LIV Golf Tour
LIV Golf Finally Gets OWGR Points — But With Major Limitations
After years of uncertainty, LIV Golf will finally award Official World Golf Ranking (OWGR) points beginning in the 2026 season. It’s a long-awaited development that brings LIV closer to full recognition within the global golf ecosystem, but the details reveal a system that many players and observers believe still falls well short of true parity.
While the decision represents progress, the way points are awarded — and how limited they are — has already sparked frustration inside LIV and debate across the professional game.
🚨⛳️✅ #BREAKING — The OWGR announces that LIV Golf will get ranking points.
Ranking points will be allocated to the top-10 finishers in LIV’s individual stroke play events, which recognises there are a number of areas where LIV does not meet the eligibility standards set out… pic.twitter.com/dJOgBwfv1X
— NUCLR GOLF (@NUCLRGOLF) February 3, 2026
How OWGR Points Will Work for LIV Golf
Under the new framework approved by the Official World Golf Rankings board, LIV Golf events will now be eligible to award ranking points, but only under strict conditions.
Only the Top 10 Finishers Earn Points
Unlike traditional tours such as the PGA Tour or DP World Tour — where all players who make the cut earn some level of OWGR points — LIV events will award points only to the top 10 finishers and ties.
Players finishing 11th or worse will receive zero world ranking points, and those unused points are not redistributed up the leaderboard. This creates a sharp cutoff that makes consistency less valuable than peak finishes.
LIV Events Are Classified as “Small Field Tournaments”
LIV tournaments are being categorized as Small Field Tournaments under the OWGR system. This designation limits the total number of ranking points available, regardless of the quality of the field.
As a result, LIV event winners are expected to earn roughly 20–25 OWGR points per victory — significantly fewer than winners on most full-field PGA Tour events, and even fewer than some opposite-field events.
Why the OWGR Limited LIV’s Point Distribution
The OWGR board has pointed to several structural differences that prevented LIV from being fully integrated under the same system as traditional tours:
- No-cut format, which removes a major performance benchmark used across ranking models
- Smaller field sizes, even with LIV expanding to 57 players in 2026
- A closed-league structure with limited promotion and relegation pathways
According to OWGR officials, these factors made a full, equal distribution of points impossible without compromising consistency across the ranking system.
Reaction From LIV Golf and Its Players
Inside LIV Golf, the response has been mixed. While the ability to earn OWGR points at all is viewed as a breakthrough, the top-10-only restriction has been widely criticized.
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LIV leadership has publicly stated that the system undervalues the depth of competition in its fields and places its players at a continued disadvantage when trying to qualify for major championships through world ranking positions.
For many LIV players, the concern isn’t just about recognition — it’s about opportunity. With so few points available each week, climbing the rankings will require frequent top finishes, leaving little margin for error.
What This Means for Majors and the Bigger Picture
Practically speaking, this change allows LIV players to slowly rebuild or maintain their world rankings without relying entirely on exemptions or outside qualifying paths.
However, the limited point allocation means LIV golfers will still face an uphill battle compared to players competing on traditional tours with deeper point distributions and more ranking opportunities.
The OWGR board has indicated that the LIV framework will be reviewed annually, leaving open the possibility for future adjustments if LIV continues to evolve its competitive structure.
Final Take
LIV Golf’s inclusion in the Official World Golf Ranking system is undeniably a milestone — but it’s a measured, cautious step rather than full acceptance.
LIV players are now part of the rankings conversation, yet the restrictions ensure the tour remains structurally distinct from golf’s traditional pathways. Whether this system evolves further will depend on how LIV adapts and how the OWGR balances innovation with competitive consistency.
For now, LIV Golf has finally entered the world rankings — just not on equal footing.
