FedEx Cup
The FedEx Cup is the PGA Tour's annual season-long championship competition, established in 2007 as the first playoff system in men's professional golf, where players earn points across a series of tournaments to qualify for postseason events that determine the overall winner.[1] The format combines a 36-event regular season with the FedEx Cup Playoffs—a trio of high-stakes tournaments that progressively narrow the field from 70 players to 30—culminating at the TOUR Championship at East Lake Golf Club in Atlanta, Georgia.[2] The champion receives the FedEx Cup trophy and a $10 million bonus from a total $100 million prize pool, with payouts distributed to the top performers based on final standings.[1] Announced by the PGA Tour in November 2005 to inject drama and viewer interest into the season's conclusion, the FedEx Cup debuted in 2007 with Tiger Woods as its inaugural champion after he won the TOUR Championship.[3] The system has undergone several refinements, including adjustments to points multipliers and field sizes; a significant change in 2025 eliminated the starting strokes format at the TOUR Championship, reverting to a pure 72-hole stroke-play event where all 30 qualifiers begin at even par, with the lowest scorer claiming victory.[4] Notable multiple winners include Rory McIlroy, who has secured the title three times (2016, 2019, 2022)—the most in its history—alongside Tiger Woods and others who have shaped its legacy through dramatic finishes. The 2025 champion was Tommy Fleetwood.[5] In the regular season, spanning January to August, PGA Tour members accumulate FedEx Cup points primarily through finishing positions, with event winners earning 500 points, runners-up 300, and points decreasing thereafter; Signature Events provide 700 points to winners, while major championships and The Players Championship award 750 points to reward elite performances.[6] The top 70 point-earners advance to the playoffs: the FedEx St. Jude Championship (top 70, no cut, winner earns 2,000 points), followed by the BMW Championship (top 50 advance, also 2,000 points to the winner), and finally the TOUR Championship (top 30, where the lowest scorer wins the FedEx Cup).[7] Post-playoffs, the seven-event FedEx Cup Fall series enables players ranked 51–125 to gain Official World Golf Ranking points, exemptions, and improved priority status for the following season's tournaments.[8]History
Inception
The FedEx Cup was announced on November 2, 2005, by PGA Tour Commissioner Tim Finchem, marking the introduction of a season-long points competition designed to establish a championship with prestige rivaling that of golf's four major tournaments.[9] Finchem aimed to create a narrative arc across the entire PGA Tour schedule that would elevate the significance of non-major events and culminate in high-stakes playoffs. The structure drew inspiration from NASCAR's Chase for the Championship, adapting a points-based playoff format to inject drama, reset opportunities, and a climactic finish into professional golf, which traditionally lacked such a system.[10] Central to the announcement was the title sponsorship partnership with FedEx Corporation, which secured naming rights for the competition through an initial six-year agreement running from 2007 to 2012, later extended multiple times including through 2018.[11] The name "FedEx Cup" was chosen to evoke the company's core theme of reliable delivery, symbolizing the transport of the season's accumulated points and performance to a grand culmination in the playoffs, while aligning with FedEx's branding as a logistics leader.[12] This corporate tie-in not only provided substantial financial backing but also underscored the Tour's strategy to leverage high-profile partnerships for enhanced visibility. The primary objectives of the FedEx Cup were to boost fan interest and television viewership by making every tournament count toward an overarching championship, thereby addressing perceptions of waning engagement in the regular season, and to motivate top players with incentives beyond weekly purses.[13] Finchem emphasized that the format would generate playoff-like excitement, sustain audience attention through the fall, and drive significant TV revenue, transforming the PGA Tour into a more dynamic, narrative-driven product.[14] For its debut in 2007, the competition featured a $35 million bonus pool—the largest performance-based payout in sports history at the time—with $10 million going to the overall winner, further incentivizing participation and performance across the 33 regular-season events.[15]Early development and initial seasons
