Five-time major champion Brooks Koepka has rejoined the PGA Tour via a special returning member program, marking the first significant defection from LIV Golf. The 35-year-old from Jupiter, Florida, notified the PGA Tour of his departure from LIV on December 23, 2025, and was reinstated on January 12, 2026. Koepka faces penalties including a $5 million charitable donation and ineligibility for certain earnings.
Brooks Koepka's return to the PGA Tour after more than three years with LIV Golf has sent ripples through professional golf. The five-time major winner, who joined LIV in June 2022 under a reported five-year, $125 million contract, opted to forgo the final year to rejoin the Tour where he won four majors between 2017 and 2019. Koepka applied for reinstatement on January 9, 2026, becoming the first eligible player to utilize the one-time Returning Member Program, designed for major or Players Championship winners from 2022 to 2025.
The program comes with steep penalties: Koepka must donate $5 million to charity, forgo equity in the Player Equity Program for five years, and receive no payment from the 2026 FedEx Cup Bonus. PGA Tour CEO Brian Rolapp estimated potential losses of $50 million to $85 million in earnings. Despite this, Koepka expressed belief in the Tour's direction, stating on Instagram, “I believe in where the PGA Tour is headed with new leadership, new investors, and an equity program that gives players a meaningful ownership stake.” He added, “When I was a child, I always dreamed about competing on the PGA Tour, and I am just as excited today.”
Koepka, a Florida State University alumnus inducted into its Athletics Hall of Fame in 2022, will debut at the Farmers Insurance Open at Torrey Pines from January 29 to February 1, 2026. He has committed to the Cognizant Classic in The Palm Beaches, his hometown event at PGA National from February 26 to March 1, 2026, marking his seventh start there and first since 2022. “I’m looking forward to competing at the Cognizant Classic in front of so many fans who’ve supported me from the start,” Koepka said.
Reactions vary. Tommy Fleetwood, ahead of the Hero Dubai Desert Classic, viewed it personally: “People want to play where their goals or dreams are aligned.” Tiger Woods called it a statement on the PGA Tour's strength: “We get a probably top-three-of-his-generation player back... That says a lot about the PGA Tour.” Rory McIlroy noted LIV's loss: “They’ve lost Brooks.” Meanwhile, Jon Rahm, Bryson DeChambeau, and Cameron Smith reaffirmed commitments to LIV beyond the February 2 deadline.
Koepka remains exempt into majors through 2027-2028 but must qualify for Signature Events via full-field tournaments like the Cognizant Classic. His move underscores ongoing tensions in golf's landscape, though Fleetwood cautioned uncertainty: “What the future holds, I don’t know.”