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FedEx Cup

Championship trophy for the PGA Tour


Championship trophy for the PGA Tour

FieldValue
titleFedEx Cup
current_season2025 FedEx Cup Playoffs
logoFedex Cup logo.svg
pixels250px
sportGolf
founded2007
countryBased in the United States
championENG Tommy Fleetwood
most_champsNIR Rory McIlroy (3)
website
TVCBS Sports
NBC Sports/Golf Channel

NBC Sports/Golf Channel The FedEx Cup is the championship trophy for the PGA Tour. Its introduction in 2007 marked the first time that men's professional golf had a playoff system. Since its inception, the competition has been sponsored by FedEx. In 2022, the PGA Tour added the FedEx St. Jude Championship to the tournament, expanding the partnership with St. Jude Children's Research Hospital as the tournament's designated charity.

The FedEx Cup is a season long competition. Points are awarded based on finishing position in all PGA Tour sanctioned tournaments. The leading points earners throughout the regular season qualify for the playoffs. Players are further eliminated after each of the first two playoff events, with the leading 30 points earners qualifying for the Tour Championship.

Tommy Fleetwood is the current champion, after he won the Tour Championship in 2025.

Rory McIlroy has the most titles with three. The only other player to win multiple FedEx Cups is Tiger Woods, with two.

Rule changes

The PGA Tour adjusted the rules around the FedEx Cup in each of the two years after its introduction in 2007. Each set of changes was introduced to address issues that arose the previous year, particularly with the playoffs portion of the FedEx Cup:

  • In February 2008, the changes were designed to allow more golfers a chance to improve their positions on the points list as the playoffs progress. The changes involve a tightening of the playoff reset points and awarding more points to playoff participants. This is effectively a penalty on those players who skip a playoff event.
  • In November 2008, the changes were designed to help ensure that the championship would not be won until every golfer who qualified finished playing the final playoff event. This resulted from the fact that Vijay Singh had accumulated enough points through the first three playoff events in 2008 to guarantee that he would win the Cup without finishing the final event.
  • In 2013, FedEx Cup points began to determine the 125 golfers who would retain their PGA Tour playing privileges (popularly known as "tour cards") for the following season. Previously, this was determined by position on the tour's money list at the end of the year.

In 2019, the total bonus pool was increased by $25 million to $70 million, with the FedEx Cup champion earning $15 million. Among that $70 million was a $10 million regular-season bonus pool, sponsored by Wyndham, tied to the final regular-season FedEx Cup standings. This recognized the 10 players who earn the most FedEx Cup points through the Wyndham Championship, with the regular-season champion earning $2 million. Beginning in 2021, the regular-season bonus pool became sponsored by Comcast Business. As of 2022, the regular-season bonus pool was $20 million with the champion earning $4 million. Also in 2019, the FedEx Cup Playoffs finale, the Tour Championship, instituted a strokes-based system, FedEx Cup Starting Strokes. In 2022, the FedEx Cup bonus pool purse increased to $75 million, with the winner's share coming in at $18,000,000.

At the conclusion of the regular season (after the Wyndham Championship), the top 70 players in the FedEx Cup standings become eligible to play in the FedEx Cup Playoffs, a series of three events over the month of August (from 2007 to 2018, the FedEx Cup Playoffs included four events).

Points earned during the PGA Tour regular season carry over to the playoffs. The FedEx Cup Playoffs events feature a progressive cut, with fields of 70 for FedEx St. Jude Championship, 50 for the BMW Championship and 30 for the Tour Championship held annually at East Lake Golf Club, Atlanta, Georgia, where the FedEx Cup champion is determined.

In the event an eligible player is unable or chooses not to play, the field is shortened and no alternates are added. Points from the missing positions are not awarded. The FedEx St. Jude Championship, the BMW Championship and Tour Championship are no-cut events.

The first two playoffs events award 2,000 points to the winner (quadruple points of regular-season events).

The Tour Championship features a strokes-based system (FedEx Cup Starting Strokes) instituted for the first time in 2019. At the time, the FedEx Cup points leader after the first two playoffs events begins the Tour Championship at 10-under par. The no. 2 player started at 8 under. The no. 3 player started at 7 under; the no. 4 player started at 6 under; the no. 5 player started at 5 under. Players 6–10 started at 4 under; players 11–15 started at 3 under; players 16–20 started at 2 under; players 21–25 started at 1 under; and players 26–30 started at even par. At the Tour Championship, the player with the lowest aggregate score over 72 holes when combined with his FedEx Cup Starting Strokes wins the Tour Championship and was also crowned FedEx Cup champion. The Tour Championship win is considered an official victory and the FedEx Cup champion also earned a bonus of $25 million and a five-year PGA Tour exemption.

