Roland-Garros 2025: How much do participants and winners earn? Everything you need to know about the tournament's prize money

How much will players earn by participating in the 2025 edition of Roland-Garros ? It will be more than last year! In 2024 , the overall prize money for the Grand Slam had already increased by 7.82% compared to 2023.
This year, the prize money increase is 5.21% compared to 2024. The total prize money distributed thus rises to 56.352 million euros, 2.87 million more than last year.
As a reminder, since 2007, men and women have received the same prize money in all categories, with Roland-Garros being the last tournament to impose parity, almost 35 years after the US Open.
As in all tournaments, the more rounds you advance, the more the prize money increases. For a single first round this year, a player can win €78,000, which is €5,000 more than last year. A huge gap exists between the first and second weeks of the fortnight: reaching the third round earns €168,000, while the round of 16 goes up to €265,000!
Then, the prize money becomes dizzying, reaching the Holy Grail: €440,000 for a quarter-final, €690,000 for a semi-final, and €1.275 million for the defeated finalist! The tournament's big winners will receive twice as much as their finalist opponents, with a prize money of €2.55 million.
In doubles, men and women also receive the same amount. However, there's no increase this year. Prize money is the same as in 2024, ranging from €17,500 for a first-round elimination to €590,000 for a tournament victory. These sums are not paid individually, but rather per team. The same goes for the mixed doubles tournament, where pairs eliminated in the first round share €5,000 and the winners share €122,000.
In the men's and women's wheelchair tennis singles tournaments, players receive between €8,750 and €63,900 depending on their results, while in doubles, teams must share between €5,150 and €21,650. This represents an increase of less than 3% compared to 2024.
But these increases aren't coming out of nowhere. In recent months, the world tennis circuit has been in turmoil. At the beginning of April, the top 20 men's and women's players took to the streets to challenge the organizers of the Grand Slams, demanding an increase in prize money and a fairer distribution of the wealth generated by the four major tournaments. This letter was sent a few weeks after the PTPA, the players' association, filed a complaint against the ATP, WTA, ITF, and ITIA (International Tennis Integrity Agency) to denounce a "corrupt, illegal, and abusive system."
Main table
Qualifications
Le Parisien