The Italian Open will award women equal prize money by 2025, tournament organizers announced this week, making it the tenth elite-tier tennis event to commit to parity. Last year's men's champion took home €1.1 million while the women's winner received €693,000, a 37% gap that disappears in two years.
Rome joins the four Grand Slams and five other Masters 1000/WTA 1000 tournaments—Indian Wells, Miami, Madrid, Cincinnati, and Beijing—already at parity or committed to it by 2026. The move matters because Masters 1000 events still pay men roughly 40% more than women across most stops, and Rome was the largest remaining holdout in the European clay swing.
The timing tracks with broader WTA Tour economics. Jannik Sinner has earned $6.72 million in 2026 tournament winnings through May, collecting more than $1 million per Masters 1000 title. His five victories this year highlight the ATP's structural advantage: men play best-of-five at majors and collect larger checks at the tier just below. Women's tour leadership has quietly pressed tournament directors to close gaps at the 1000-level, where sponsor interest now matches or exceeds men's events in key demos. The Italian Tennis Federation controls both Rome tournaments and can absorb the increase without splitting revenue streams.
Sponsor math supports the shift. Women's finals at Indian Wells and Madrid drew higher U.S. television ratings than men's matches in 2024 and 2025, and apparel partners pay comparable activation fees for both tours at combined events. Rome's decision removes a visible inequity that complicated pitch meetings—CMOs asking why they should pay the same fee for different prize pools. Equal pay simplifies the conversation and aligns with corporate DEI commitments that still carry budget weight in 2026.
The move also exposes the remaining gap. Six Masters 1000 tournaments—Monte Carlo, Stuttgart, Halle, Hamburg, Shanghai, and Paris—still pay men significantly more, and none have announced timelines. ATP Tour leadership has resisted mandatory parity requirements, arguing that best-of-five formats and different tour structures justify different payouts. That position grows harder to defend as majors, the largest Masters events, and now Rome equalize.
Watch the French Open's 2026 prize-money announcement in late May, where Roland Garros will either hold at parity or adjust total pools to reflect Sinner-level men's dominance in early-year earnings. ATP Masters 1000 tournament directors meet in June to discuss minimum prize-money standards, and women's tour executives will push for binding parity language. Rome's commitment creates leverage: the Italian federation now pays equally at its flagship event, making it awkward for Monte Carlo or Shanghai to argue they cannot.
The last comparable shift happened between 2006 and 2010, when Wimbledon and the French Open adopted equal pay after decades of resistance. This time the turn is faster—Rome moved in two years, not two decades—because the infrastructure already exists and the sponsor case is clear.
The takeaway
Rome's 2025 equal-pay commitment leaves six Masters 1000 events defending a 40% men's premium as sponsor economics and ratings converge.
tennisprize moneywtaatpitalian openwomen's sports
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