The FedEx Cup debuted in 2007 as a season-long competition on the PGA Tour, featuring points accumulation across regular-season events leading to a four-event playoff series. The initial playoff field comprised the top 125 players in FedEx Cup standings, with points awarded based on finishing positions and elevated allocations for majors and The Players Championship to emphasize their prestige. Tiger Woods clinched the inaugural title by winning the Tour Championship, amassing 123,033 points and securing both the tournament victory and the season-long championship.[3] The 2007 bonus structure offered a $35 million total pool, including a $10 million payout to the Cup winner and distributions to the top five finishers, marking a substantial incentive aimed at elevating end-of-season engagement.[16][3] In 2008, Vijay Singh captured the FedEx Cup after strong performances in the early playoff events, but his lead grew insurmountable midway through the series, highlighting limitations in maintaining suspense until the finale. This outcome prompted the PGA Tour to introduce a "reset" mechanism for 2009, adjusting standings before the Tour Championship to equalize opportunities among qualifiers and prevent early resolutions.[17] Tiger Woods won his second FedEx Cup in 2009, entering the Tour Championship as the points leader and finishing second in the event to claim the bonus. Early iterations of the playoffs drew criticism for diminishing the value of regular-season achievements through aggressive points scaling in postseason events, as well as concerns about player fatigue from the late-summer schedule compression following a demanding 30-plus event regular season.[18][19] The 2007 Tour Championship benefited from heightened interest, averaging 6.6 million viewers across its broadcast rounds, a notable uptick from prior non-playoff iterations of the event.[20]Major rule evolutions
The FedEx Cup playoffs underwent a significant overhaul in 2013 to enhance competitiveness and reduce predictability in outcomes, particularly following criticisms that dominant players like Tiger Woods could secure the title with minimal late-season risk. Previously, the qualification thresholds were top 144 for the first event, top 120 for the second, top 70 for the third, and top 30 for the fourth; the 2013 format adjusted these to top 125 for The Barclays, top 100 for the Deutsche Bank Championship, top 70 for the BMW Championship, and top 30 for The Tour Championship, while maintaining four events overall. This restructuring aimed to create more elimination pressure and drama, responding to concerns from the Woods-dominated era (2007–2009) where the points leader often coasted to victory. In 2019, the PGA Tour further refined the playoffs to streamline the schedule and amplify season-long stakes, reducing the events from four to three: The Northern Trust (top 100 qualifiers), the BMW Championship (top 70 advancing), and The Tour Championship (top 30). A key innovation was the introduction of starting strokes at The Tour Championship, where all 30 players began at even par but received a handicap based on FedExCup standings—the leader started at 10-under par, with strokes decreasing sequentially by one until the 30th place at even par—to balance rewarding regular-season performance with on-course competition. This format sought to mitigate the predictability of prior years by ensuring the points leader had an advantage without guaranteeing victory, while shifting the playoffs earlier in August to avoid clashing with NFL season openings. The adjustment boosted engagement. Subsequent updates from 2023 onward focused on elevating elite events amid the introduction of eight Signature Events in 2024, which featured elevated purses ($20 million each) and adjusted FedExCup points multipliers—winners earning 700 points compared to 500 for standard full-field events—to concentrate talent and points in high-profile tournaments. These tweaks aimed to heighten late-season intensity without overhauling the core playoff structure. For 2025, following Scottie Scheffler's dominant 2024 victory, the PGA Tour confirmed no sweeping reforms but implemented targeted enhancements, including the elimination of starting strokes at The Tour Championship so all 30 players start at even par in a pure 72-hole stroke play event, alongside minor points adjustments for Signature Events (e.g., slight reductions beyond top finishes to balance distribution). The total bonus pool remained at $100 million, distributed in three stages: approximately $20 million post-regular season to the top 10 performers, additional payouts post-BMW Championship to the top 30, and final bonuses at the TOUR Championship to the top 30 (with the winner earning $10 million from the event plus cumulative totals up to $25 million). The 2025 TOUR Championship, under the new even-par start format, was won by Tommy Fleetwood, marking his first PGA Tour victory and FedEx Cup title. These evolutions collectively addressed historical critiques of "dynasty" dominance by promoting broader contention, as seen in varied winners since 2013.[21][1][22]Format
