Elena Rybakina collected $4.8 million for winning the WTA Finals in Riyadh, the largest single-event prize in women's tennis history and roughly 150% more than the $1.9 million she would have earned at last year's tournament in Cancún.
The payout structure reflects Saudi Arabia's entry as title sponsor and host through a three-year agreement signed in April. Total prize money for the eight-woman field reached $15 million, up from $9 million in 2023. Rybakina went undefeated through round-robin and knockout stages, guaranteeing the maximum payout even before the final. The runner-up took home $2.5 million; players eliminated in the semifinals earned $1.2 million each. Even the participant who went 0-3 in group play left with $350,000, more than the winner of most WTA 500 events.
The Saudi Public Investment Fund's involvement explains the step-change. The kingdom is acquiring credibility in women's sports at speed: hosting the Finals gives the PIF proximity to IMG, WTA's commercial agent, and to the sport's top-20 players during off-season sponsor activation windows. The WTA Finals historically struggled for host cities willing to write eight-figure checks; Riyadh committed immediately and attached naming rights to the Saudi Tennis Federation. For context, the men's ATP Finals in Turin pays the champion $4.88 million from a $15.25 million pool, meaning the gender pay gap at season-ending championships effectively closed in one contract cycle.
Sponsor and apparel executives are watching the ripple effects. Rybakina's existing deals with Nike, Yonex, and a portfolio of Gulf-based brands now carry higher baseline visibility. Her earned media value from the Riyadh win registers in the $8-12 million range across Middle Eastern and Central Asian markets where tennis remains aspirational, not transactional. That comps favorably against F1 drivers and European football players who command similar activation budgets but split attention across longer seasons. For brands targeting women's sports, the calculus is straightforward: the WTA's willingness to take Saudi money front-loaded prize equity that took the PGA Tour decades to achieve. The optics will remain contested, but the economics are clarifying quickly.
Rybakina's win also underscores the asset-value gap between Slam titles and consistent season performance. She has one major—Wimbledon in 2022—but her game travels well indoors, and she reached the Finals as the No. 5 seed after a steady summer hardcourt run. The WTA's year-end championship pays better than three of the four Slams for the winner: Wimbledon distributes roughly $3.2 million to its singles champions; the U.S. and Australian Opens pay $3.6 million and $2.1 million respectively. Only the French Open, at $2.7 million, sits below the Finals now. That prize inversion creates strange incentives. A player who peaks in November can out-earn a Slam champion if they win five matches in Riyadh versus seven at a major.
The WTA Finals move to Riyadh locks through 2026. Between now and then, watch three dynamics: whether player appearance fees beyond prize money start leaking into trade press, how the tournament's November timing affects offseason training and sponsor commitment windows, and if any WTA 1000 events attempt to match the Finals' prize scale using regional sovereign wealth. The ATP Finals' Turin contract runs through 2025; its renewal negotiation will now reference the WTA's Saudi number as a floor, not a ceiling.