Justin Rose’s net worth is estimated at about $40 million, but the number only tells part of the story. Spotrac lists the English golfer’s career earnings at $83,338,165, including $10,657,976 in 2025 alone, and he had already added $2,215,403 in 2026 before this piece was published.
Rose’s latest season showed again why the total keeps climbing. He finished second at the 2025 Masters, missed the cut at both the PGA Championship and the U.S. Open, then tied for 16th at the Open Championship. Across the four majors in 2025, he earned $2,453,257, a reminder that even a mixed year at golf’s biggest events can still produce a heavy payday for a player with nearly three decades on the professional track.
That career stretches back to 1998, when Rose debuted at the Open Championship as an amateur and finished tied for fourth. He won his first major at the 2013 U.S. Open and has posted at least one top-10 finish in a major every year for the last 10 years except 2022. That run is one reason he remains among the top 50 richest golfers in the world, with wealth built from tournament results, sponsorships and outside business interests.
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Rose’s endorsement portfolio is broad. It includes Bonobos, TaylorMade, Honma and Titleist, along with sponsorships from Mastercard, Zurich Insurance, FlyHouse, SuperStroke, Teneo, Workday and Morgan Stanley. That collection is estimated to generate another $10 million to $15 million a year, adding a second stream of income to a career already packed with prize money.
The money has also helped fund causes the couple sees as part of the game’s wider duty. Rose and his wife, Kate, founded the Kate and Justin Rose Foundation in 2009 to support the nutritional and educational needs of children living in poverty in Central Florida. The foundation also works with Blessings in a Backpack and BookTrust. In 2020, the couple launched the Rose Ladies Series to help female golfers in Europe keep competing during the COVID-19 pandemic.
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Katie Rose later said the project was meant as a temporary bridge, but it expanded far beyond that. She said they expected it to be a stopgap until the Ladies European Tour recovered, yet it grew into an 11-tournament series, with the prize money doubled and events staged at venues such as Royal Birkdale and Hillside after the 2020 start at Royal St George’s. For a player born in Johannesburg, South Africa, and long based between the Bahamas and Florida, Rose’s finances now reflect a career that has become as durable off the course as it has been on it.






