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For nearly two decades, Rory McIlroy relentlessly pursued the elusive green jacket. Now, his closet is bursting with triumph.
This past Sunday, the 36-year-old from Northern Ireland successfully retained his championship at Augusta National. Navigating its storied fairways, he shot a remarkable 12-under par to clinch the 2026 Masters Tournament.
Last year, when McIlroy donned his first green jacket, he became only the second golfer in PGA history to surpass $100 million in career earnings. The only other? The legendary Tiger Woods, of course.
McIlroy’s latest victory added a record-breaking $4.5 million to his bank account, pushing his total career earnings on the PGA Tour to an astounding $114,696,641.
Meanwhile, Tiger Woods remains the reigning financial heavyweight of the golf world, holding the all-time PGA Tour earnings record at $120,999,166. With his recent triumph at Augusta, McIlroy is now just $6.3 million shy of overtaking Woods as the top earner in PGA Tour history.
The stage is set for a thrilling showdown. Thanks to the surge in modern tournament prize money, McIlroy’s ascension to the top of the earnings list seems inevitable. Should he maintain his scorching performance through the summer, he could surpass Woods’ record even before the FedEx Cup playoffs commence.
Oisin Keniry/R&A/R&A via Getty Images
PGA Tour All-Time Money Winners
Here is an updated list of the PGA Tour’s all-time money winners:
- Tiger Woods: $120,999,166
- Rory McIlroy: $114,696,641
- Scottie Scheffler: $103,269,566
- Phil Mickelson: $96,727,968
- Justin Rose: $75,951,420
- Dustin Johnson: $75,695,066
- Adam Scott: $71,576,075
- Jim Furyk: $71,507,269
- Justin Thomas: $71,383,912
- Vijay Singh: $71,312,738
The True Wealth: Beyond the Official Money List
While the official PGA Tour money list is the benchmark for competitive dominance on American soil, it actually paints a laughably incomplete picture of the true financial empires both men have built.
For Woods, the $121 million he earned between the ropes is essentially pocket change compared to his corporate machinery. Tiger Woods is one of the very few athletes in human history to cross the billionaire threshold. According to financial analysts, his career pretax earnings hover around $2 billion. The overwhelming majority of that wealth was minted in boardroom negotiations, not on putting greens. For 27 years, Tiger was the face of Nike Golf, a partnership that paid him hundreds of millions of dollars. When you add in his massive, era-defining contracts with EA Sports, Gatorade, TaylorMade, Bridgestone, and Monster Energy, alongside his highly successful TGR golf course design firm, Woods operates as a multinational corporation.
McIlroy’s financial footprint, while perhaps not in the billionaire stratosphere of Woods, is similarly staggering when you pull back the curtain. The $114.7 million sitting on his official PGA Tour ledger doesn’t even include all the money he has won playing golf.
The PGA Tour’s official list does not count the season-ending FedEx Cup bonus pool. McIlroy is the only player to win the FedEx Cup three times, banking over $43 million in direct cash from those victories alone. It also ignores the now-defunct Player Impact Program (PIP), which rewarded players for driving fan engagement; McIlroy routinely topped that list, adding another $35 million to his coffers over the last few years. Furthermore, as a truly global player, McIlroy has spent extensive time dominating the European DP World Tour, where he has accrued roughly $68 million in international purses.
When you factor in his off-course corporate deals—anchored by a $100 million apparel contract with Nike and a massive equipment deal with TaylorMade—McIlroy brings in an estimated $35 million annually before he ever hits a golf shot. Through his investment vehicle, Symphony Ventures, he has taken lucrative equity stakes in companies ranging from tech platforms like TickPick to the Alpine Formula 1 team. When you combine his global on-course winnings with his sprawling corporate empire, McIlroy’s true career gross earnings easily exceed $400 million.
We here at CelebrityNetWorth currently estimate Tiger Woods’ net worth at $1.3 billion and Rory McIlroy’s net worth at $250 million. Tiger is 50 years old. Rory is 36. At his current pace, Rory could have another decade of golf dominance left in the tank. How do you think these respective net worths will look in 10 years?
Here’s our updated list of the richest golfers of all time:
- Tiger Woods: $1.3 billion
- Greg Norman: $400 million
- Jack Nicklaus: $400 million
- Phil Mickelson: $300 million
- Rory McIlroy: $250 million
Rory is 14 years younger than Tiger. He’s 35 years younger than Greg Norman. He’s 50 years younger than Jack Nicklaus. And he’s 19 years younger than Phil Mickelson.
How do you think that richest golfers in the world list will look in a decade? Or two? Or five?
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