The Fortinet Founders Cup and What the LPGA’s Prize Money Shuffle Really Tells Us
After 35 years covering professional golf, I’ve learned that prize money tells a story—sometimes a complicated one. The LPGA Tour’s Fortinet Founders Cup at Sharon Heights Golf & Country Club this week offers a fascinating case study in how the women’s game is navigating its own economic realities in 2026.
On the surface, it looks straightforward enough: a $3 million purse returning to its 2021-2024 levels after dipping to $2 million last year, with Yealimi Noh claiming victory in that reduced-purse edition. That’s the headline. But what strikes me about this situation is what the fluctuation actually reveals about the current state of LPGA sponsorship and, frankly, the broader conversation around women’s professional golf.

Money Matters—But It’s Complicated
Let’s talk numbers first. The winner at this week’s event will pocket $450,000, which is a respectable check by any measure. But here’s where my experience as a longtime tour observer kicks in: look at what happens to prize money distribution as you move down the leaderboard. Making the cut guarantees “almost $7,000,” and finishing inside the top six pushes you into six-figure territory. That’s a meaningful difference.
“The overall prize money payout is back up to its former number in 2026, with a cool $450,000 finding its way to the winner at the end of the tournament. That is before a number of different factors reduce how much money pro golfers really earn.”
I’ll be honest with you—that last sentence caught my attention. After watching purses grow across the PGA Tour landscape over the past decade, there’s an implicit acknowledgment here that the sticker price of a purse isn’t always what players actually take home. Taxes, management fees, caddie percentages, travel costs—the real money shrinks faster than a winter golf ball in the cold.
The Prize Money Breakdown
| Position | Prize Money |
|---|---|
| 1st | $450,000 |
| 2nd | $282,976 |
| 3rd | $205,279 |
| 4th | $158,799 |
| 5th | $127,816 |
| 6th | $104,576 |
| 10th | $68,944 |
| 20th | $35,633 |
| 30th | $24,324 |
| Cut (65th) | $6,971 |
What I notice here is the steep drop-off. Go from first place to tenth, and you’ve lost 85% of your earnings. This isn’t unique to the LPGA—I saw similar patterns when I caddied for Tom Lehman back in the ’90s—but it does highlight the winner-take-most dynamics that dominate professional golf. The players who are already playing well have enormous financial incentive to play even better, while mid-field finishers face a pretty significant cliff.
Context Matters: The Asian Swing and Southwest Return
The Founders Cup arrives as the LPGA returns from a three-week Asian swing, kicking off what amounts to a brief southwestern road show. Arizona and Nevada follow, before the tour heads back to California in mid-April. I think this routing matters more than casual fans might realize.
“The LPGA Tour has returned to US shores after a three-week spell in Asia, and the Fortinet Founders Cup is the first stop on a short trip around the country’s south-west corner.”
Having spent decades around professional golf, I understand the exhaustion factor of international travel. Three weeks in Asia is substantial. Getting players back on US soil, in a relatively compact region, speaks to practical scheduling considerations. But it also reflects where sponsor interest currently sits—the Southwest corridor and California have market appeal, whether that’s local sponsorships or venue prestige.
The Real Prize: Race to CME Globe Points
Here’s something casual observers often miss: the cash purse isn’t always the whole story. The Fortinet Founders Cup offers 500 Race to CME Globe points to the winner—that’s currency of a different kind. These points factor into the season-long race, which culminates in significant financial rewards and, importantly, playing rights for coming seasons.
“As well as the direct financial rewards, there are 500 Race To CME Globe points on the line for the winner and the chance to lock up playing rights for the coming seasons.”
In my experience covering the tour, this is where strategy enters the equation. A player climbing the CME standings gets access, credibility, and leverage—sometimes worth more than a single week’s paycheck. For a mid-tier LPGA competitor, finishing second or third here might be less about the immediate cash and more about staying competitive in the larger seasonal narrative.
What This Moment Represents
The fluctuation in this event’s purse—from $2 million back to $3 million—tells me that LPGA sponsorship remains in a state of recalibration. It’s not crisis territory; it’s adaptation. We’re in an era where global sponsors are testing markets, where regional events compete with season-long narratives, and where the women’s game continues building momentum without the deep-pocketed institutional support that men’s golf sometimes takes for granted.
That’s actually encouraging. The fact that the Fortinet Founders Cup exists at all, with a $3 million purse and significant CME points attached, reflects real progress. Yes, the year-to-year fluctuation is worth noting. But I’ve covered enough golf to know that tournaments and tours are built brick by brick, sponsor by sponsor, season by season.
The LPGA’s southwest swing this spring, anchored by this week’s event at Sharon Heights, represents the tour doing exactly what professional sports need to do: adapting, competing, and moving forward. The players here will compete for real money, real points, and real playing rights. That’s the business of professional golf—and it’s working.
