harris English, $1,030,000

Keegan Bradley, $790,000

Robert MacIntyre, $550,000

Maverick McNealy, $515,000

Cameron Young, $350,000

Ludvig Åberg, $335,000

Andrew Novak, $325,000

Sam Burns, $285,000

Brian Harman, $280,000

Corey Conners, $275,000

Patrick Cantlay, $270,000

Collin Morikawa, $240,000

Viktor Hovland, $235,000

Hideki Matsuyama, $230,000

Shane Lowry, $225,000

Nick Taylor, $220,000

Harry Hall, $215,000

Jacob Bridgeman, $210,000

Sungjae Im, $205,000

Chris Gotterup, $205,000

Akshay Bhatia, $195,000

Here’s the prize money payouts for each player at this week’s Tour Championship

(note this will be considered as official tournament prize money earned and will count toward the all-time money list).

Win: $10,000,000

2: $5,000,000

3: $3,705,000

4: $3,200,000

5: $2,750,000

6: $1,900,000

7: $1,400,000

8: $1,065,000

9: $900,000

10: $735,000

11: $695,000

12: $660,000

13: $625,000

14: $590,000

15: $560,000

16: $505,000

17: $490,000

18: $475,000

19: $460,000

20: $445,000

21: $430,000

22: $415,000

23: $400,000

24: $390,000

25: $380,000

26: $375,000

27: $370,000

28: $365,000

29: $360,000

30: $355,000

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Main Image: Andrew Redington