In 2025, the bonus pool was raised to $100 million and the rules of the final event, the Tour Championship, were changed from the previous dispersed stroke system so that the 30 players remaining all start with the same score. The winner over the course of four days is crowned the champion and wins $10 million from that event alone.

Format

Qualifying for the playoffs

The season structure changed beginning in the fall of 2013, but the qualifying criteria have not changed since 2009.

The first part of the season is known as the "regular season" starting in January, culminating in three events called the "playoffs" in August.

Players earn points in each event they play. For all regular-season PGA Tour events, 500 FedEx Cup points are awarded to the winner, with points also being earned by every player making the cut. In "signature events", 700 FedEx Cup points go to the winner, while 750 points are given to the champion of the four majors and the Players. Lastly, 300 points are given to the winner of any event played in the same week as a major or signature event.

The goal is to be among the top 70 points leaders following the final event of the regular season.

Only those players who are regular full-time members of the PGA Tour earn points. A non-member who joins the PGA Tour in mid-season is eligible to earn points in the first event he plays after officially joining the Tour.

At the end of the regular season, the top 70 players participate in the playoffs.

The number of points awarded for winning each playoff event is 2000, which is four times the amount awarded for a typical regular season tournament. Points won in playoff events are added to those for the regular season, and the fields are reduced as the playoffs proceed. Since 2013 the top 125 on the FedEx Cup points list also retain their tour cards for the following season.

After the second playoff event, as of 2019, the FedEx Cup points leader after the first two playoff events begins the Tour Championship at 10-under par. The No. 2 player starts at 8 under. The No. 3 player starts at 7 under; the No. 4 player starts at 6 under; the No. 5 player starts at 5 under. Players 6–10 start at 4 under; players 11–15 start at 3 under; players 16–20 start at 2 under; players 21–25 start at 1 under; and players 26–30 start at even par. At the Tour Championship, the player with the lowest aggregate score over 72 holes when combined with his FedEx Cup Starting Strokes wins the Tour Championship and is also crowned FedEx Cup champion. The Tour Championship win is considered an official victory and the FedEx Cup champion also earns a bonus of $18 million and a five-year PGA Tour exemption.

Playoff events

EventPlayers
FedEx St. Jude ChampionshipTop 70 points leaders
*(after the Wyndham Championship)*
BMW ChampionshipTop 50 points leaders
*(after the FedEx St. Jude Championship)*
Tour ChampionshipTop 30 points leaders
*(after the BMW Championship)*

If an eligible player skips a playoff event, no alternates are added and the field is reduced accordingly.

Playoff rewards

The Trophy

As of 2022, the player with the most points after the Tour Championship wins the FedEx Cup itself and $18 million of a $75 million bonus fund. The runner-up gets $6.5 million, 3rd place $5 million, 4th place $4 million, 5th place $3 million, and so on down to $85,000 for 126th through 150th place. Beginning with the 2013 season, non-exempt players who finish 126th-150th in the FedEx Cup are given conditional PGA Tour status, but can attempt to improve their status via qualifying school.

In 2007, the money was placed into their tax-deferred retirement accounts, not given in cash. Players under 45 are not able to access any 2007 FedEx Cup bonuses (as opposed to prize money earned in the tournaments themselves) until turning 45. They can invest their bonus in any manner they choose, and once they turn 45, can choose to defer payment until they turn 60 or play in fewer than 15 PGA Tour events in a season. Once a player chooses to take payments from his fund, he will receive monthly checks for five years.

Because of possible legislation affecting deferred retirement plans, in the wake of business stories that speculated that Tiger Woods could amass a $1 billion retirement fund if he won the FedEx Cup six more times, the PGA Tour announced a change to the payout system effective in 2008. The top 10 finishers now receive the bulk of their FedEx Cup bonuses in cash up front; for example, the 2008 FedEx Cup champion received $9 million up front and $1 million in his tax-deferred retirement account. FedEx Cup bonuses to finishers below the top 10 are still paid solely into the players' retirement accounts.