Points system in regular season
The FedEx Cup regular season points system rewards players based on their finishing positions in official PGA Tour tournaments from January through August, fostering competition across a diverse schedule of events. Points are distributed according to predefined tables tailored to each event's category, emphasizing performance in high-stakes competitions while ensuring accessibility for all PGA Tour members. This structure, in place since refinements in 2019, prioritizes consistency and achievement over the season rather than isolated results.[1] The season commences each January with a complete reset of FedEx Cup points to zero for all players, enabling a fresh start regardless of prior-year performance. The 2025 regular season features 36 events, encompassing full-field tournaments, eight signature events, The Players Championship, and the four major championships. While the top 125 players in the final regular-season standings earn exempt status for the following year, every PGA Tour member accumulates points toward the overall FedEx Cup rankings, with the top 70 advancing to the playoffs.[2][23] In standard full-field events, points follow a tiered scale based on position, awarding 500 points to the winner, 300 to second place, and 195 to third, with diminishing returns down to 6 points for 70th place. Signature events, introduced in 2023 to highlight elite fields and elevated purses, double the impact for top performers by granting 700 points to the winner—approximately 40% more than regular events—while maintaining a similar descending scale for other positions. The Players Championship and majors amplify this further, offering 750 points to winners to underscore their global prestige, with adjusted distributions that slightly reduce points from seventh place onward to balance the scale.[1][24] Points are not calculated via earnings multipliers in the current format; instead, each event has a fixed distribution table, with no adjustments for field strength in opposite-field tournaments beyond the standard allocation to maintain equity. Team events such as the Presidents Cup do not contribute individual FedEx Cup points, as they focus on national team play rather than stroke-play rankings. These accumulated regular-season points directly influence playoff qualification thresholds.[1]Qualifying criteria for playoffs
The FedEx Cup Playoffs begin immediately after the conclusion of the regular season, which ends with the Wyndham Championship in late August. The top 70 players in the FedExCup standings, based on points accumulated during the regular season, qualify for the opening playoff event, the FedEx St. Jude Championship.[1] These players also automatically retain their full PGA Tour membership status for the following season, while the overall top 125 in season-long FedExCup points—determined after the subsequent FedExCup Fall events—secure exempt status for full-field events and other privileges.[8] Qualification emphasizes consistent performance across the 36-event regular season, where points are awarded based on finishes in official PGA Tour tournaments. From the FedEx St. Jude Championship, the field narrows progressively: the top 50 players in updated FedExCup standings advance to the BMW Championship, and the top 30 proceed to the season-ending TOUR Championship.[1] Points earned in the playoffs carry forward and influence final season rankings, but initial entry hinges solely on regular-season accumulation. Players outside the top 70 after the Wyndham Championship do not enter the playoffs but can still compete in the FedExCup Fall series of seven tournaments to accumulate points toward the top 125 threshold for card retention.[8] Historically, playoff qualification thresholds have evolved to heighten competition and streamline the postseason. From the FedEx Cup's inception in 2007 through 2012, the top 144 players qualified for the first of four playoff events. This expanded to a consistent top 125 starting field from 2013 to 2018, coinciding with the use of FedExCup points to determine the 125 players retaining full Tour cards. In 2019, the format shifted to three events with the top 100 qualifying for the opener, aiming to elevate field quality and reduce fatigue. In 2023, the threshold tightened further to the top 70, marking the smallest starting field to date and aligning with broader Tour adjustments to eligibility and event structures.