The Asian Tour is the principal men's professional golf tour in Asia except for Japan (which has its own Japan Golf Tour). It is also a full member of the International Federation of PGA Tours. Official money events on the tour count for Official World Golf Ranking points.
The Asian Tour is administered from Singapore. It is controlled by a board with a majority of professional golfers, and a Tournament Players Committee of its player members, supported by an executive team. The chairman of the board is the Indonesian businessman Jimmy Masrin.
In 2002, the tour moved its office from Hong Kong to Malaysia and in 2004 the tour was taken over by a new organisation established by the players, who had been in dispute with the previous management. In 2007 it moved to new headquarters on the resort island of Sentosa in Singapore, which is also the home to what was at that time the tour's richest sole sanctioned tournament, the Singapore Open.
In 2009 a rival tour, the OneAsia Tour, was established. Relations between the two tours are hostile.
In 2010, the Asian Tour launched the Asian Development Tour (ADT) as a developmental circuit. Five events were played the first year. By 2015 the tour had expanded to holding 28 tournaments with US$2.2 million of prize money.
With LIV Golf's initial investment in the Asian Tour having been reported in late 2021. The 2022 season marked the introduction of the International Series, which was unveiled in February. The series was to consist of 10 events to be added to Asian Tour schedules over the following 10 years, with each event featuring prize funds between and $2,000,000. The investment being primarily backed by LIV Golf.
In 2006 the Asian Tour became the most prestigious men's tour on which a woman has made the half-way cut in recent times when Michelle Wie did so at the SK Telecom Open in South Korea.
Among the ways to obtain an Asian Tour card is to be among the top 35 (including ties) at the Tour's qualifying school, finishing in the top 5 of the Asian Development Tour Order of Merit, and placing in the top 60 of the previous season's Order of Merit. The winner of the Asian Tour Order of Merit also receives entry into The Open Championship.
Since 2008, 50 percent of players' earnings from the US Open and The Open Championship have counted towards the Asian Tour's Order of Merit. The two Opens were singled out from the other majors because they have open qualifying which Asian Tour members may enter.
Formerly Asia's richest event, the HSBC Champions, was first played in November 2005 with a prize fund of $5 million. The tournament was co-sanctioned by the Asian Tour and the earnings were counted towards the money list for its first three years before it became a World Golf Championships event in 2009.
Another limited-field event in Malaysia; the CIMB Classic, was launched in 2010 with a $6 million purse. The first Asian Tour event to be co-sanctioned by the U.S.-based PGA Tour began as an unofficial event on that tour, but it started to offer official money and FedEx Cup points in 2013.
In 2016, the tour's richest sole-sanctioned event was the Venetian Macao Open, with a prize fund of $1.1 million.
In 2022, the Saudi International became the tour's flagship event and as a result became its richest sole-sanctioned event.
3,130 |
2,129 |
627,458 |
507,553 |
1,058,524 |
755,994 |
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1,004,792 |
1,139,084 |
713,901 |
1,127,855 |
738,047 |
788,299 |
822,361 |
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1,452,702 |
532,590 |
591,884 |
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381,930 |
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177,856 |
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2006, 2008 |
2005, 2012 |
Stefano Mazzoli | |
Kho Taichi | |
Kim Bi-o | |
No awards | |
Sadom Kaewkanjana | |
Park Sang-hyun | |
Micah Lauren Shin | |
Scott Vincent | |
Natipong Srithong | |
Cameron Smith | |
Richard T. Lee | |
Masanori Kobayashi | |
Tjaart van der Walt | |
Rikard Karlberg | |
Chinnaswamy Muniyappa | |
Noh Seung-yul | |
Scott Hend | |
Juvic Pagunsan | |
Shiv Kapur | |
Adam Groom | |
Marcus Both | |
Kevin Na | |
Ted Oh | |
Simon Dyson | |
Kenny Druce | |
Ed Fryatt | |
Ted Purdy | |
Jeff Wagner | |
Arjun Atwal |
5,485,537 |
4,493,844 |
3,795,696 |
3,533,551 |
3,487,029 |
3,455,859 |
3,426,632 |
3,034,434 |
2,776,891 |
2,664,047 |
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