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LIV Golf CEO Scott O’Neil stated the tour is funded through the 2026 season, raising concerns about its long-term viability. The Saudi Public Investment Fund, which backs LIV, is reconsidering its funding strategy amid geopolitical changes.
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Here is a clip from the deleted video TNT posted
“The reality is you’re funded through the season and then you work like crazy as a business to create a business and a business plan to keep us going.” pic.twitter.com/TefE2cKXqj
Scott O’Neil indicated that LIV Golf is funded through the 2026 season but emphasized the need for a sustainable business plan moving forward.
If LIV loses funding from the Saudi Public Investment Fund, it may struggle to pay salaries and continue operations at its current scale.
Bryson DeChambeau will be a free agent after this season, and questions remain about whether LIV players can return to the PGA Tour without Saudi backing.
LIV Golf has secured sponsorships from brands like Rolex and Under Armour, and some events have attracted over 100,000 fans, indicating potential for growth despite challenges.

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— NUCLR GOLF (@NUCLRGOLF) April 17, 2026 (The clip was later deleted from TNT’s account, but preserved by several other accounts on X.) While that shorter-term view about PE-backed businesses is largely correct, it offers a much shorter and more defined timeframe than the one that LIV officials implied earlier in the week. In an email to LIV employees, O’Neil said that “Our season continues exactly as planned, uninterrupted and at full throttle.” A high-level source with knowledge of LIV’s operations indicated that “LIV Golf funding and operations continue as scheduled.” While neither of those statements offers any guarantee of future funding, there’s no indication in either that the timeframe for funding is limited. Should LIV lose Saudi Arabian funding, could the league survive? At its present scale, the challenge to pay hundreds of millions in salary alone could be impossible. Bryson DeChambeau, one of LIV’s two marquee draws, will be a free agent at the end of this season, and it’s highly unlikely a PIF-less LIV could afford the massive contract he would require. DeChambeau and Jon Rahm are the most visible — and, for golf fans, most pressing — question about the future of LIV: namely, will LIV players be allowed to return to the PGA Tour? LIV defectors Brooks Koepka and Patrick Reed have already found pathways back. Koepka was extended a special invitation that came with a hefty expected charitable donation, while Reed has agreed to sit out for a year from his final LIV event last August. LIV has secured sponsorships from some notable brands like Rolex and Under Armour, but the tour has struggled to gain domestic footing and ratings to compete with the PGA Tour. While O’Neil has said that 10 of the tour’s 13 teams will be profitable this year, their value remains uncertain, untested and unclear, especially without a Saudi financial backstop. Where the tour does continue to have promise, however, is in the establishment of tournaments in traditionally underserved markets. Both the South African and Australian LIV tour stops drew more than 100,000 fans earlier this year. Those alone could be attractive for a merger or partnership with another worldwide tour such as the DP World Tour. LIV has eight remaining events on the schedule this season. The slate includes five United States-based tournaments, starting with an early May event at Trump National Golf Club in Washington, D.C.