[23][25] Special provisions exist for exemptions and tie resolutions to ensure fairness. Players granted medical extensions—typically for up to nine starts following injury or illness—can accumulate FedExCup points during these events toward playoff qualification or the top 125, with any shortfall allowing additional opportunities in the following season. In cases of ties for the 70th position or subsequent cuts, rankings are resolved first by year-to-date official PGA Tour earnings, followed by a sudden-death playoff if necessary for event entry.[26] In the 2024 playoffs, for example, 70 players qualified after the Wyndham Championship, led by Scottie Scheffler with 5,992.75 FedExCup points—more than double his nearest rival—highlighting the dominance required for top seeding.[27]Playoff qualification thresholds
The FedEx Cup Playoffs employ a progressive elimination system across three events to narrow the field and heighten competition. The initial field consists of the top 70 players from the regular season standings entering the FedEx St. Jude Championship, where points from the regular season fully carry over and the event awards 2,000 points to the winner (four times the standard full-field allocation). Following this first playoff event, the top 50 players in the combined standings—incorporating regular-season and St. Jude points—advance to the BMW Championship, eliminating the bottom 20 competitors.[1][7] At the BMW Championship, the field of 50 again competes without a cut, awarding 2,000 points to the winner as well, with standings updated to include performance from the St. Jude event. The top 30 players in these cumulative standings then qualify for the Tour Championship, eliminating the remaining 20. Unlike prior years, there is no points reset after the first playoff event; instead, ongoing accumulation determines advancement through the second event, allowing strong performances to significantly alter rankings.[28][29] For the 2025 season, the Tour Championship reverted to a pure 72-hole stroke-play format, with all 30 qualifiers starting at even par and no virtual starting strokes applied, a change implemented to simplify the finale and emphasize on-course play. The lowest total score determines the FedEx Cup champion and season-long bonuses. This adjustment, announced in May 2025, replaced the staggered starting strokes system used from 2019 to 2024, where the field began at 10-under par virtually, with additional strokes distributed based on entering standings (leader at 8-under, down to even for 30th).[4][30] Ties for the final advancement positions after the St. Jude or BMW Championships are resolved via sudden-death playoffs on designated holes, consistent with standard PGA Tour procedures for qualification disputes. The 2025 playoff rules saw no additional modifications beyond the Tour Championship format change, though PGA Tour officials have indicated a potential review for 2026 to assess further refinements.[31] This tiered structure promotes intense contention by rewarding recent form while retaining the influence of season-long consistency, as evidenced by Viktor Hovland's 2023 FedEx Cup victory; entering the playoffs seventh in standings, he won the BMW Championship to surge to second before dominating the Tour Championship with a final-round 63 for a five-shot win.[32]Playoff Events
Structure of the three playoff tournaments
The FedEx Cup Playoffs consist of three sequential tournaments held in late summer, designed to progressively narrow the field from the top 70 players in the season-long standings to a final 30-player showdown. The first event, the FedEx St. Jude Championship, takes place in late August at TPC Southwind in Memphis, Tennessee, where the top 70 qualifiers compete over 72 holes with no cut. This venue has hosted the event since 2021, marking its role as the fixed site for the opening playoff round. The tournament features a $20 million purse, with the top 50 advancing to the next event based on cumulative FedEx Cup points.[33] The second event, the BMW Championship, follows in early September on a rotating course, drawing the surviving top 50 players for another 72-hole stroke-play format with no cut. In 2025, it was held at Caves Valley Golf Club in Owings Mills, Maryland, continuing the event's tradition of venue changes every three to five years to bring fresh challenges; previous hosts include Olympia Fields and Aronimink.