(This story was originally published on Aug. 21.)

More than $6 million in disclosed pay was dished out at Saturday’s UFC 202 event, and the headliners took the lion’s share of it.

On Saturday MMAjunkie reported the contracted disclosed paydays for the pay-per-view event’s main-card fighters, including a record $3 million for Conor McGregor and $2 million for fellow headliner Nate Diaz.

According to the Nevada State Athletic Commission, payouts for the entire card totaled $6,106,000 – with McGregor and Diaz getting 82 percent of it.

UFC 202 took place at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas, and in the main event, featherweight champion McGregor (20-3 MMA, 8-1 UFC) avenged a March loss to Diaz (19-11 MMA, 14-9 UFC) in a non-title welterweight bout and scored a narrow majority-decision win via 48-47, 47-47 and 48-47 scores.

Other top earners included co-main event winner Anthony Johnson ($270,000) and main-card victor Donald Cerrone ($170,000).

The full list of disclosed UFC 202 payouts included:

Conor McGregor: $3 million (no win bonus)

def. Nate Diaz: $2 million

Anthony Johnson: $270,000 (includes $135,000 win bonus)

def. Glover Teixeira: $65,000

Donald Cerrone: $170,000 (includes $85,000 win bonus)

def. Rick Story: $41,000

Mike Perry: $20,000 (includes $10,000 win bonus)

def. Hyun Gyu Lim: $18,000

Tim Means: $62,000 (includes $31,000 win bonus)

def. Sabah Homasi: $12,000

Cody Garbrandt: $54,000 (includes $27,000 win bonus)

def. Takeya Mizugaki: $39,000

Raquel Pennington: $46,000 (includes $23,000 win bonus)

def. Elizabeth Phillips: $12,000

Artem Lobov: $26,000 (includes $13,000 win bonus)

def. Chris Avila: $10,000

Cortney Casey: $40,000 (includes $20,000 win bonus)

def. Randa Markos: $14,000

Lorenz Larkin: $78,000 (includes $39,000 win bonus)

def. Neil Magny: $47,000

Colby Covington: $42,000 (includes $21,000 win bonus)

def. Max Griffin: $10,000

Marvin Vettori: $20,000 (includes $10,000 win bonus)

def. Alberto Uda: $10,000

Now, the usual disclaimer: The figures do not include deductions for items such as insurance, licenses and taxes. Additionally, the figures do not include money paid by sponsors, including the official UFC Athlete Outfitting sponsorship program pay. They also do not include any other “locker room” or special discretionary bonuses the UFC oftentimes pays. They also do not include pay-per-view cuts that some top-level fighters receive.

For example, as previously reported, UFC officials handed out additional $50,000 UFC 202 fight-night bonuses to Johnson and Cerrone (“Performance of the Night”) as well as McGregor and Diaz (“Fight of the Night”).

In other words, the above figures are simply base salaries reported to the commission and do not reflect entire compensation packages for the event.

For complete coverage of UFC 202, check out the UFC Events section of the site.