After turning professional Pavon played on the
Alps Tour in 2014 and 2015. He won the Open International de Rebetz in 2014 and the Servizitalia Open in
2015. He reached the final stage of the 2015
European Tour Q School and gained a place on the
Challenge Tour for 2016. Pavon didn't win on the
2016 Challenge Tour but he finished in second place three times: at the
Turkish Airlines Challenge,
Montecchia Golf Open and
Foshan Open. He was joint third in the
NBO Golf Classic Grand Final and finished sixth on the Road To Oman Rankings to earn his 2017
European Tour card. Pavon's first season on the
European Tour was moderately successful and he finished 49th in the Order of Merit. His best result was to finish second in the 2018 AfrAsia Bank Mauritius Open at Anahita after a final round 67. He finished third in the 2017 Scottish Open. The tournament was one of the Open Qualifying Series events and his high finish gave him an entry to the
2017 Open Championship the following week. He had rounds of 74 and 78 and missed the cut. Pavon had less success on the
2018 European Tour, finishing the season 89th in the Order of Merit. He finished tied for 5th in the
AfrAsia Bank Mauritius Open at the end of 2017 but his only other top-10 finish was in the
Dubai Duty Free Irish Open. He qualified for his first
U.S. Open. He started with a 71 and made the cut, despite a second round 77, finishing in a tie for 25th place. In October 2023, Pavon won his first European Tour event at the
Acciona Open de España. He recorded a total of 261 (23-under-par) to win wire-to-wire by four shots. He finished the
2023 European Tour season in 15th place on the Race to Dubai, earning him PGA Tour membership for the
2024 season. In January 2024, he won the
Farmers Insurance Open by one stroke over
Nicolai Højgaard. With this win, he became the first Frenchman to win on the PGA Tour since
Arnaud Massy won the
1907 Open Championship (later recognised as a PGA Tour victory). In February, he finished third at the
AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am in California. He earned $1.36m in prize money and finished at −15, 2 strokes behind the winner
Wyndham Clark. ==Personal life==