Elena Rybakina collected $15.25 million for winning the WTA Finals in Riyadh, the largest single prize in women's sports history and more than double the $5 million Iga Świątek earned at the same event in 2023. The payout includes $5 million for the title, $5 million for going undefeated through round-robin play, and $5.25 million in bonuses tied to season performance. The previous high-water mark was $7.5 million split among the U.S. Women's Open golf purse leaders.
The tour moved the year-end championship to Saudi Arabia under a three-year partnership announced in April. The kingdom's Public Investment Fund supplies prize money through the Saudi Tennis Federation, part of a broader push into women's sports following LIV Golf, the Newcastle United acquisition, and Cristiano Ronaldo's $200 million-per-year deal with Al Nassr. Total Finals prize money reached $25 million, up from $15 million in Fort Worth last year. The tour declined to disclose the full sponsorship value, but people familiar with the talks said the guarantee exceeds $50 million annually when infrastructure and hospitality costs are included.
Player backlash was muted this year compared to initial resistance in spring. Aryna Sabalenka, Coco Gauff, and Rybakina all attended without public objection. Ons Jabeur withdrew citing injury; her agent told Reuters she had "scheduling conflicts." The shift reflects prize-money reality. Rybakina's season earnings now exceed $20 million, comparable to mid-tier ATP stars and triple what the top WTA player earned in 2015. Agents note that appearance fees at exhibitions in Riyadh, Abu Dhabi, and Dubai—often $500,000 to $1 million per event—create financial incentive even for players privately skeptical of sportswashing critiques.
Sponsorship tension is building elsewhere. Three Western brands—names withheld at their request—asked the WTA for contractual relief from Saudi venue activation requirements, according to two people involved in negotiations. The tour refused. One global athletic brand is now evaluating whether to renew its $8 million annual deal when it expires in December 2025. The WTA calendar for next season includes a new $10 million 1000-level event in Jeddah, making Saudi Arabia a fixture beyond the Finals. Tour leadership argues the money accelerates equity: total 2024 prize funds reached $450 million, up 28% year-over-year, with the Saudi partnership covering most of the increase.
The ATP has not announced comparable Saudi involvement, though the kingdom hosted the Next Gen Finals this month with a $2.5 million purse. Three ATP players declined interview requests about potential expansion. One agent, speaking anonymously, said his client would "take the check" if offered comparable terms. The dynamic mirrors Formula 1's Saudi Grand Prix, where driver criticism faded after the second year as the race became calendar infrastructure.
Watch the WTA's December board meeting, where title sponsors will present renewal terms. The tour is also negotiating a U.S. broadcast package to replace Tennis Channel's expiring rights; potential bidders have asked whether Saudi events will require separate editorial guidelines. The Jeddah 1000 is scheduled for late February, one week after Dubai and two weeks before Indian Wells, compressing the spring swing. Rybakina's next competitive appearance is the Australian Open in mid-January, where she enters as the +650 second favorite behind Świątek at +450.
The $15.25 million check clears this week through Citibank's Riyadh branch. Rybakina's management declined to comment on tax jurisdiction or structuring.
The takeaway
WTA's Saudi partnership delivers record purses but strains Western sponsors as tour locks in Gulf calendar through 2027.
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