Millions of dollars. Checks that don't fit in your pocket. Records that are broken every year. Prize money in tennis is fantastic numbers. But who gets them? Do all players bathe in gold? And why is tennis one of the most expensive sports for both stars and middling players? Let's take a calculator and figure out where the money comes from and where it goes.
Where does the money for prize money come from
The main source is tournaments. The Grand Slam tournaments (Australian Open, Roland Garros, Wimbledon, US Open) earn money from tickets, broadcasts, sponsors, and the sale of souvenirs. Their income is in the hundreds of millions of dollars. And they share it with players. For example, in 2024, the total prize fund of the US Open exceeded 75 million dollars, and Wimbledon - 50 million pounds.
Next come the Masters 1000 series (for men) and the WTA 1000 series (for women). Their funds range from 7 to 12 million dollars. The 500 and 250 series tournaments are smaller: from 1 to 3 million. And finally, the challengers and futures - the lowest league of professionals - there the funds can be from 25 to 150 thousand dollars for the entire tournament.
In addition, the Association of Tennis Professionals (ATP) and the Women's Tennis Association (WTA) pay bonuses for qualifying for the year-end tournament, as well as have their own funds to support players in lower tiers. All these money circulate in the system, but are distributed extremely unevenly.
Top players: millionaires on rackets
Novak Djokovic, Rafael Nadal, Roger Federer, Serena Williams - their prize money for their careers has exceeded 150 million dollars each. Only prize money, not counting advertising and personal contracts. Djokovic had earned nearly 185 million dollars in prize money by 2025. Month by month, he received checks for 3-4 million for winning a Grand Slam tournament. Plus bonuses from the ATP for first place in the ranking.
For example, the distribution at the Grand Slam: the winner re ...
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