ATP Finals 2025: dream figures up for grabs for Jannik Sinner, Carlos Alcaraz and other champions

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The ATP Finals 2025 promises spectacle, prestige and a staggering prize pool. On the concrete of Turin&#8217s Inalpi Arena, the best eight players of the season will compete between November 9 and 16 not only for the last major tournament of the season (before the appendix reserved for the Davis Cup in which the national teams will return), but also for a major slice of points and earnings.

Should an undefeated champion emerge, that is, one capable of winning all the group matches, the semifinals and the finals, he or she will take home 1,500 points valid for both the ATP Live Race To Turin and the official ranking, a haul that can change the world hierarchies. Economically, then, he would take home the monstrous sum of 5 million 71 thousand U.S. dollars, the equivalent of 4 million 330 thousand euros at the current exchange rate.

Each victory in the round, moreover, guarantees almost $396,500 (338,190 euros), the one in the semifinals is worth $1,183,500 (1,009,494 euros), and the one in the finals (beyond whether one wins it undefeated in the round or not) is worth $2,367,000 (2,018,938 euros). Even those who play only one match receive a participation fee (ranging from about 141,000 euros for one appearance to 282,000 euros for completing the round), while designated reserves, ready to take over if one of the eight participants drops out, will collect 132,000 euros even if they do not take the field. In doubles, the figures are smaller but still significant: they range from 44 thousand euros for the reserves to nearly 820 thousand for the undefeated champion pair.

In this golden scenario, Jannik Sinner and Carlos Alcaraz stand as the absolute protagonists. The Italian, fresh off a season of confirmations topped by two Slam tournaments won, returns to Turin with the goal of repeating his 2024 title. The Murcian, on the other hand, is determined to bring back to Spain a title that has been missing since 1976 (when Manuel Orantes beat Wojciech Fibak in five sets in the final of the’then Masters Grand Prix in Houston) and that not even a phenomenon like Rafa Nadal has managed to put in his trophy cabinet.

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