The winner of the FedEx Cup also receives a five-year exemption on the PGA Tour, mirroring the exemption that was given to the tour's leading money winner prior to 2017. Before the change in format in 2019, that made it impossible for the FedEx Cup and the Tour Championship to be won by two different players, the Tour Championship winner received a three-year exemption. Winners of other playoff events receive only the standard 2-year exemption.

Since 2013, the FedEx Cup standings have been the primary means of determining exemption status for the following year; the 125 players who qualify for the playoffs are fully exempt. Players who finish 126th through 150th, if not exempt through other means such as a recent tournament win, retain conditional status; these, along with finishers 151 through 200, are eligible for the Korn Ferry Tour Finals, through which they may regain their cards if not already exempt.

Before 2013, the money list rather than the FedEx Cup standings determined exemption status. Since the money and point distributions were different and the money list was not finalized until after the Fall Series, it was common for players to qualify for the playoffs and still lose their card at the end of the season.

Winners

YearWinnerScore/
pointsMarginPlayoffsRegular seasonEventsWinsRankingPointsEvents
[2025](2025-fedex-cup-playoffs)ENG Tommy Fleetwood−183 strokes3152,92318
[2024](2024-fedex-cup-playoffs)USA Scottie Scheffler−304 strokes3116,61518
[2023](2023-fedex-cup-playoffs)NOR Viktor Hovland−275 strokes3271,79520
[2022](2022-fedex-cup-playoffs)NIR Rory McIlroy (3)−211 stroke3162,10413
[2021](2021-fedex-cup-playoffs)USA Patrick Cantlay−211 stroke3232,05621
[2020](2020-fedex-cup-playoffs)USA Dustin Johnson−213 strokes32151,07111
[2019](2019-fedex-cup-playoffs)NIR Rory McIlroy (2)−184 strokes3152,84218
[2018](2018-fedex-cup-playoffs)ENG Justin Rose2,260414041,99114
[2017](2017-fedex-cup-playoffs)USA Justin Thomas3,0006604122,68921
[2016](2016-fedex-cup-playoffs)NIR Rory McIlroy3,120740423697314
[2015](2015-fedex-cup-playoffs)USA Jordan Spieth3,8001,4934114,16921
[2014](2014-fedex-cup-playoffs)USA Billy Horschel4,7501,650426972223
[2013](2013-fedex-cup-playoffs)SWE Henrik Stenson4,7502,0074291,42614
[2012](2012-fedex-cup-playoffs)USA Brandt Snedeker4,1001,27341191,19418
[2011](2011-fedex-cup-playoffs)USA Bill Haas2,7601541151,27322
[2010](2010-fedex-cup-playoffs)USA Jim Furyk2,9802523131,69118
[2009](2009-fedex-cup-playoffs)USA Tiger Woods (2)4,0001,0804113,34113
[2008](2008-fedex-cup-playoffs)FIJ Vijay Singh125,10155142715,03419
[2007](2007-fedex-cup-playoffs)USA Tiger Woods123,03312,57832130,57413

Individual tournament winners

YearFedEx St. Jude ChampionshipBMW ChampionshipTour ChampionshipYearThe Northern TrustBMW ChampionshipTour Championship
2025ENG Justin Rose (2/2)USA Scottie Scheffler (2/2)ENG Tommy Fleetwood
2024JPN Hideki MatsuyamaUSA Keegan Bradley (2/2)USA Scottie Scheffler (1/2)
2023USA Lucas GloverNOR Viktor Hovland (1/2)NOR Viktor Hovland (2/2)
2022USA Will ZalatorisUSA Patrick Cantlay (3/3)NIR Rory McIlroy (6/6)
2021USA Tony FinauUSA Patrick Cantlay (1/3)USA Patrick Cantlay (2/3)
2020USA Dustin Johnson (5/6)ESP Jon RahmUSA Dustin Johnson (6/6)
2019USA Patrick Reed (2/2)USA Justin Thomas (2/2)NIR Rory McIlroy (5/6)
YearThe Northern TrustDell Technologies ChampionshipBMW ChampionshipTour Championship
2018USA Bryson DeChambeau (1/2)USA Bryson DeChambeau (2/2)USA Keegan Bradley (1/2)USA Tiger Woods (4/4)
2017USA Dustin Johnson (4/6)USA Justin Thomas (1/2)AUS Marc LeishmanUSA Xander Schauffele
2016USA Patrick Reed (1/2)NIR Rory McIlroy (3/6)USA Dustin Johnson (3/6)NIR Rory McIlroy (4/6)
2015AUS Jason Day (1/2)USA Rickie FowlerAUS Jason Day (2/2)USA Jordan Spieth
2014USA Hunter MahanUSA Chris KirkUSA Billy Horschel (1/2)USA Billy Horschel (2/2)
2013AUS Adam ScottSWE Henrik Stenson (1/2)USA Zach JohnsonSWE Henrik Stenson (2/2)
2012USA Nick WatneyNIR Rory McIlroy (1/6)NIR Rory McIlroy (2/6)USA Brandt Snedeker
2011USA Dustin Johnson (2/6)USA Webb SimpsonENG Justin Rose (1/2)USA Bill Haas
2010USA Matt KucharUSA Charley HoffmanUSA Dustin Johnson (1/6)USA Jim Furyk
2009USA Heath SlocumUSA Steve Stricker (2/2)USA Tiger Woods (3/4)USA Phil Mickelson (2/2)
2008FJI Vijay Singh (1/2)FJI Vijay Singh (2/2)COL Camilo Villegas (1/2)COL Camilo Villegas (2/2)
2007USA Steve Stricker (1/2)USA Phil Mickelson (1/2)USA Tiger Woods (1/4)USA Tiger Woods (2/4)

