It pays to win the U.S. Open … literally.

On Wednesday, USGA CEO Mike Whan announced that the prize money payout for this year’s championship at Shinnecock Hills Golf Club would be $22.5 million, an increase of $1 million from year ago and the fifth bump in the overall purse in the last six years. Sunday’s winner, Wyndham Clark, would earn a record $4.5 million

For context, when the USGA last played the U.S. Open at Shinnecock Hills in 2018, the prize money payout was just $12 million with winner Brooks Koepka earning $2.16 million for his second straight U.S. Open title.

RELATED: Wyndham Clark holds on to capture second Open title on wild day at Shinnecock

Whan was straightforward when talking about the decision to increase. “I think at the end of the day … we believe, and it’s fair if you want to disagree with it, we believe we’re the best championship in the game, and we want a lot of aspects to be the best championship in the game,” Whan said. “Where we go, how we treat the players, how we pay out, how we’re televised, and we’re proud of the fact there’s more network hours on the U.S. Open than any other major championship.

“Yeah, some of that’s just personal pride. We want to be big. We want to be the best. We want to make sure it’s life-changing in multiple ways.”

The USGA decision follows officials at the Masters increasing their prize money payout to $22.5 million, thus matching Augusta National for the largest paydays of any of the men’s majors. That said, Whan was cautious to hint that there is sentiment among the majors to react to each other as purses rise.

“We also are not in a race. We’re not chasing,” Whan said. “I don’t know if that answers your question, but we’re proud of where we are. I couldn’t tell you, and until I get some truth serum in here, how much farther we go in the years to come, but we think it’s a measure of how we feel about our championship. It needs to be significant and stand out. We think 22.5 does.”

Only the Players Championship, with a purse of $25 million, has a bigger overall payday than the U.S. Open. And as for the majors, the U.S. Open and Masters are out front, followed by the PGA Championship, which paid out $20.5 million last month after Aaron Rai’s win at Aronimink. The Open Championship paid out $17 million at Royal Portrush in 2025.

More context: Let’s consider how much the USGA has paid U.S. Open winners over time. As you can see, the reward has become exponentially greater in recent years.

1950: Ben Hogan at Merion, $4,000
1960: Arnold Palmer at Cherry Hills, $14,400
1973: Johnny Miller at Oakmont, $35,000
1980: Jack Nicklaus at Baltusrol, $55,000
1982: Tom Watson at Pebble Beach, $60,000
1992: Tom Kite at Pebble Beach, $275,000
2000: Tiger Woods at Pebble Beach, $800,000
2008: Tiger Woods at Torrey Pines, $1.35 million
2011: Rory McIlroy at Congressional, $1.44 million
2015: Jordan Spieth at Chambers Bay, $1.8 million
2017: Brooks Koepka at Erin Hills, $2.16 million
2021: Jon Rahm at Torrey Pines, $2.25 million
2022: Matt Fitzpatrick at The Country Club, $3.15 million
2023: Wyndham Clark at LACC, $3.6 million
2024: Bryson DeChambeau at Pinehurst, $4.3 million

And here is the payouts for each U.S. Open at Shinnecock Hills:

1896 (James Foulis): Purse—$335; winner’s share: $150
1986 (Raymond Floyd): Purse—$700,000; winner’s share: $126,000
1995 (Corey Pavin): Purse—$2 million; winner’s share: $350,000
2004 (Retief Goosen): Purse—$6.25 million; winner’s share: $1.125 million
2018 (Brooks Koepka): Purse—$12 million; winner’s share: $2.16 million

The top 60 and ties make the 36-hole cut at the U.S. Open. For those who don’t advance past to the weekend. And for any professionals who don’t make the cut at the U.S. Open, you’re still walking away with a nice return: $10,000.

The full prize money payout breakdown for this year’s championship was released on Saturday after the cut was made. Each of the professionals who missed the cut also received $10,000 in unofficial prize money.

