The Biggest Chess Prizewinners In 2022 (And How Much They Made)
Today we bring you the players who won the most prize money in the major international chess events of 2022. Back in August, we revealed which chess players had won the most prize money throughout history for their performance in major matches and tournaments. As was the case then, here we are covering only performance prizes—that means no money earned from endorsements, appearance fees, residencies, etc.
With that in mind, who do you think won the most prize money in major tournaments this year? GM Ian Nepomniachtchi, winner of the FIDE Candidates Tournament? Maybe GM Hikaru Nakamura, the FIDE Fischer Random world champion and winner of the FIDE Grand Prix and Speed Chess Championship? Or perhaps it was Sinquefield Cup and Grand Chess Tour (GCT) champion GM Alireza Firouzja? Maybe GM Wesley So, the Chess.com Global Chess Champion and second-place finisher in the Grand Chess Tour?
Well, it was none of these players! And with that information, you can probably guess the #1 player by process of elimination.
Top Winners
The answer, of course, is GM Magnus Carlsen. Even with his last World Championship coming back in 2021, the winner of the Champions Chess Tour (CCT), Norway Chess, and both the World Rapid and Blitz Championships (WRBC) earned nearly $560,000 in major tournament prizes throughout 2022. It was the clean sweep of the WRBC in late December that catapulted Carlsen into first place for the year.
In doing so, he passed Wesley So at the last moment. So did not participate in the WRBC and could only watch as Carlsen earned $120,000 in a week to take the top spot. (That's $6.24 million if you could do it every week for a year.) So brought in just over $540,000 worth of prize money in 2022, which probably means he doesn't mind too much coming in second.
Nakamura was the third player to cross the half-million threshold, ending the year with about $515,000 after tying for second at the World Blitz Championship. Nepomniachtchi ($430,000) and Firouzja ($360,000) rounded out the top five.
$100,000 Club
Here is every player who earned six figures in major tournament prizes throughout 2022, from the Grand Prix that started in February through the World Rapid and Blitz Championships at the end of December:
Player | TOTAL | Events |
GM Magnus Carlsen | $558,596 | 7 |
GM Wesley So | $541,632 | 14 |
GM Hikaru Nakamura | $515,795 | 10 |
GM Ian Nepomniachtchi | $429,512 | 13 |
GM Alireza Firouzja | $358,542 | 7 |
GM Jan-Krzysztof Duda | $296,178 | 6 |
GM Fabiano Caruana | $263,810 | 11 |
GM Levon Aronian | $260,136 | 10 |
GM Maxime Vachier-Lagrave | $234,904 | 13 |
GM Anish Giri | $213,061 | 9 |
GM Shakhriyar Mamedyarov | $201,834 | 10 |
GM Ding Liren | $175,540 | 5 |
GM Richard Rapport | $166,938 | 8 |
GM Le Quang Liem | $134,500 | 3 |
GM Praggnanandhaa R | $129,000 | 1 |
GM Nihal Sarin | $118,802 | 4 |
GM Dmitry Andreikin | $112,861 | 7 |
GM Vladimir Fedoseev | $109,405 | 8 |
GM Leinier Dominguez | $109,391 | 8 |
GM Tan Zhongyi | $103,753 | 5 |
After making the finals of the 2022-23 Women's Candidates and winning the 2022 Women's Rapid Championship, in addition to playing in other major women's tournaments, GM Tan Zhongyi made the most of any woman chess player and reached six figures in the year as well.
Players made this list in various ways. For instance, GMs Shakhriyar Mamedyarov, Le Quang Liem, and Praggnanandhaa R did very well in the Champions Chess Tour. Players like GMs Ding Liren (Candidates), Richard Rapport (Grand Prix), and Nihal Sarin (CGC) did very well with one major prize, all of which came via second-place finishes. Of course, the very top players needed to do well across the board.
All-Time Update
What does the 2022 list mean for the all-time prize winners? Note first that the historical count went through the 2022 Candidates, meaning only the last five months of the year contributed to gains. Of course, Carlsen went on a tear in those last five months. All in all, Anand still leads Carlsen all-time, but not by much—less than $25,000:
Player | 2022 Total | Career Total |
Anand | $58,260 | $9,462,010 |
Carlsen | $558,596 | $9,438,449 |
Very little has changed in the historical count, in fact, although it's a near-certainty that Carlsen will overtake Anand in 2023 even without playing in the world championship. The ranking top 10 remains the same, with Caruana and Nakamura staying ahead of Nepomniachtchi. The two players who crossed the all-time million-dollar threshold in 2022, Ding Liren and Anish Giri, were already there in August.
