Hubert Kos, Kate Douglass Top 2025 World Cup Prize Money Standings, $1.55M Awarded In Total

2025 WORLD AQUATICS SWIMMING WORLD CUP – Toronto

With the conclusion of the Toronto stop, the 2025 World Cup Series has now come to an end, with the final standings locked in and all prize money allocated. We looked at the overall rankings here, but the prize money table will look slightly different.

With Triple Crown bonuses, World Record bonuses, and a new ‘Crown Buster’ bonus, there was scope for swimmers to rack up the cash without topping the overall standings.

In total, we saw the following prize money split from the overall amount of $1,553,500 awarded:

  • Women – $830,500
  • Men – $723,000

The majority of the prize money awarded was for the athletes position in the standings, both at each stop and overall, but with 23 Triple Crowns and 13 World Records there was also a significant amount of ‘bonus’ money awarded.

  • Standings (Stop and Overall) – $1,196,000
  • Bonus (Triple Crown, World Record, Crown Buster) – $357,500

The way the prize money is awarded has been changed slightly this year. You can see a full recap of this here.

Women

The women’s rankings saw the battle go right down to the wire, with the top two of Kate Douglass and Gretchen Walsh separated by just 0.2 points in the end.

Both women completed a ‘Triple Triple’, winning three events at each of the three stops. Douglass took the 200 breast, 100 breast, and 100 free, while Walsh won the 100 IM, 50 fly, and 100 fly.

Their battle came down to the final day, with Walsh leading by 0.2 points. Wash notched a swim of 53.10 in the 100 fly final, leaving Douglass requiring her to pretty much match her new World Record in the 100 free to overhaul her.

She more than rose to the challenge, not only breaking her record but also becoming the first woman in history to break 50 seconds in the event. That swim gave her the Triple Crown bonus ($10,000), a World Record bonus ($10,000), and an additional $30,000 for finishing top of the standings rather than 2nd.

She took home a monstrous $182,000 over the last three weeks, with Walsh the only other woman to crack $100,000. Kaylee McKeown nearly joined them after a stunning final stop where she broke the 200 back World Record and busted Regan Smith‘s crown in the 100 back.

Lani Pallister and Mollie O’Callaghan made the most of the final stop as well, as all three Australian women overtook Smith in the standings in Toronto. Pallister was the biggest riser, taking home $36,000 from the final stop alone thanks to a World Record, two Triple Crowns and a 4th-place finish at the stop.

Kasia Wasick and Alex Walsh won Triple Crowns to crack $20,000 in overall winnings despite not finishing in the top eight overall. There was only one Crown Buster in Toronto, Kaylee Mckeown in the aforementioned 100 back, with 14 of the 15 potential crowns going the way of the previous two stops.

Overall Money Table, 2025 World Cup Series – Women

Position Swimmer Stop 1 – Carmel Stop 2 – Westmont Stop 3 – Toronto Triple Crowns Crown Busters World Records Overall Standings Total
1 Kate Douglass $10,000 $12,000 $10,000 $30,000 $20,000 $100,000 $182,000
2 Gretchen Walsh $12,000 $10,000 $8,000 $30,000 $10,000 $70,000 $140,000
3 Kaylee McKeown $8,000 $5,500 $12,000 $20,000 $2,500 $20,000 $30,000 $98,000
4 Lani Pallister $5,500 $6,000 $6,000 $20,000 $10,000 $15,000 $62,500
5 Mollie O’Callaghan $5,400 $5,400 $5,400 $10,000 $20,000 $12,000 $58,200
6 Regan Smith $6,000 $8,000 $5,500 $10,000 $10,000 $14,000 $53,500
7 Alexandria Perkins $5,300 $5,200 $5,000 $11,000 $26,500
8 Erika Fairweather $5,200 $4,900 $5,200 $10,000 $25,300
9 Kasia Wasick $4,400 $4,400 $4,700 $10,000 $23,500
10 Alex Walsh $4,900 $5,300 $10,000 $20,200
11 Ellen Walshe $4,600 $5,000 $5,300 $14,900
12 Roos Vanotterdijk $4,700 $4,700 $4,600 $14,000
13 Mary-Sophie Harvey $4,200 $4,600 $4,800 $13,600
14 Marrit Steenbergen $4,000 $4,500 $4,900 $13,400
15 Rebecca Meder $4,500 $4,300 $4,200 $13,000
16 Mona McSharry $5,100 $5,100 $10,200
17 Phoebe Bacon $4,000 $4,500 $8,500
18 Anna Peplowski $4,100 $4,100 $8,200
19 Eneli Jefimova $5,100 $5,100
20 Anna Elendt $5,000 $5,000
21 Anastasia Gorbenko $4,800 $4,800
22 Alex Shackell $4,800 $4,800
23 Taylor Ruck $4,400 $4,400
24 Ella Ramsay $4,300 $4,300
25 Abbie Wood $4,300 $4,300
26 Olivia Wunsch $4,200 $4,200
27 Florine Gaspard $4,100 $4,100
28 Freya Colbert $4,000 $4,000

