The Billionaire’s Game: What Golf’s Wealth Explosion Really Means for the Sport
Look, I’ve been covering professional golf for 35 years, and I’ve watched a lot of things change on the tour. But nothing—and I mean nothing—has fundamentally altered the game’s landscape quite like the explosion in player wealth we’re seeing right now. And it’s not just about the prize money getting bigger, though Lord knows that’s part of it.
When I was caddying for Tom Lehman back in the ’90s, we were thrilled about six-figure purses. Now? We’re talking about players accumulating generational wealth that would make old-money industrialists blush. The question that keeps me up at night isn’t whether this is good or bad—it’s what it means for golf’s soul.
Tiger’s $1.4 Billion Throne
Let’s start with the elephant in the room: Tiger Woods is now the only billionaire golfer on the planet. That’s not just impressive—it’s almost incomprehensible. Here’s a man who didn’t just dominate his sport; he monetized every conceivable angle of it.
Tiger Woods is officially the only billionaire golfer on the planet, a status he achieved in 2022. As of March 2026, he’d nudged ahead of basketball star LeBron James on the list of richest sportsmen in the world.
What strikes me about Tiger’s ascent isn’t just the $121 million in PGA Tour earnings—it’s his business acumen. A golf course design business, Popstroke mini-golf, involvement in TGL: this is a man who understood early that championships alone don’t build empires. In my experience covering the tour, most elite players have one skill: hitting golf balls at an elite level. Tiger has that plus an entirely different business MBA.
The kicker? Even with all his recent on-course struggles, his wealth continues growing. That tells you everything you need to know about diversification in professional sports.
The LIV Effect: Money That Changed Everything
Now here’s where it gets interesting, and where my decades of insider perspective matters. Look at who’s climbing this wealth chart fastest: Greg Norman ($450 million), Phil Mickelson ($350 million), and Jon Rahm ($200 million). Notice a pattern?
Jon Rahm has rocketed up the highest earner charts in recent years after winning majors in 2021 (US Open) and 2023 (The Masters) and securing sponsorship deals with Callaway, Rolex, Mercedes-Benz and VistaJet. But his biggest injection came in 2023 when the Spaniard signed a $300m contract with LIV Golf, reportedly receiving half of that up front.
LIV Golf has fundamentally disrupted the wealth distribution in professional golf. Rahm’s $300 million contract—half paid upfront—represents something we’ve never seen before in golf’s history. When I started covering this game, we measured player earnings in millions accumulated over careers. Now we’re measuring single contracts in the hundreds of millions.
Is this good for the game? That’s complicated. On one hand, it means talented international players like Rahm don’t have to grind for 20 years to build generational wealth. On the other hand, it’s created a two-tier system that frankly concerns me. The traditional tour and LIV are now two competing ecosystems with vastly different economics.
The Design Business Gold Mine
What I find most revealing about this wealth list is how many fortunes were built post-retirement through golf course design. Jack Nicklaus with over 400 layouts worldwide, Gary Player still actively building his empire at 90 years old—these guys cracked the code decades ago.
In my experience, this trend accelerates whenever a marquee player retires. They’ve got name recognition, they understand course architecture from a player’s perspective, and wealthy developers will pay premium prices for that combination. It’s a business model that’s proven remarkably durable.
The Scottie Question
Here’s what the article tantalizes us with: where is Scottie Scheffler? The man has pocketed eyewatering sums for his string of recent victories, won multiple majors, yet doesn’t crack this seven-richest list. That’s not a criticism—Scottie’s still early in his wealth-building journey. But it tells you something important: in professional golf, on-course earnings are just the appetizer. The real wealth comes from what you do off the course.
Scottie’s recent Masters victory in 2025 and consistent dominance should be accelerating his wealth accumulation through endorsements and business ventures. Mark my words: we’ll see him on this list within a decade.
What This Means for Golf’s Future
I think what we’re witnessing is golf’s evolution into a ultra-wealthy performer’s sport. The barrier to entry at the highest levels has always been talent and dedication. But now, to truly maximize your financial potential, you need business sophistication, investment savvy, and off-course opportunities. Not every player has that skill set.
That said, I’m not pessimistic about it. Competition for the best young talent is fiercer than ever, purses are genuinely larger, and opportunities for international players have expanded dramatically. The flipside of LIV’s disruption is that traditional tour purses have increased significantly in response.
Having covered 15 Masters and three decades of professional golf, I’ve learned this: the game adapts. The business of golf has changed, but the competition—the thing that makes it special—remains as compelling as ever. These fortunes are impressive, but they’re built on excellence that still requires everything: talent, dedication, mental toughness, and a little bit of luck.
Tiger might be a billionaire, but he still had to make putts to get there.