Career FedEx Cup bonus leaders

PlayerTotal2007200820092010201120122013201420152016201720182019202020212022202320242025
NIR Rory McIlroy56,0521403,0001252,00025010,00011027515,00096058418,0004,0001,608
USA Scottie Scheffler35,7172,5004675,7502,00025,000
USA Xander Schauffele29,2832,0002505,0004,5002,2004,0006,5004,833
USA Tiger Woods28,59410,00011010,000133322,0003,0003,000169150
USA Dustin Johnson27,057322701,0001,5006002801757003,0001,5001,50040015,0001,100
USA Justin Thomas25,94015529010,0007003,5004,5003,0002,750140905
NOR Viktor Hovland22,4134982,20071518,0001,000
USA Patrick Cantlay17,57718022547818615,0001,7503,000755
USA Collin Morikawa12,50012,500
USA Jordan Spieth16,96170025010,0005503,000165167101498825530175
ENG Justin Rose15,64524570752481,00080050030060012055010,00043010570120221191
USA Jim Furyk15,4073001,0001,50010,0001402502701,5001807532160
USA Billy Horschel14,4433224510,0001101251331,000168395890600130615
SWE Henrik Stenson13,863136327010,0001153,000140155110105
USA Brandt Snedeker12,95522514515013860010,0002907521025080135451101105
AUS Adam Scott12,422290128702302452001,500290701,500801201,9001711055501404,833
USA Bill Haas11,545328013416510,00015520524319012914270
ESP Jon Rahm11,2781,0002106833,0005,000715670
FJI Vijay Singh11,27250010,0007511018515032757075
KOR Im Sung-jae10,8255137504985,7505652,750
USA Phil Mickelson9,0242,0007003,0002802501,000550110110245145220164110140
USA Steve Stricker8,6823,0002702,0007002352252,00070807032
USA Sahith Theegala8,2705202507,500

Source

References

References

  1. "FedEx St. Jude Championship 2024".
  2. (February 28, 2008). "The Changes: What to know". PGA Tour.
  3. (September 24, 2011). "Five key structural changes about '09 FedExCup". PGA Tour.
  4. Dell, John. (August 23, 2012). "Web.com impact expanded with qualifying changes". PGA Tour.
  5. (March 30, 2021). "Comcast Business Sponsors Tour Top 10".
  6. (August 8, 2022). "Scottie Scheffler finishes No. 1 in Comcast Business Tour Top 10". PGA Tour.
  7. "FedEx Cup 101". PGA Tour.
  8. (February 7, 2022). "FedEx Cup bonus pool, purse, winner's share, prize money payout for 2022 and beyond".
  9. "PGA Tour FedExCup Overview". PGA Tour.
  10. "How it works: FedExCup Playoffs". PGA Tour.
  11. "PGA Tour FedExCup Overview". PGA Tour.
  12. Van Sickle, Gary. (August 21, 2007). "A Guide to the FedEx Cup".
  13. Wetzel, Dan. (September 4, 2007). "Billion to one". [[Yahoo Sports]].
  14. (November 13, 2007). "PGA Tour will have two-week break for Ryder Cup". ESPN.
  15. "FedExCup Bonus Money". PGA Tour.
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