How Much Did Jeeno Thitikul's Caddie Earn At The CME Group Tour Championship?

The finale of the LPGA Tour season offered one of the biggest purses in the women’s game, but what did winner Jeeno Thitikul's caddie earn?

Jeeno Thitikul with her caddie at the CME Group Tour Championship at Tiburon
Jeeno Thitikul led the tournament after three rounds
(Image credit: Getty Images)

The CME Group Tour Championship offered a suitably grand finale to the LPGA Tour campaign, with the top 60 in the season-long Race to CME Globe rankings competing at Tiburon Golf Club in Florida.

In the end, Jeeno Thitikul won the event for the second season in a row, meaning she was again crowned Race to CME Globe champion. However, as well as writing her name into the history books, the Thai player is also significantly wealthier following her four-shot victory.

The event offered a prize money payout of $11m, with Thitikul banking the joint largest one-off payout ever awarded in the women’s game, $4m, the same sum she won at the event a year ago.

Jeeno Thitikul after winning the CME Group Tour Championship

Jeeno Thitkul won the Race to CME Globe for the second year running in 2025

(Image credit: Getty Images)

It’s not just the winning caddie who received a substantial payday thanks to the elevated prize money at the tournament.

Players finishing in the top 10 of events are generally expected to award their caddies 7% of their prize money, with 5% going to the other 50 players in the CME Group Tour Championship field.

The runner-up at the tournament was Pajaree Anannarukarn, who earned $1m, meaning her caddie Jesus Mozo should be in line for a payday of around $70,000.

As a no-cut event, every player in the field for the CME Group Tour Championship receives a payment, with even the player finishing bottom of the leaderboard, Chanettee Wannasaen, banking $55,000 in prize money. As a result, her caddie can expect a payday of around $2,750.

Mike Hall
News Writer

Mike has over 25 years of experience in journalism, including writing on a range of sports throughout that time, such as golf, football and cricket. Now a freelance staff writer for Golf Monthly, he is dedicated to covering the game's most newsworthy stories. 


He has written hundreds of articles on the game, from features offering insights into how members of the public can play some of the world's most revered courses, to breaking news stories affecting everything from the PGA Tour and LIV Golf to developmental Tours and the amateur game. 


Mike grew up in East Yorkshire and began his career in journalism in 1997. He then moved to London in 2003 as his career flourished, and nowadays resides in New Brunswick, Canada, where he and his wife raise their young family less than a mile from his local course. 


Kevin Cook’s acclaimed 2007 biography, Tommy’s Honour, about golf’s founding father and son, remains one of his all-time favourite sports books.

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