The LPGA announced a multi-year partnership with Golf Saudi on Thursday to stage a new Las Vegas event carrying a $4 million purse, marking new commissioner Katie Winge's first major sponsorship deal since taking office in January. The tournament, branded the Aramco Championship, debuts in 2026 at an undisclosed Nevada venue and immediately becomes one of the tour's richest non-major stops.
Golf Saudi—the marketing arm of the Saudi Golf Federation and a sister entity to LIV Golf's primary backer, the Public Investment Fund—will serve as title sponsor through at least 2028. The $4 million purse places the event above 14 of the LPGA's current 33 tour stops, though still below the $11 million CME Group Tour Championship and the $9 million U.S. Women's Open. The deal includes hospitality rights for Saudi tourism promotion and on-course branding for Aramco, the state oil giant that already sponsors Formula One and women's football properties in Europe. Financial terms beyond the purse were not disclosed, but three people familiar with tour economics estimate title fees for a multi-year LPGA event at this scale begin near $8 million annually.
The partnership extends Saudi investment into women's golf after quiet years of LIV-branded chaos on the men's side. Golf Saudi has sponsored the Ladies European Tour's Aramco Saudi Ladies International since 2020, a $5 million event that draws top LPGA players during the Middle East swing. That relationship apparently satisfied both parties: the LPGA co-sanctions the Saudi stop, and Winge attended the 2025 edition in Riyadh six weeks before her commissionership began. The Las Vegas announcement follows by three months, fast by tour standards. One agent with multiple LPGA clients called it "the easiest check Katie will ever bank," noting that Saudi entities prefer U.S. venues for Western consumer access and that Nevada carries none of the political friction that killed a proposed PGA Tour event in the kingdom in 2022.
The move also signals the LPGA's renewed focus on domestic expansion after years of Asia-heavy scheduling. The tour added stops in Miami and Austin over the past 18 months but lost Columbus and Arkansas. Las Vegas has not hosted an LPGA event since the 1990s, though it anchors a winter sports tourism corridor and offers low-cost venue rental compared to coastal markets. The $4 million figure is notable: it matches the Chevron Championship's purse and sits $1 million above the typical designated-event baseline, a tier the LPGA introduced in 2023 to compete with LIV-style payouts. Sponsors in that bracket receive expanded digital rights, player appearance guarantees, and co-branded international broadcast windows—all features attractive to state-backed entities seeking global reach.
Two complications: First, the PGA Tour's Vegas stop—the Shriners Children's Open—runs in October at TPC Summerlin, creating potential date and venue conflict if the LPGA targets fall. Second, Winge's predecessor Mollie Marcoux Samaan avoided overt Saudi partnerships despite the LET co-sanctioning, preferring KPMG, Cognizant, and legacy American brands. Winge's calculus appears different; she told Golfweek the partnership "reflects where capital is moving in sports" and noted the tour's fiduciary duty to maximize player earnings. That language echoes PGA Tour talking points from 2023, when Jay Monahan announced the tour's framework agreement with PIF after months of denying interest.
What to watch: Venue announcement expected by mid-March, likely Shadow Creek or a Strip-adjacent property; coordinator hires for Saudi hospitality buildout; any sponsor conflicts with existing LPGA partners, particularly in finance and energy verticals where Aramco branding may overlap. The PGA Tour-PIF framework remains unsigned, so this deal may preview a broader Gulf normalization in golf. Winge's next sponsor call is reportedly with a Chinese EV manufacturer sizing a $3 million purse commitment for an Asia swing event.
The LPGA's 2026 schedule now features 34 official events, 19 with purses above $3 million, and three with Saudi or PIF-adjacent funding. The commissioner has been in office 71 days.
The takeaway
Golf Saudi pays **$4M** purse for Vegas event, giving new LPGA boss instant credibility with players and a Gulf revenue model.
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