 

Men

The men’s side was a little more clear-cut heading into Toronto. Hubert Kos was the only man to have taken three victories at each of the first two stops, with Ilya Kharun and Shaine Casas close behind.

With three Triple Crowns and top spot in the overall standings on the line, Kos had the best male single-meet performance of the series, clocking two World records en route to a score of 59.4 points.

He won the most money of anyone at the final stop with $30,000 in Triple Crown bonuses, $20,000 in World Record bonuses, and $12,000 for winning the stop giving him a total of $62,000. Combined with the $22,000 he earned through the Carmel and Westmont stops and the $100,000 prize for the series win, he ended as the top money-maker overall with $184,000 in winnings.

Shaine Casas ended with eight wins from nine races, nearly sweeping the IM events. He took the Triple Crown in the 100 IM and 200 IM, but a 3rd-place finish in the 400 IM at the first stop in Carmel left

Caspar Corbeau was just 0.2 points behind Casas in the overall standings, which equated to a $40,000 difference in prize money. That was almost exactly the gap between the two in overall prize money too, as Corbeau took one triple Crown and one World Record at the final stop.

Ilya Kharun (200 fly, 50 fly) and Luke Hobson (200 free) were the only other men to win a Triple Crown, as ‘Buster-in-chief’ Josh Liendo cracked two winning streaks in Toronto.

Noe Ponti (100 fly) and Jack Alexy (100 free) were his victims, and Liendo made $25,000 in at the final stop: $5,000 from Crown Buster bonuses, $10,000 for his 100 fly World Record, and $10,000 for finishing 2nd at the stop.

Tomoyuki Matsushita‘s DQ in the 400 IM on the final day in Toronto proved costly, as the 3:56.66 he had swum for 2nd would have been worth 17.7 points, enough to put him 7th overall at the stop. That would have been worth $5,300 –  placing him 11th in the overall money table rather than 16th.

Overall Money Table, 2025 World Cup Series – Men

Position Swimmer Stop 1 – Carmel Stop 2 – Stop 3 – Triple Crowns Crown Busters World Records Overall Standings Total
1 Hubert Kos $12,000 $10,000 $12,000 $30,000 $20,000 $100,000 $184,000
2 Shaine Casas $5,500 $12,000 $6,000 $20,000 $70,000 $113,500
3 Caspar Corbeau $10,000 $6,000 $8,000 $10,000 $10,000 $30,000 $74,000
4 Ilya Kharun $6,000 $8,000 $5,500 $20,000 $15,000 $54,500
5 Carson Foster $8,000 $5,400 $5,400 $14,000 $32,800
6 Josh Liendo $5,000 $10,000 $5,000 $10,000 $30,000
7 Noe Ponti $5,400 $5,500 $5,200 $12,000 $28,100
8 Chris Guiliano $5,300 $5,200 $5,100 $11,000 $26,600
9 Thomas Ceccon $4,800 $5,300 $5,300 $10,000 $25,400
10 Luke Hobson $4,800 $4,300 $10,000 $19,100
11 Kacper Stokowski $4,900 $4,500 $4,500 $13,900
12 Finlay Knox $4,500 $4,700 $4,400 $13,600
13 Kieran Smith $4,100 $4,000 $4,100 $12,200
14 Ilya Shymanovich $5,000 $5,100 $10,100
15 Jack Alexy $5,100 $4,800 $9,900
16 Tomoyuki Matsushita $4,700 $4,600 $9,300
17 Shin Ohashi $4,300 $5,000 $9,300
18 Alberto Razzetti $4,200 $4,900 $9,100
19 Finn Brooks $4,900 $4,000 $8,900
20 Dylan Carter $4,600 $4,100 $8,700
21 Leon Marchand $5,200 $5,200
22 Adam Peaty $4,700 $4,700
23 Sam Short $4,600 $4,600
24 Grant House $4,400 $4,400
25 Lucas Henveaux $4,400 $4,400
26 Lewis Clareburt $4,300 $4,300
27 Ralf Tribuntsov $4,200 $4,200
28 Brendan Smith $4,200 $4,200
29 Jeremias Pock $4,000 $4,000

