How Much Do Pro Pickleball Players Make?
A data-driven look at professional pickleball earnings across the PPA, MLP, and APP tours, including prize money ranges, contract tiers, and how payouts actually work.
Overview
Professional pickleball prize money has grown rapidly since 2023, with top players earning over $1 million in career prize money tracked by DinkBank. Ben Johns leads all-time earnings with over $1.2 million across PPA and MLP events. Anna Bright and Anna Leigh Waters follow, each surpassing $700,000 in career prize money. These figures represent verified tournament payouts only and do not include contracts, appearance fees, or endorsement deals.
Below the top tier, earnings vary significantly based on tour, contract status, and event volume. A full-time professional competing across all three major tours can earn between $50,000 and $300,000 annually in prize money, while players in early rounds of smaller events may earn only a few hundred dollars per tournament.
Earnings by Tour
Three professional tours distribute the majority of pickleball prize money. Each operates with a different payout structure and economic model.
PPA Tour (Professional Pickleball Association)
The PPA Tour offers the largest individual prize pools in professional pickleball. Events are categorized as Slams, Finals, Cups, and Opens, each with different purse sizes. Payouts are further adjusted by contract tier — Gold Card holders receive full payouts (1.0x multiplier), Standard contract players receive roughly 0.4x, and Unsigned players receive the lowest tier. All five disciplines (Men's Singles, Women's Singles, Men's Doubles, Women's Doubles, Mixed Doubles) carry separate prize pools.
Read the full PPA prize money breakdown →
MLP (Major League Pickleball)
MLP uses a team-based format where all players on a team earn the same payout regardless of their individual contract tier. This is a key difference from PPA — a Gold Card player and an Unsigned player on the same winning MLP team receive identical prize money. MLP events include Midseason tournaments and Playoffs with different payout structures.
Read the full MLP prize money breakdown →
APP Tour (Association of Pickleball Professionals)
The APP Tour uses a six-category event system based on prize pool size and event prestige. Unlike PPA, the APP does not use a contract tier system — all players receive the same payout schedule. Categories range from Tier 1 events ($150K purse) to Standard Tour Stops with smaller pools.
Tour Comparison
| Feature | PPA | MLP | APP |
|---|---|---|---|
| Format | Individual | Team-based | Individual |
| Contract Tiers | Gold Card, Standard, Futures, Unsigned | Same payout per team member | No tier system |
| Event Types | Slams, Finals, Cups, Opens | Midseason, Playoffs | 6 categories by purse size |
| Disciplines | MS, WS, MD, WD, XD | Team events | MS, WS, MD, WD, XD |
| Payout Depth | Winner through Round of 32 | Per team placement | Winner through Round of 32 |
How Contract Tiers Affect Earnings
On the PPA Tour, a player's contract tier directly determines their prize money multiplier. Gold Card holders receive the full published payout (1.0x), while Standard contract players receive approximately 0.4x of the same amount. Unsigned players receive the lowest payouts.
This means two players who finish in the same position at the same PPA event can earn very different amounts depending on their contract status. Gold Card contracts have all been distributed — no new ones are being issued. The Futures tier is a new category for upcoming players, though none have been signed yet.
Prize Money Growth (2023–2025)
Total tracked prize money across all tours has grown steadily:
| Year | Events Tracked | Total Prize Money |
|---|---|---|
| 2023 | 34 | $3,098,410 |
| 2024 | 36 | $3,629,298 |
| 2025 | 47 | $3,564,237 |
Source: DinkBank internal tracking. Figures represent verified prize money payouts only. The number of tracked events has increased as DinkBank expands coverage across all three tours.
How DinkBank Tracks Earnings
DinkBank calculates player earnings using official tour payout structures, bracket results, and event-specific prize breakdowns. All monetary figures on DinkBank are labeled with one of two confidence levels:
- DinkBank Confirmed: Verified by official tour sources or reputable reporting
- DinkBank Estimate: Calculated from public sources and internal modeling when official breakdowns are unavailable
Prize money figures do not include contract guarantees, appearance fees, endorsement income, or bonuses unless explicitly noted. For full details, see the Methodology page.