(UPDATED on 7/13/15 with corrected pay for Brad Pickett, whose eligible WEC bouts weren’t initially factored into his total.)

UFC 189 marked the debut of the UFC’s new Reebok fighter kits, and we now have our first sponsorship payout totals.

The UFC-Reebok program, which replaces the fighter’s traditional outside sponsorships, awards payouts based on a fighter’s seniority, but with champions and title challengers in their own tier.

At UFC 189, which aired on pay-per-view from Las Vegas’ MGM Grand Garden Arena, co-main-event winner and reigning welterweight titleholder Robbie Lawler earned an event-high $40,000.

The total payout for the card was $235,000.

The full UFC 189 UFC-Reebok sponsorship payouts included:

Conor McGregor: $30,000

def. Chad Mendes: $30,000

Champ Robbie Lawler: $40,000

def. Rory MacDonald: $30,000

Jeremy Stephens: $20,000

def. Dennis Bermudez: $5,000

Gunnar Nelson: $5,000

def. Brandon Thatch: $2,500

Thomas Almeida: $2,500

def. Brad Pickett: $10,000

Matt Brown: $15,000

def. Tim Means: $5,000

Alex Garcia: $2,500

def. Mike Swick: $10,000

John Howard: $10,000

def. Cathal Pendred: $2,500

Cody Garbrandt: $2,500

def. Henry Briones: $2,500

Louis Smolka: $2,500

def. Neil Seery: $2,500

Cody Pfister: $2,500

def. Yosdenis Cedeno: $2,500

Under the new sponsorship program’s payout tiers, fighters are paid based on their total UFC bouts, as well as Zuffa-era WEC (January 2007 and later) and Zuffa-era Strikeforce (April 2011 and later) fights. Competitors with 1-5 bouts receive $2,500 per appearance; 6-10 bouts get $5,000; 11-15 bouts earn $10,000; 16-20 bouts pocket $15,000; and 21 bouts and more get $20,000. Additionally, champions earn $40,000 while title challengers get $30,000.

As previously reported, fighters are required to wear Reebok-branded apparel in conjunction with all official UFC events, including their fights, press conferences, weigh-ins and open workouts.

In addition to experience-based pay, UFC fighters will receive, in perpetuity royalty, payments amounting to 20-30 percent of any UFC merchandise sold that bears their likeness, according to officials.

For complete coverage of UFC 189, check out the UFC Events section of the site.