Jon Rahm withdrew his 18-month appeal against DP World Tour sanctions on March 10, ending temporary membership privileges including 2025 Ryder Cup eligibility, but he refuses to pay over $3 million in fines. This follows his earlier rejection of a conditional settlement offer, as tensions continue over LIV Golf conflicts. Part of the 'Jon Rahm DP World Tour Dispute' series.
Following his rejection of a late February conditional release from the DP World Tour—which required paying fines, withdrawing appeals, and playing six-plus events (see prior coverage)—Jon Rahm formally withdrew his 18-month sanctions appeal on March 10. This decision terminates the interim status that had preserved his membership privileges, such as entry to DP World Tour events and eligibility for the 2025 Ryder Cup at Bethpage Black.
Competing in LIV Golf South Africa in Johannesburg—overlapping the DP World Tour's Hainan Classic—Rahm faces ongoing suspensions and fines for unauthorized participation in conflicting events. He has explicitly stated he will not pay the accumulated fines exceeding $3 million.
Rahm previously criticized the tour's offer as extortionate, demanding only the standard four-event minimum (including the Spanish Open) instead of six to eight. DP World Tour CEO Guy Kinnings defended the terms as fair and beneficial for the tour.
Other LIV players responded differently: Tom McKibbin, David Puig, and Elvis Smylie accepted releases and plan additional starts like the Hero Indian Open; South Africans Branden Grace and Dean Burmester resigned. A 2023 arbitration upheld similar sanctions.
The saga impacts future Ryder Cups, particularly 2027 in Ireland, requiring active membership, event minimums, and cleared fines. Rahm aims for four events but faces complications.