2026 Thailand Open Prize Money: How Much Did the Winners Take Home?
The Toyota Thailand Open 2026 Presented by Victor provided not only world-class sporting drama at the Nimibutr Stadium but also a massive financial windfall for the competing athletes. As a prominent BWF World Tour Super 500 event, the tournament boasted a lucrative total prize pool of US$500,000.
Governed strictly by Badminton World Federation (BWF) regulations, this financial purse is meticulously split between singles and doubles disciplines. For players from Southeast Asia, understanding the payout values in local currencies highlights the life-changing scale of these earnings. Using the benchmark exchange rates from April 2026—where 1 USD ≈ 3.97 MYR and 1 USD ≈ 1.28 SGD—the reward structures for the elite performers reveal impressive figures.
💰 The Grand Spoils: What the Champions Took Home
Winning a BWF Super 500 title is an immense career milestone that comes with a premium paycheck. Interestingly, BWF regulations structurally award slightly more total prize money to the doubles pairs compared to a solo singles champion, acknowledging that the reward must be divided between two athletes.
Singles Champions (Men’s & Women’s Singles)
The singles crowns were claimed by Denmark’s Anders Antonsen and Japan’s Akane Yamaguchi. For outlasting their respective fields, each walked away with a cool US$37,500.
- In Malaysian Ringgit: ~MYR 148,875
- In Singapore Dollars: ~SGD 48,000
Doubles Champions (Men’s, Women’s, & Mixed Doubles)
The dominant pairings—Bao Lijing / Cao Zihan, Leo Rolly Carnando / Daniel Marthin, and Mathias Christiansen / Alexandra Bøje—pushed through grueling brackets to claim the grand prize of US$39,500 per pair.
- In Malaysian Ringgit: ~MYR 156,815 per pair (~MYR 78,408 per player)
- In Singapore Dollars: ~SGD 50,560 per pair (~SGD 25,280 per player)
🥈 The Consolation: Financial Rewards for the Runners-Up
Falling just short in a major final is an agonizing athletic experience, but the financial compensation for reaching the final Sunday remains incredibly substantial. At the 2026 Thailand Open, the runners-up across all five disciplines received identical flat payouts.
Whether competing alone or in tandem, placing second yielded a generous sum of US$19,000.
- In Malaysian Ringgit: ~MYR 75,430
- In Singapore Dollars: ~SGD 24,320
For local home-crowd hero Kunlavut Vitidsarn, who narrowly missed out on the Men’s Singles trophy in a breathtaking 97-minute classic, the US$19,000 prize acts as a well-deserved reward for a monumental physical effort. Meanwhile, doubles pairs splitting the prize took home US$9,500 (~MYR 37,715 / ~SGD 12,160) per athlete.
📊 Comprehensive Prize Money Breakdown Table
To visualize how the rest of the elite field fared, the overall financial distribution across the deeper knockout rounds of the tournament breaks down as follows:
| Round Reached | Singles Payout (USD) | Singles (MYR) | Singles (SGD) | Doubles Payout (USD)* | Doubles (MYR)* | Doubles (SGD)* |
| Winner | $37,500 | RM 148,875 | S$ 48,000 | $39,500 | RM 156,815 | S$ 50,560 |
| Finalist | $19,000 | RM 75,430 | S$ 24,320 | $19,000 | RM 75,430 | S$ 24,320 |
| Semi-finals | $7,250 | RM 28,782 | S$ 9,280 | $7,000 | RM 27,790 | S$ 8,960 |
| Quarter-finals | $3,000 | RM 11,910 | S$ 3,840 | $3,625 | RM 14,391 | S$ 4,640 |
| Last 16 | $1,750 | RM 6,947 | S$ 2,240 | $1,875 | RM 7,443 | S$ 2,400 |
*Note: Doubles prize money amounts are total figures allocated per pair. Individual players receive exactly half of the stated amount.
