Georges St-Pierre’s first UFC payday did not look like the opening line of a legendary career. He walked into UFC 46 against Karo Parisyan with $3,000 guaranteed, another $3,000 available if he won, and a fight few outside his team expected him to control.
More than two decades later, St-Pierre has returned to that night while speaking with Demetrious Johnson. The number itself is not new: GSP had already shared the purse publicly several years ago. What lands again is the decision he made after collecting the full $6,000 for a unanimous decision victory. The money did not become a celebration. It went back into the fighter he was still trying to build.

GSP recalls his first UFC purse
St-Pierre was a young Canadian prospect when he met Parisyan in January 2004. Parisyan was experienced, dangerous and already known as an awkward welterweight opponent. GSP took him through three rounds, won the decision and started a UFC career that would eventually place him among the greatest champions in MMA history.
At the beginning, the pay was nowhere near the reputation that followed. St-Pierre said his UFC 46 deal paid $3,000 to compete and another $3,000 for winning. During his recent conversation, he returned to the choice he made with that first cheque: “I reinvested in myself.”
He spoke about paying for practical needs and using part of his early earnings to travel for training, including trips to New York, Thailand and Brazil. The young GSP was not spending money on looking like a star before he had become one. He was searching for better coaching, stronger rounds and skills he could carry back into the cage.
- St-Pierre earned $3,000 to show for his UFC debut against Karo Parisyan.
- His unanimous decision victory added a $3,000 win bonus.
- He says he invested early UFC earnings into training and development.
- The purse was known previously, but has returned to attention through his new interview.
UFC 46 started the climb
The Parisyan fight looks very different when viewed through everything St-Pierre became later. He did not enter the arena as a dominant champion or a major pay-per-view name. He was making his first UFC appearance and trying to prove that his unbeaten start outside the promotion could hold up against a serious opponent.

Parisyan made him work for the full 15 minutes, but St-Pierre left with the decision and the entire win bonus. That first result quickly opened bigger doors. He stopped Jay Hieron in his next UFC appearance, then found himself fighting Matt Hughes for the welterweight championship before the end of the same year.
| Georges St-Pierre at UFC 46 | Confirmed detail |
|---|---|
| Opponent | Karo Parisyan |
| Date | January 31, 2004 |
| Fight result | St-Pierre won by unanimous decision after three rounds |
| Guaranteed purse recalled by GSP | $3,000 |
| Win bonus recalled by GSP | $3,000 |
| Total payment after victory | $6,000 |
The cheque became preparation
St-Pierre’s story is not only about how little a future UFC great received for his first octagon fight. It is also about the way he treated money before championship belts, main events and major paydays entered his life. The first cheque gave him a chance to improve, and he used it that way.
That choice fits the fighter fans eventually watched. GSP did not stay the same athlete who beat Parisyan on debut. His wrestling became one of the hardest problems in the sport. His preparation became part of his identity. Fight by fight, he turned himself into an opponent who could control where a contest happened and how long anyone remained comfortable inside it.
The old purse has resurfaced while UFC fighter pay remains a subject fans follow closely. St-Pierre did not need to make the memory dramatic. The figures already carry enough weight: a future two-division UFC champion entered the promotion for $3,000 guaranteed, earned another $3,000 by winning, and used part of that money to become harder to beat.
Years later, Georges St-Pierre’s career is remembered through titles, defences and the opponents he defeated. His first UFC payment belonged to a very different stage of the journey. The way he spent it already sounded like the champion he would become.
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