[34][35] Like the opener, it offers a $20 million purse, and the top 30 performers advance while the field is further reduced. These back-to-back scheduling—spaced one week apart—requires significant travel between venues, typically from the Southeast to the Mid-Atlantic or Midwest, adding logistical intensity to the playoffs.[36] The playoffs culminate with the Tour Championship in mid-September at East Lake Golf Club in Atlanta, Georgia, a no-cut, 72-hole event exclusively for the top 30 qualifiers. This venue has been the permanent host since 2004, providing a consistent finale with its par-70 layout renovated in recent years to enhance playability.[37][38] For the 2025 season, the event was contested as a pure 72-hole stroke-play tournament, with all 30 players starting at even par and the lowest scorer claiming victory. The event carries a $40 million purse, supplemented by the season's $100 million FedEx Cup bonus pool, where the overall champion receives $10 million.[39][1]Scoring and advancement rules
The FedEx Cup playoffs employ a points system that builds on the regular season structure but applies higher multipliers to amplify the impact of performance in the postseason events. In the first two playoff tournaments—the FedEx St. Jude Championship and the BMW Championship—points awarded are quadrupled compared to standard regular-season events, with the winner of each receiving 2,000 points, the runner-up 1,200 points, third place 760 points, and fourth place 540 points, for example.[1][28][40] Regular-season FedEx Cup points fully carry over into the playoffs and are added to the points earned in the FedEx St. Jude Championship to determine the top 50 players advancing to the BMW Championship. Similarly, cumulative points from the regular season and the first playoff event are combined with BMW Championship earnings to set the top 30 qualifiers for the Tour Championship. This cumulative approach ensures that strong regular-season performances provide a foundation, while playoff results can dramatically alter standings due to the elevated point values.[1][23] At the Tour Championship, FedEx Cup points are awarded based on finishing positions, with the winner receiving 600 points. For the 2025 season, the event was a standard 72-hole stroke-play tournament with all players starting at even par, and the player posting the lowest overall score declared the FedEx Cup champion.[7][28][23] In the event of a tie for the overall lead after 72 holes at the Tour Championship, a sudden-death playoff determines the winner and thus the FedEx Cup title, but there is no playoff for the overall season-long points standings, as the tournament outcome supersedes them. The playoff points structure for the first two events remained unchanged in 2025, while the Tour Championship format was updated to eliminate starting strokes.[7][23]Event locations and rotations
The FedEx St. Jude Championship, the opening event of the FedExCup Playoffs, has featured a rotating selection of venues since the playoffs' inception in 2007, with Liberty National Golf Club in Jersey City, New Jersey, serving as the primary host from 2009 through 2018, including multiple editions in 2013, 2015, 2017, and 2018.[41] From 2019 to 2022, the event alternated between Liberty National and TPC Boston in Norton, Massachusetts, as part of a planned regional rotation between the New York/New Jersey area and the Boston region. Starting in 2023, the tournament shifted to TPC Southwind in Memphis, Tennessee, where it was held through 2025, marking a move to a more permanent location tied to the event's title sponsorship by FedEx, a Memphis-based company. This change was announced in 2022 to align the playoffs' start with FedEx's headquarters and enhance local economic benefits, with the deal extending through at least 2026 and generating an estimated $90 million in annual impact for the Memphis area through tourism, hospitality, and related spending.[42] Future rotations beyond 2026 remain unannounced, but the current setup emphasizes stability in Memphis while preserving flexibility for high-profile courses.[43] The BMW Championship, the second playoff event, has utilized a diverse array of venues across the United States since 2007 to promote geographic variety and showcase historic courses, with no fixed location but a policy of annual rotation that has occasionally featured three-year cycles for select sites since 2020.[44] Early editions were predominantly at Cog Hill Golf & Country Club in Lemont, Illinois, hosting four of the first five tournaments from 2007 to 2012, before shifting to a broader rotation that included notable examples such as Aronimink Golf Club in Newtown Square, Pennsylvania, in 2018; Caves Valley Golf Club in Owings Mills, Maryland, in 2021; and Olympia Fields Country Club near Chicago in 2020 and 2023.