Win: Wyndham Clark, -4/276, $4.5 million

2: Sam Burns, -3/277, $2.43 million

3: Tom Kim, -1/279, $1.5325 million

T-4 : J.T. Poston, E/280, $920,882

T-4: Keith Mitchell, E/280, $920,882

T-4: Scottie Scheffler, E/280, $920,882

T-7: Joaquin Niemann, 1/281, $617,090

T-7: Tyrrell Hatton, 1/281, $617,090

T-7: Gary Woodland, 1/281, $617,090

T-7: Sam Stevens, 1/281, $617,090

T-11: Justin Rose, 2/282, $405,862

T-11: Aaron Rai, 2/282, $405,862

T-11: John Parry, 2/282, $405,862

T-11: Tommy Fleetwood, 2/282, $405,862

T-11: Xander Schauffele, 2/282, $405,862

T-11: Sahith Theegala, 2/282, $405,862

T-17: Ludvig Aberg, 3/283, $280,966

T-17: Justin Thomas, 3/283, $280,966

T-17: Ben Griffin, 3/283, $280,966

T-17: Akshay Bhatia, 3/283, $280,966

T-17: Collin Morikawa, 3/283, $280,966

T-17: Matt Fitzpatrick, 4/284, $230,220

T-23: Ben James, 5/285, $181,101

T-23: Ryan Fox, 5/285, $181,101

T-23: Jackson Koivun, 5/285, $Amateur

T-23: Ben Kohles, 5/285, $181,101

T-23: Pierceson Coody, 5/285, $181,101

T-23: Ryder Cowan, 5/285, $Amateur

T-23: Alex Fitzpatrick, 5/285, $181,101

T-23: Corey Conners, 5/285, $181,101

T-23: Emiliano Grillo, 5/285, $181,101

T-32: Max McGreevy, 6/286, $128,756

T-32: Dustin Johnson, 6/286, $128,756

T-32: Rory McIlroy, 6/286, $128,756

T-32: Maverick McNealy, 6/286, $128,756

T-32: Brian Harman, 6/286, $128,756

T-32: Zac Blair, 6/286, $128,756

T-32: Keegan Bradley, 6/286, $128,756

T-39: Jacob Bridgeman, 7/287, $101,859

T-39: Johnny Keefer, 7/287, $101,859

T-39: Miles Russell, 7/287, $Amateur

T-39: Robert MacIntyre, 7/287, $101,859

T-43: Max Greyserman, 8/288, $78,100

T-43: Chris Gotterup, 8/288, $78,100

T-43: Harry Higgs, 8/288, $78,100

T-43: Michael Brennan, 8/288, $78,100

T-43: Cameron Young, 8/288, $78,100

T-43: Laurie Canter, 8/288, $78,100

T-43: Niklas Norgaard, 8/288, $78,100

T-43: Ryo Hisatsune, 8/288, $78,100

T-43: Sungjae Im, 8/288, $78,100

T-43: Michael Kim, 8/288, $78,100

T-53: Adrien Dumont de Chassart, 9/289, $51467

T-53: Kurt Kitayama, 9/289, $51,467

T-53: Angel Hidalgo, 9/289, $51,467

T-56: Peter Uihlein, 10/290, $48,625

T-56: Nico Echavarria, 10/290, $48,625

T-56: Marek Fleming, 10/290, Amateur

T-56: Jordan Spieth, 10/290, $48,625

T-56: Bud Cauley, 10/290, $48,625

T-61: Jackson Van Paris, 11/291, $47,242

T-61: Spencer Tibbits, 11/291, $47,242

T-63: Eric Lee, 13/293, Amateur

T-63: Caleb Surratt, 13/293, $46,551

T-65: James Nicholas, 14/294, $44,938

T-65: Russell Henley, 14/294, $44,938

T-65: Neal Shipley, 14/294, $44,938

T-65: Hideki Matsuyama, 14/294, $44,938

T-65: Andrew Putnam, 14/294, $44,938

T-65: William Mouw, 14/294, $44,938

71: Patrick Rodgerts, 17/297, $43,324

72: Dylan Wu, 18/298, $42,863

Follow Golf Digest Middle East on social media

Instagram

X

Facebook

YouTube

Main Image: Tracy Wilcox