The The Masters has always been about tradition. The green jacket. The roars at Augusta. The history that builds every April. But in 2026, it also became about something else. Money, and a lot of it.
This year’s Masters featured a record $22.5 million purse, the largest ever for one of golf’s four major championships. It is a number that reflects where the sport is right now, and how much the stakes continue to rise at the highest level. And at the center of it all was Rory McIlroy.
The 2026 Masters featured a record $22.5 million in prize money, marking the largest purse ever for one of golf’s four major championships.
Here’s how the top three finishers were paid 💵 pic.twitter.com/NHxjUpq1aT
Rory McIlroy cashes in on history again
McIlroy did more than win. He made history. By capturing his second straight Masters title, he joined an elite group of back-to-back champions that includes Tiger Woods, Nick Faldo, and Jack Nicklaus.
That alone would define most careers. But this win came with a massive financial reward as well. McIlroy took home $4.5 million for the victory, the biggest winner’s share in Masters history.
At a tournament where legacy often outweighs money, this was one of those rare years where both felt just as big.
A new financial benchmark for golf’s biggest stage
The $22.5 million purse is not just a record for the Masters. It is a record across all major championships.
That matters. Golf has seen purses rise steadily in recent years, but the Masters has always been a little different. Prestige came first. Now, the payouts are catching up in a big way.
Here’s how the top of the leaderboard cashed in:
1st: $4.5 million — Rory McIlroy
2nd: $2.43 million — Scottie Scheffler
T-3rd: $1.08 million each — Tyrrell Hatton, Russell Henley, Justin Rose, Cameron Young
And it didn’t stop there. The money kept flowing deep into the field:
5th place: $900,000
6th place: $810,000
7th place: $753,750
10th place: $607,500
12th place: $517,500
Even players finishing outside the top 20 still walked away with significant checks:
20th place: $292,500
25th place: $198,000
30th place: $153,000
That’s the kind of depth that shows just how massive this purse really was.
Why this moment feels bigger than just money
It’s easy to get caught up in the numbers, but the bigger story is what they represent. The Masters has always stood apart because of its history and traditions. Winning means a lifetime invitation, a green jacket, and a permanent place in the sport.
That hasn’t changed. What has changed is the scale. The audience is bigger. The spotlight is brighter. And now, the financial rewards match the moment.
Augusta still delivers what matters most
Even with record payouts, the core of the Masters remains untouched. Players still chase the same thing they always have. A win at Augusta. A moment that lasts forever. The money is bigger now. The stakes are higher.
But as McIlroy showed again, the real prize is still the one you wear, not the one you cash.
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