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2024 Hero Indian Open: Prize Money Breakdown and Winner’s Payout

Published 03/31/2024, 5:00 AM EDT

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Joost Luiten, Rasmus Hojgaard, and Matteo Manasseo are some of the names teeing off at the Hero Indian Open. DP World Tour continues with its Asian Swing stopping at India after Singapore. The DLF Golf and Country Club, a course endorsed by Gary Player, is hosting the country’s national open, jointly sanctioned by the DP World Tour and PGTI.

A victory here will pave the path for the Asian Swing Champion. As part of the revamped DPWT format, there will be five global swings and each swing will have its respective champion, and additional perks – a $200,000 bonus. This year the event will have a purse of $2.25 million, an increase from last year. Here is the full purse size and winner’s payout at the Hero Indian Open.

Hero Indian Open purse size breakdown

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The 57th edition of the Hero Indian Open boasts an elevated purse of $2.25M, up $250,000 from last year. This is also the highest for the DLF Golf and Country Club event. Last year, German star, Marcel Siem pocketed $340,000 for his single-shot triumph over Yannik Paul. This year the winner will receive $382,500 and the runner-up will claim $247,500.

1st$382,500
2nd$247,500
3rd$141,750
4th$112,500
5th$95,400
6th$78,750
7th$67,500
8th$56,250
9th$50,400
10th$45,000
11th$41,400
12th$38,700
13th$36,225
14th$34,425
15th$33,075
16th$31,725
17th$30,375
18th$29,025
19th$27,900
20th$27,000
21st$26,100
22nd$25,425
23rd$24,750
24th$24,075
25th$23,400
26th$22,725
27th$22,050
28th$21,375
29th$20,700
30th$20,025
31st$19,350
32nd$18,675
33rd$18,000
34th$17,325
35th$16,650
36th$15,975
37th$15,525
38th$15,075
39th$14,625
40th$14,175
41st$13,725
42nd$13,275
43rd$12,825
44th$12,375
45th$11,925
46th$11,475
47th$11,025
48th$10,575
49th$10,125
50th$9,675
51st$9,225
52nd$8,775
53rd$8,325
54th$7,875
55th$7,650
56th$7,425
57th$7,200
58th$6,975
59th$6,750
60th$6,525
61st$6,300
62nd$6,075
63rd$5,850
64th$5,625
65th$5,400
66th$5,175
67th$4,950
68th$4,725
69th$4,500
70th$4,275

Apart from prize money, there are other incentives at stake as well. First, there are 3000 Race to Dubai Rankings up for grabs for players.

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The winner gets approximately 15.8 Official World Golf Ranking points, with the points available based on field strength. The top player at the end of the event also gets other big benefits, including a two-plus season exemption on the European Tour, as well as berths into other key events. And there is more!

The winner gets 500 DP World Tour points, with the player holding the most season-long Race to Dubai points at the end of the tournament winning the Race to Dubai and its first-place prize. Notably, the top eight players in the Race to Dubai standings after the season will be paid from the Race to Dubai bonus pool of $6 million.

Hero Indian Open has a field rating of 92.05 with 15.83 points reserved for the winner. Japanese rookie Keita Nakajima has surged ahead with a four-point cushion ahead of the final round. But the packed leaderboard offers hopes of a tough fight in the final round of the Hero Indian Open.

Players to watch out for on Sunday

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Two big names headline the field, Rasmus Hojgaard, the twin brother of Nicolai Hojgaard, and Alex Fitzpatrick, brother of Ryder Cupper, and Matthew Fitzpatrick exited early on after missing the cut. But Keita Nakajima took the full chance to cash in on the opportunity drawing the spotlight to himself at the Hero Indian Open.

Nakajima backed up his stellar 65 in the first two rounds with a 68 on the moving day. Gavin Green of Malaysia and French International, Romain Langasque, are chasing on his heels at 14-under. 

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Europe’s very own and once a PGA Tour hotshot, Matteo Manassero is tied at fourth at 13-under. Just two weeks back, the Italian netted his first DP World Tour victory in 11 years at the Jonsson Workwear Championship. Hometown favorite, Veer Ahlawat kept his chances alive shooting 69 on the moving day. Ahlawat is the lone Indian inside the top ten carving out a solo sixth in the packed Hero Indian Open leaderboard. 

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Written by:

Parnab Bhattacharya

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One take at a time

Parnab Bhattacharya is a Beat Writer at EssentiallySports in the Golf Division. With four years of writing experience, he is now exploring his deep-rooted love for the gentleman’s sport. Parnab's area of expertise is his predictive and perspective pieces, where he explores all things golf, diving deep into the whys and whats behind players' and Tours' moves in the sport, and unflinchingly voicing his take.
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Edited by:

Sampurna Pal

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