LIV Golf revealed its future strategy for survival in light of the Saudi Arabia PIF’s reported decision to pull funding from the league, confirming the widely-reported news for the first time on Thursday. The league shared the news via a press release, laying out their hopes to transition from a “foundational launch phase” to a “multi-partner investment model.”
Here’s what you need to know.
LIV Golf creates independent board, searches for new investors
For weeks, reports have proliferated about LIV Golf’s tenuous future. On Wednesday, sources told GOLF.com that the Saudi Arabia PIF would pull funding following the 2026 season, confirming an earlier report from the Wall Street Journal.
Sports Business Journal later reported that PIF governor Yasir Al-Rumayyan would leave the league’s board.
In their statement Thursday morning, LIV Golf did not directly mention PIF’s funding cuts or Al-Rumayyan’s departure, but what they did reveal seemed to confirm both realities. They announced “new board appointments as the league focuses on securing long-term financial partners to support its transition from a foundational launch phase to a diversified, multi-partner investment model.”
By “foundational launch phase,” LIV is referring to the first five years of its existence from 2022 until present, in which the PIF was the sole funder, owner and operator of the league. That will no longer be the case after the 2026 season.
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In the absence of PIF’s multi-billion investment, LIV Golf needs to find new big-money investors, presumably from multiple sources in order to fill the considerable monetary void. The league’s hope is that a transition to such a “diversified, multi-partner investment model” would secure its future for years to come.
The league also announced a “newly established independent board” as part of a “strategic evolution,” which is a departure from the model the league previously operated under with Al-Rumayyan as board chairman.
LIV appointed Gene Davis and Jon Zinman to the board “to guide the league through its next phase.”
While this is the first time LIV Golf has officially acknowledged their new reality, the league’s CEO Scott O’Neil did let the news slip in a since-deleted interview two weeks ago, in which he said, “The reality is you’re funded through the season. Then you work like crazy as a business to create a business and a business plan to keep us going.”
LIV players reach out about PGA Tour return: Report
What are LIV Golf’s biggest stars thinking considering LIV Golf’s tenuous post-PIF future? None of them have spoken directly about it in public, but another report that dropped on Thursday shed some light onto the answer.
Golf Digest reported that “representatives for multiple LIV players have contacted the PGA Tour to discuss a potential return.” Furthermore, the report stated that the PGA Tour would provide a path back for remaining LIV Golf pros, citing “people familiar with the conversations.” However, that route would be “considerably more restrictive” than the ones taken by Brooks Koepka and Patrick Reed earlier this year.
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The PGA Tour created a new policy known as the “Returning Member Program” to provide Koepka with a direct path back to the Tour. It required Koepka to make a $5 million charitable contribution and barred him from FedEx Cup bonus money, among other penalties.
That program was also available to three other LIV stars, Bryson DeChambeau, Jon Rahm and Cameron Smith, but none of those players took the Tour up on its offer before the temporary program expired.
Patrick Reed decided not to re-sign with LIV Golf right before the 2026 season began. Instead, Reed opted to play this season on the DP World Tour, in hopes of a return to the PGA Tour late this year. To do so, Reed is first required to serve a one-year suspension from the last LIV event he played in August of 2025.
In late August of this year, Reed will be eligible to play in PGA Tour events as a non-member via sponsor’s exemptions and open qualifying. Beginning in 2027, Reed will be fully reinstated as a PGA Tour member under the past champions category.
Reed’s situation was made easier by the fact that he resigned his PGA Tour membership before joining LIV and violating the Tour’s regulations.