LPGA to offer $131M in prize money over 33 events by 2025
LPGA golfers will compete for a record $131 million in purse money in 2025, the 75th anniversary season, the tour announced Wednesday.
The LPGA’s 33-event schedule will begin with the Hilton Grand Vacations Championship in Orlando, Florida, starting Jan. 30-Feb. 2 and concludes with the CME Group Tour Championship in Naples, Florida, from Nov. 20-23.
The 2025 schedule includes a new stop at the Black Desert Championship in Ivins, Utah, from May 1-4, and a return to Cancun, Mexico, for the Riviera Maya Open three weeks later. It will be the first LPGA tournament played in Cancun since 2017.
The LPGA will host tournaments in 14 US states and 11 other countries, including two Asian swings in the spring and fall and a European swing in the summer.
“The 2024 season was another historic year for the LPGA Tour, and with this 2025 edition we will continue to build on that growth,” LPGA commissioner Mollie Marcoux Samaan said in a statement. “The program is highlighted by two exciting new events, a new multi-year title for the LPGA Tour’s longest non-mainstream tournament, higher purse sizes, additional benefits that will enhance the athlete experience, improved field flow and a longer period that will give our athletes a well-deserved break after their big career in 2024 .”
The record fee represents a 90% increase to more than $62 million from 2021, the LPGA said. The tour says the majors will offer $83 million in prize money and 16 tournaments will have purses of at least $3 million, including 10 majors and non-Tour Championship events.
On top of the increased purses, 24 events will offer golfers a tour fee, free lodging and/or guaranteed minimum payouts.
The CME Group Tour Championship will have an $11 million purse, including $4 million for the winner, the largest single prize in women’s golf history.
There will be $47 million at stake in five major tournaments, starting with the Chevron Championship in The Woodlands, Texas, on April 24-27. The US Women’s Open will be played at Erin Hills in Wisconsin for the first time from May 29-June 1 followed by the first stop at PGA of America headquarters in Frisco, Texas, for the KPMG Women’s PGA Championship from June 19-22.
The Amundi Evian Championship in France is scheduled for July 10-13, and the main season wraps up three weeks later with the AIG Women’s Open in Wales.
The Hanwha LIFEPLUS International Crown, a 32-player team matchmaking event, returns after a one-year hiatus. The unofficial event will be played at the New Korea Country Club in late October. LPGA golfers will also compete against PGA players in the Grant Thornton Invitational, another unofficial event, in December.
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