 

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snailSpace
7 months ago

What Hubi told Hungarian media:

“For me, taking part in the World Cup was all about swimming — about seeing where I stand in terms of fitness and how much I’ve improved in short course racing. The prize money didn’t interest me at all. I know it’s quite a nice sum, but the university rules are pretty strict about how much money I can receive from competitions. So right now, two things matter: my swimming performance and making sure I fully comply with NCAA regulations. The compliance department will determine whether I’m entitled to any of the prize money or not.
This isn’t anything new — I also competed in the World Cup in 2022, and for similar reasons,… Read more »

This Guy
Reply to  snailSpace
7 months ago

Meanwhile coaches are making 50 million dollars for getting fired. I thought things were supposed to be figured out by now? Why is the NCAA always a complete mess

petriasfan
7 months ago

This year’s World Cup has been a pleasure to follow. Great to see the continuation of rivalries across many events, a teaser for what’s to come this December for European SC and the number of barriers broken.

Swimmingly Sorry
Reply to  petriasfan
7 months ago

This year’s world cup was fantastic, with the exception of TV production.

Eduardo
Reply to  petriasfan
7 months ago

Any world record predictions?

Walsh-Madden-Grimes-Weinstein
7 months ago

Alex Walsh bombing out of the heats in the W 100 BR at the Toronto, ON stop definitely cost her some money especially without a backup event.

Last edited 7 months ago by Walsh-Madden-Grimes-Weinstein
Nik
Reply to  Walsh-Madden-Grimes-Weinstein
7 months ago

I’ m sure Alex will appreciate you sharing this with the world. Perhaps get a second opinion before pressing the ” post comment ” button.

Suiii
Reply to  Walsh-Madden-Grimes-Weinstein
7 months ago

Oh No! She only made $20,000 in three weeks. What a shame

DLswim
7 months ago

Pretty good payouts by swimming standards!

Bevo
7 months ago

Six of the top 10 men have ties to Texas Swimming

(G)olden Bear
Reply to  Bevo
7 months ago

Three are OG Texas, the rest are just mercenaries.

snailSpace
Reply to  (G)olden Bear
7 months ago

Oh God, the coping!

Bobthebuilderrocks
Reply to  snailSpace
7 months ago

Knowing who this is makes it so much funnier

snailSpace
Reply to  Bobthebuilderrocks
7 months ago

Well now I’m bummed I don’t know. Darn your American sources!

Bobthebuilderrocks
Reply to  snailSpace
7 months ago

has something to do with the december mercenary we saw last year

snailSpace
Reply to  Bobthebuilderrocks
7 months ago

Oh my God. That is GOLDEN!

Bobthebuilderrocks
Reply to  snailSpace
7 months ago

very much so

Terry
7 months ago

Looks like Kate was somewhat a six-figure beneficiary of the wayward spinal tap (ouch) that McIntosh had. 

Canadian swim star Summer McIntosh ‘feeling great’ after illness sidelined her from World Cup tour | CBC Sports

WaterAce
7 months ago

Those aren’t bad paydays whatsoever, but still sad it’s only a once a year thing

snailSpace
Reply to  WaterAce
7 months ago

Yeah they really should bring back the old format. There is so little racing for swimmers.

This Guy
7 months ago

Kos made $184,000 in 3 weeks.

Meanwhile for that same amount you can sell your soul and reputation to Peter Theil and Brett Hawk and have zero respect for yourself or sport.

Glad to see swimming pay out and keep people motivated to pursue their dreams. Keep it up and keep it growing

SwimSoot
Reply to  This Guy
7 months ago

How much did Kos make from World LC?

Beach Boy
Reply to  SwimSoot
7 months ago

Would be nice to see how much athletes make from long course worlds

Steve Nolan
Reply to  This Guy
7 months ago

Yeah but like, Shane Ryan would top out at maybe $5-10k if he did all 3? It’s just not the same thing.

That’s why Chalmers got offered a hell of a lot more money than most of the guys they’ve actually gotten so far.

trollstyle
Reply to  This Guy
7 months ago

But this only happens once a year and it’s only for the best of the best. Even the best in 1 event may only get a limited sum of money just because the swimmer does not swim more events. And compared to other professional sports, $184,000 isn’t a lot.

Fairy
Reply to  This Guy
7 months ago

He made that money; but cannot keep/receive a dime as he is still competing for Texas and is in the US with student visa.