While the players haven't changed, here is what the top 11 looks like entering 2023. Even after the top two, there will likely be some motion in the coming year near the bottom of the list as well.
Player | All-Time | 2022 |
GM Viswanathan Anand | $9,462,010 | $58,260 |
GM Magnus Carlsen | $9,438,449 | $558,596 |
GM Garry Kasparov | $7,947,979 | $0 |
GM Anatoly Karpov | $5,989,480 | $0 |
GM Vladimir Kramnik | $4,757,339 | $10,000 |
GM Bobby Fischer | $3,519,559 | $0 |
GM Veselin Topalov | $3,306,834 | $29,486 |
GM Levon Aronian | $2,781,947 | $260,136 |
GM Hikaru Nakamura | $2,619,814 | $515,795 |
GM Fabiano Caruana | $2,535,420 | $263,810 |
GM Ian Nepomniachtchi | $2,433,605 | $429,512 |
Top Events of 2022
Players don't win that prize money out of nowhere, of course. Nearly $1,500,000 was awarded in the Champions Chess Tour, but the largest single tournament was the Chess.com Global Championship with its $1,000,000 prize fund. The FIDE Candidates Tournament, by comparison, had €500,000 in prizes, which was worth about $520,000 at the time the tournament concluded.
So's $200,000 prize at the CGC was anyone's single largest of the year, even though Carlsen won over $240,000 across all CCT events. (GM Jan-Krzysztof Duda, Praggnanandhaa, and Liem Le all won six figures across the entire CCT as well.) Also winning six figures in one tournament was Nakamura at the Fischer Random Championship, Nepomniachtchi at the Candidates, and even Nihal as the CGC runner-up. Firouzja won a six-figure bonus for winning the overall GCT.
Here were the winners of every major event in the tally for the year, along with their prize.
Tournament/Series | Site | Ended | Winner | Prize | Note |
CCT (all events) | Chess24 | Nov. 20 | Carlsen | $242,500 | |
CGC | Chess.com | Nov. 7 | So | $200,000 | largest single-tournament prize |
Fischer Random | Reykjavik | Oct. 30 | Nakamura | $150,000 | |
Candidates | Madrid | July 7 | Nepomniachtchi | $119,385 | converted from Euros |
GCT (full tour) | Multiple | Sep. 13 | Firouzja | $100,000 | bonus for winning tour |
Sinquefield Cup | Saint Louis | Sep. 13 | Firouzja | $92,500 | includes $5,000 brilliancy prize |
GCT | Bucharest | May 15 | Vachier-Lagrave | $77,667 | |
RCC Season | Chess.com | Aug. 14 | Nakamura | $77,500 | |
Norway Chess | Stavanger | June 11 | Carlsen | $77,280 | converted from Norwegian krone |
World Rapid | Kazakhstan | Dec. 28 | Carlsen | $60,000 | |
World Blitz | Kazakhstan | Dec. 30 | Carlsen | $60,000 | |
GCT R&B | Warsaw | May 24 | Duda | $40,000 | |
GCT R&B | Zagreb | July 25 | Carlsen | $40,000 | |
GCT R&B | Saint Louis | Aug. 30 | Firouzja | $40,000 | |
SCC | Chess.com | Dec. 20 | Nakamura | $33,041 | |
RCC Finals | Chess.com | Aug. 21 | Nepomniachtchi | $30,000 | |
Grand Prix | Berlin (1) | Feb. 17 | Nakamura | $27,259 | converted from Euros |
Grand Prix | Belgrade | Mar. 14 | Rapport | $26,616 | converted from Euros |
Grand Prix | Berlin (2) | Apr. 4 | So | $26,326 | converted from Euros |
Conclusion
The year 2022 saw chess players win millions of dollars worth of prizes. With the Nepomniachtchi-Ding Liren World Championship and a merged CCT/CGC around the corner, what will 2023 bring?
Which 2022 prize stat surprised you most? Who will come out on top in 2023? Let us know in the comments what you think!