[45] Recent announcements confirm the continuation of this approach, with Caves Valley returning in 2025 following renovations and Bellerive Country Club in St. Louis, Missouri, scheduled for 2026, reflecting a deliberate cycle to revisit premier venues every few years while introducing new markets.[35] This rotation policy, managed in partnership with the Western Golf Association, aims to maximize fan engagement and charitable contributions, as the event supports Evans Scholars scholarships.[46] In contrast, the TOUR Championship, the playoffs' finale, has been held exclusively at East Lake Golf Club in Atlanta, Georgia, since 2004, with no rotation due to the PGA TOUR's ownership of the historic Donald Ross-designed course, which serves as the organization's headquarters and a symbol of its commitment to the event's prestige.[38] The venue first hosted the tournament in 1998 but became its permanent home to provide consistency for the season-ending competition among the top 30 FedExCup contenders.[47] Venue selections for the playoff events are guided by criteria including course prestige and historical significance, accessibility for fans and media, favorable weather patterns, and substantial economic contributions to host communities, often prioritizing partnerships with major sponsors like FedEx to ensure long-term viability.[44] For instance, the 2023 relocation of the FedEx St. Jude Championship to Memphis was influenced by these factors, securing a sponsorship-driven permanence that boosts local revenue while maintaining the event's elite status.Rewards
Season-long bonuses
The FedEx Cup season-long bonuses, introduced in 2007, provide a cumulative payout based on players' final standings in the points list at the conclusion of the playoffs, rewarding consistent performance throughout the regular season and postseason events.[1] Initially, the bonus pool totaled $35 million, distributed equally among the top five finishers regardless of margins, with each receiving $7 million.[16] This structure evolved to a tiered system emphasizing broader participation and season-long consistency, expanding payouts to the top 150 players by 2013 and increasing the pool size over time to incentivize depth in the field.[3] The bonus pool reached $75 million in 2023, with the champion earning $18 million, before expanding to $100 million in 2024, where the winner received $25 million and second place $7.5 million, tapering to smaller amounts for lower positions.[48][49] For 2025, the $100 million pool was maintained and restructured into three payout stages—$20 million to the top 10 after the regular season, $22.93 million to the top 30 after the BMW Championship, and $57.07 million to the top 30 after the Tour Championship—tied to standings at each point, allowing the top seed to potentially accumulate up to $25 million if retaining the lead through all stages (e.g., $10 million after regular season, $5 million after BMW, $10 million in final stage), though the champion's bonus in the final stage is $10 million.[1][50][51] Payouts in the final stage decrease progressively, with second place receiving $5 million, third $3.705 million, down to 30th at $355,000; earlier stages follow similar tiered distributions limited to their respective fields.[4] Beyond monetary awards, season-long bonuses confer significant exemptions and status benefits. The champion receives a five-year PGA Tour exemption, while the top 50 in final standings gain full exemption for the following season, and positions 51-70 receive conditional status with access to limited events.[1] Prior to 2022, high finishers also gained entry to majors and World Golf Championships based on standings, though major qualifications now primarily rely on Official World Golf Ranking and other criteria following the WGC's discontinuation. These bonuses are subject to federal income tax withholding of up to 24% and applicable state taxes, treated as ordinary income without special deferral options in recent years.[52]Playoff-specific prizes
