The Open prize money confirmed as Brian Harman nets record payout for win
Brian Harman is banking a sizeable payout after lifting the Claret Jug after finishing as the runaway The Open Championship winner at Royal Liverpool.
The American finished six strokes clear of the field thanks to a near-perfect putting performance across the four days that left the latter stages of Sunday's play a procession before crowning the new champion. Harman, 36, is now finally a major championship winner.
With that comes considerable remuneration. And after the R&A upped the prize pot to £12.8 million ($16.5m) for this year's tournament, it is a record amount. That is up from the £10.9 million ($14m) handed out at St. Andrew's 12 months ago.
However, those figures are still short of the purse for the calendar's other majors. For Harman, the prestige of winning golf's oldest tournament also comes with the added extra of a few more million going into his bank account.
After winning, he receives a cheque for £2.3 million ($3m). That is half a million up from the figure Cameron Smith earnt following last year's thrilling finish.
Bubba Watson shares details of horror knee injury ahead of LIV Golf debutFor finishing in a tie for second, the Masters champion Jon Rahm will add £840k ($1.1m) to his earnings for the year. As does Jason Day, Sepp Straka and Tom Kim, who all also finished seven under.
Behind them, Rory McIlroy and Emiliano Grillo sit in a tie for sixth place and will each receive £430k ($550k) for their efforts. In eight, Cameron Young and Shubhankar Sharma have £310k ($400k) coming their way.
Rounding out the top ten, Matthew Jordan, Max Homa and Tommy Fleetwood are making £240k ($308k) for their four days of play. Below is the full prize breakdown
2023 Open Championship prize money
1st: Brian Harman - £2.33m ($3m)
2nd: Jon Rahm, Jason Day, Tom Kim, Sepp Straka - £840k ($1.08m) each
6th: Rory McIlroy, Emiliano Grillo - £430k ($550k) each
8th: Cameron Young, Shubhankar Sharma - £310k ($400k) each
10th: Tommy Fleetwood, Max Homa, Matthew Jordan - £240k ($300k) each
13th: Henrik Stenson, Hideki Matsuyama, Thomas Detry - £190k ($240k) each
16th: Laurie Canter, Xander Schauffele, Alex Fitzpatrick, Viktor Hovland - £150k ($190k) each
Gareth Bale to face Yahoo billionaire as he tees up on PGA Tour for first time20th: Tyrell Hatton, Sungjae Im, Antoine Rozner - £130k ($160k) each
23rd: Adrian Meronk, Scottie Scheffler, Matthew Southgate, Louis Oosthuizen, Alex Noren, Stewart Cink, Byeong Hun An, Rickie Fowler, Jordan Spieth, Nicolai Hojgaard - £94k ($120k) each
33rd: Adam Scott, Oliver Wilson, Patrick Cantlay, Richard Bland, Wyndham Clark, Cameron Smith, Patrick Reed, Romain Langasque - £65k ($84k) each
41st: Marcel Siem, Victor Perez, Hurly Long, Jordan Smith, J.T. Poston, Alexander Bjork, Min Woo Lee, Matt Fitzpatrick - £46k ($59k) each
49th: Christiaan Bezuidenhout, Abraham Ancer, Brendon Todd - £36k ($46k) each
52nd: Ryan Fox, Corey Conners, Michael Stewart - £34k ($43k) each
55th: Andrew Putnam, Gary Woodland, Adrian Otaegui, Zach Johnson - £32k ($41k) each
59th: Brandon Robinson-Thompson - £31k ($41k)
60th: Scott Stallings, Bryson DeChambeau, Kurt Kitayama, Rikuya Hoshino £31k ($40k) each
64th: Padraig Harrington, Brooks Koepka, Richie Ramsay, Guido Migliozzi £30k ($39k) each
68th: Danny Willett, David Lingmerth, Sami Valimaki £30k ($38k) each
71st: Robert MacIntyre, Thomas Pieters, Joost Luiten £29k ($38k) each
74th: Christo Lamprecht (amateur), Thirston Lawrence - £29k ($37k)
76th: Zack Fischer - £29k ($37k)