The 10 DP World Tour players to have earned PGA Tour cards for the 2026 season have been confirmed.
A system first introduced in the 2023 season, the top 10 players in the Race to Dubai would earn PGA Tour cards for the following year.
Marco Penge earned his card weeks ago after an excellent 2025 campaign but there were still nine more cards left to grab as the season drew to a close.
Find out the 10 players who've punched their ticket to the PGA Tour for the 2026 season below.
A monstrously long driver whose putting and iron play have vastly improved, Marco Penge looks made for stateside golf.
The Englishman won three times on the DP World Tour in 2025 and finished second at the Scottish Open, and with him ranking in the top 50 in the world, will be making his maiden appearance at Augusta National next April...
Despite only receiving his DP World Tour card last year, Kristoffer Reitan has taken full advantage of the playing privileges.
An excellent driver and an outstanding putter, the Norwegian has sharpened up his iron play this year, wining at the Soudal Open and recording top-fives at the Hainan Classic, the Austrian Alpine Open, the BMW International Open, the Nexo Championship, the Open de France and the Alfred Dunhill Links.
Jumping up the Race to Dubai with his win at the Italian Open, Adrien Saddier more recently finished T5 at the Irish Open and lost in a play-off to Alex Noren at the BMW PGA Championship the following week.
Starting his season in superb fashion after graduating from the Challenge Tour, John Parry went T2-1 across the Alfred Dunhill Championship and the Mauritius Open last December.
Despite riding a shaky putter for much of the season, Parry has top-fives at the Kenya Open, the Soudal Open, the Nexo Championship and the Alfred Dunhill Links Championship and was an impressive T16 at The Open.
Pound for pound, there aren't many players who've had a better season than Alex Noren. The Swede has spent much of his time on the PGA Tour in recent years, but injury limited his playing time, spending the first four months out of action.
After finding some form at the end of the season, Noren crossed the pond to win the British Masters and the BMW PGA Championship in the space of a month, retaining his PGA Tour card for 2026.
After starting the year 3-1-T35-2, much was expected of Laurie Canter in 2025. Despite qualifying for all four majors, Canter missed the cut in three of them, and had just one top-30 finish between mid-March and mid-October, but his T2 finish at the Genesis Championship catapulted him back up the Race to Dubai standings.
First rising to prominence at The Open in 2017 where he finished solo-third, Haotong Li later held the 36-hole lead at the 2020 PGA Championship. But struggles for form and fitness saw the Chinese golfer contemplating giving the game up.
A resurgence in 2025, however, has seen Li win the Qatar Masters and record top-fives at the China Open, the Turkish Airlines Open and the Soudal Open, before finishing T4 at The Open.
After an outstanding 2023 on the Japan Golf Tour, Keita Nakajima made the move to the DP World Tour in 2024. While he failed to win in 2025, he did record three runner-up finishes at the Singapore Classic, Hero Indian Open and the DP World India Championship, as well as finishing fourth at the British Masters.
The 11th man on the list last year, Jordan Smith finally gets his PGA Tour card after nine years on the DP World Tour.
Although he wasn't able to crack into the winners' circle, Smith did post top-fives at the China Open, the Soudal Open, the BMW International Open and the Alfred Dunhill Links Championship, with top-10s at the Nedbank Golf Challenge, the Turkish Airlines Open and the Nexo Championship.
A third-placed finish at the season-ending DP World Tour Championship means that the Danish player has pipped Dan Brown to the final spot.
Neergaard-Petersen finished second at the Qatar Masters in February and has also secured six other top-10 finishes this year.