The FedEx St. Jude Championship and BMW Championship, the first two events of the playoffs, each offer a $20 million purse, with $3.6 million awarded to the winner.[33][53] These elevated purses, introduced in 2023 to align with the PGA Tour's signature events, represent a significant increase from earlier years; for example, the inaugural 2007 playoff events featured $7.5 million purses each.[54] The Tour Championship concludes the playoffs with a $40 million purse—the largest on the PGA Tour—with the winner receiving $10 million from the event itself.[55] All three playoff tournaments operate under a no-cut policy, ensuring every participant in the field receives prize money; for instance, the 30th-place finisher at the 2025 Tour Championship earned $355,000.[55][1] Beyond monetary rewards, playoff participants benefit from exemptions into the following season's events, including the next FedEx Cup playoffs for top-70 qualifiers and a two-year PGA Tour membership exemption for those reaching the top 30.[28] The Tour Championship winner also receives the FedEx Cup trophy, symbolizing the season-long championship.[1] In mid-2025, the PGA Tour announced format enhancements for the playoffs, including the elimination of starting strokes at the Tour Championship and an increase in its purse to $40 million to reflect the event's elevated status as official prize money competition.[1]Career earnings leaders
The career earnings leaders in FedEx Cup bonuses reflect the cumulative impact of consistent performance across multiple seasons, with bonuses awarded based on final standings in the season-long points competition and playoff events. As of the end of the 2025 season, Rory McIlroy holds the all-time lead with approximately $50 million from three FedEx Cup victories in 2016, 2019, and 2022, plus consistent high finishes. Tiger Woods ranks second with about $40 million from three wins in 2007, 2009, and 2013. Scottie Scheffler is third with over $42 million, including his 2024 victory ($25 million) and $17.6 million from 2025 bonuses despite not winning the Cup that year (won by Tommy Fleetwood, who earned $14.07 million in 2025 bonuses, boosting his career total significantly).[56][57][58] The following table summarizes the top 10 all-time FedEx Cup bonus earners as of the 2025 season end (approximate totals based on available data; active players denoted with an asterisk), including total bonuses and years active in the competition:| Rank | Player | Total Bonuses | FedEx Cup Wins | Years Active |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Rory McIlroy* | ~$50M | 3 | 2009–2025 |
| 2 | Tiger Woods | ~$40M | 3 | 2007–2019 |
| 3 | Scottie Scheffler* | ~$42M | 1 | 2018–2025 |
| 4 | Justin Rose* | ~$24M | 1 | 2007–2025 |
| 5 | Xander Schauffele* | ~$23M | 0 | 2017–2025 |
| 6 | Jordan Spieth* | ~$22M | 1 | 2013–2025 |
| 7 | Dustin Johnson | ~$21M | 1 | 2008–2022 |
| 8 | Justin Thomas* | ~$20M | 0 | 2015–2025 |
| 9 | Adam Scott* | ~$19M | 1 | 2007–2025 |
| 10 | Jason Day* | ~$18M | 1 | 2010–2025 |
Winners and Achievements
List of FedEx Cup champions
The FedEx Cup champions are determined by a player's performance across the PGA Tour regular season and the subsequent playoff events, culminating in the Tour Championship. Since its inception in 2007, the competition has seen 16 unique winners (as of 2025), with Rory McIlroy holding the record for the most titles at three. The points system underwent significant changes, particularly in 2013 when allocation was adjusted for better parity, and again in 2019 when the Tour Championship adopted a starting-strokes format based on FedEx Cup standings entering the event (e.g., the No. 1 player starts at 10-under par, No. 2 at 7-under, etc.), which alters direct comparability of cumulative points across eras. This format was eliminated in 2025, reverting to a points-based system where the Tour Championship winner receives 600 points, and the lowest score determines the champion.[1][59][4] The following table lists all FedEx Cup champions chronologically, including their final points total (or equivalent starting strokes for 2019–2024 where applicable) and Tour Championship finish. Points reflect season-long accumulation adjusted through playoffs until the 2019 format shift; for 2025, points include the 600 awarded to the winner.| Year | Winner | Points/Starting Strokes | Tour Championship Finish |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2007 | Tiger Woods | 123,033 | 1st (won) |
| 2008 | Vijay Singh | 125,101 | 5th |
| 2009 | Tiger Woods | 97,702 | 2nd |
| 2010 | Jim Furyk | 9,375 | 1st (won) |
| 2011 | Bill Haas | 8,000 | 2nd |
| 2012 | Brandt Snedeker | 10,000 | 3rd |
| 2013 | Henrik Stenson | 7,040 | 2nd |
| 2014 | Billy Horschel | 4,750 | 2nd |
| 2015 | Jordan Spieth | 3,800 | 1st (won) |
| 2016 | Rory McIlroy | 3,120 | 10th |
| 2017 | Justin Thomas | 3,000 | 9th |
| 2018 | Justin Rose | 2,260 | 1st (won) |
| 2019 | Rory McIlroy | 0 (starting strokes: 10-under) | 8th (effective) |
| 2020 | Dustin Johnson | 0 (starting strokes: 10-under) | 1st (won) |
| 2021 | Patrick Cantlay | 0 (starting strokes: 3-under) | 1st (won in playoff) |
| 2022 | Rory McIlroy | 0 (starting strokes: 6-under) | 1st (won) |
| 2023 | Viktor Hovland | 0 (starting strokes: 2-under) | 1st (won) |
| 2024 | Scottie Scheffler | 0 (starting strokes: 10-under) | 1st (won) |
| 2025 | Tommy Fleetwood | 2,923 | 1st (won) |
Multiple-time winners and notable performances
Tiger Woods won the FedEx Cup twice, in 2007 and 2009, while Rory McIlroy holds the record with three titles in 2016, 2019, and 2022, showcasing consistent excellence across multiple seasons, including a dramatic six-stroke rally from seven shots back in the final round of the 2022 Tour Championship.[61] No other player has secured more than one FedEx Cup as of 2025, though Justin Thomas claimed his lone victory in 2017 at age 24, highlighting the youth often associated with top performers.[61] Patrick Cantlay's 2021 victory exemplified resilience, as he survived a grueling six-hole playoff against Bryson DeChambeau at the BMW Championship to earn the No. 1 seed, then went wire-to-wire at the Tour Championship with a final-round 69 to edge Jon Rahm by one stroke.[62] Viktor Hovland's 2023 performance featured a remarkable rally, closing with a 7-under 63 at East Lake to win by five shots over Xander Schauffele, capping a streak of three consecutive victories including the BMW Championship and FedEx St. Jude.[63] Scottie Scheffler's 2024 dominance was unparalleled, entering the playoffs with four victories (including The Players and Masters) and accumulating 4,806 regular-season points—nearly 1,400 more than second-place Rory McIlroy—before winning the Tour Championship by four strokes for his seventh win of the year.[64] In 2025, Tommy Fleetwood broke through for his first PGA Tour victory at the Tour Championship, closing with a steady 2-under 68 to finish three shots ahead of Patrick Cantlay and Russell Henley, ending a long drought despite multiple near-misses earlier in the season.[22] The average age of FedEx Cup winners through 2025 hovers around 30, reflecting the blend of emerging talents like Jordan Spieth (22 in 2015) and seasoned players like Vijay Singh (45 in 2008), underscoring the competition's appeal to golfers at their physical and mental peaks.[61]Records and statistics
The highest total FedEx Cup points earned in a single regular season belong to Scottie Scheffler, who accumulated 4,806 points in 2024 through four victories and 13 top-10 finishes.[64] This mark surpassed previous benchmarks, reflecting the impact of expanded fields and elevated points for signature events introduced in 2023. In the playoffs, Viktor Hovland earned 2,000 points from his victory at the BMW Championship in 2023.[65] Tiger Woods holds the record for most Tour Championship victories in the FedEx Cup era with three wins (2007, 2009, 2018), each contributing to his overall season-long success.[66] Regarding comebacks, Dustin Johnson overcame a two-stroke starting strokes deficit in the 2020 Tour Championship—entering at -6 relative to Jon Rahm's -4—to secure the title by three strokes, marking one of the notable recoveries in the stroke-based starting format introduced in 2019.[67] Key milestones include Vijay Singh as the first non-American winner in 2008, clinching the title without victory at the Tour Championship through consistent playoff performances.[68] Jordan Spieth remains the youngest champion at age 22 years and 61 days when he won in 2015.[69] In 2025, the FedEx Cup bonus pool reached a record $100 million distribution, with the Tour Championship purse hitting $40 million—the highest for any individual PGA Tour event—awarded to champion Tommy Fleetwood ($10 million) and the top 30 finishers.[39] Americans have won 11 of the 19 FedEx Cups (as of 2025), with Rory McIlroy securing three titles for Northern Ireland among the non-American victories.[61] Viewership peaked during the 2019 playoffs, with the Tour Championship final round averaging 3.71 million viewers on NBC, the second-highest audience for the event in a decade.[70]| Record Category | Achievement | Holder(s) | Year(s) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Highest Regular Season Points | 4,806 | Scottie Scheffler | 2024 |
| Most Playoff Points (Single Event) | 2,000 | Multiple (e.g., Viktor Hovland at BMW Championship) | 2023 |
| Most Tour Championship Wins (FedEx Era) | 3 | Tiger Woods | 2007, 2009, 2018 |
| First Non-American Winner | N/A | Vijay Singh (Fiji) | 2008 |
| Youngest Winner | 22 years, 61 days | Jordan Spieth | 2015 |
| Highest Bonus Pool | $100 million | N/A | 2025 |
| Peak Final Round Viewership | 3.71 million | N/A (Tour Championship) | 2019 |