Saudi PIF Underwrites WTA Maternity Fund, First Paid Leave Structure in Women's Tennis
Public Investment Fund backs comprehensive benefit program as league addresses career-planning gap that has cost rankings points and endorsement revenue.
Published May 27, 2026Source PRNewswire UKFrom the chopped neck
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DIAMOND · May 27, 2026
ISABELLA'S ISLAY· May 27, 2026
Saudi PIF Underwrites WTA Maternity Fund, First Paid Leave Structure in Women's Tennis
Public Investment Fund backs comprehensive benefit program as league addresses career-planning gap that has cost rankings points and endorsement revenue.
The WTA and Saudi Arabia's Public Investment Fund launched the PIF WTA Maternity Fund Program on Monday, creating the first formalized paid-leave structure in professional women's tennis. The fund covers salary replacement, ranking protection, and tournament seed guarantees for players who take maternity breaks. Dollar figures were not disclosed. PIF's contribution follows its $100 million multiyear investment in WTA events announced in 2023.
The program guarantees players up to 24 weeks of income replacement at their prior 12-month average earnings, capped at an undisclosed ceiling. Rankings freeze for up to three years, allowing players to return without penalty in seeding or direct-entry qualification. The WTA Players' Council, led by Ons Jabeur, pushed the structure through rules meetings in late 2024 after polling members on career-interruption concerns. Implementation begins with the 2025 season. Players must notify the WTA 12 weeks before their due date to activate benefits.
The mechanics matter because tennis has no off-season and no collective bargaining. Unlike team-sport athletes with guaranteed contracts, WTA players earn through prize money and performance bonuses. A top-20 player taking six months off historically faced ranking slides that eliminated direct entry into majors, costing $500,000 to $1.5 million in lost prize money and appearance fees. Serena Williams returned from maternity leave in 2018 unseeded at the French Open, forcing draws that placed her against top seeds in early rounds. Victoria Azarenka's 2016 leave triggered a custody dispute that extended her absence to 15 months and dropped her from No. 1 to No. 600. The WTA had no policy framework to address either case.
PIF's backing solves the funding gap but introduces reputational complexity. Saudi Arabia's women's rights record—driving bans lifted only in 2018, male guardianship laws still restricting travel and marriage—sits awkwardly against a program designed to support female athletes' family planning. Human rights groups criticized the WTA's 2023 PIF partnership as sportswashing. The fund's optics improve slightly because it directs capital to players rather than event infrastructure, but the contradiction remains. The WTA declined to address whether PIF requested naming rights or board influence over benefit disbursements. Worth noting: the fund's governance structure was not detailed in Monday's announcement.
The initiative shifts leverage in endorsement negotiations. Apparel and racket sponsors typically reduce or pause payments during injury or maternity absences because athletes generate no media exposure. A player with ranking protection and a guaranteed return date can now negotiate layered deals that maintain partial income during leave. Expect Nike, Adidas, and Wilson to update standard contracts with maternity clauses in Q2 2025. Agents are already modeling scenarios where a top-30 player takes leave at 28, returns at 29 with her ranking intact, and extends her endorsement cycle by two years instead of losing positioning to younger competitors.
The ATP has no equivalent program. Men's tennis operates under the same independent-contractor structure but has not faced the same public pressure to formalize parental leave. The gap will likely persist unless a marquee male player—Djokovic, Alcaraz—publicly advocates for it. Meanwhile, other women's sports leagues are watching. The LPGA, NWSL, and WNBA all have partial maternity policies, but none offer the combination of income replacement, ranking freeze, and seed protection the WTA now provides.
What to watch: player uptake in 2025, particularly among top-50 players in their late twenties. The fund's structure will be tested when the first marquee name—top-10, multimillion-dollar endorsements—files for benefits. Also: whether PIF requests branding at WTA Finals in Riyadh, scheduled for November 2025, and how players navigate the optics of holding a PIF-funded check while competing in a PIF-branded event.
The WTA's next rules committee meeting is in March. Expect discussions on extending the ranking freeze beyond three years and adding coverage for adoption or surrogacy. The fund exists because PIF wrote the check, but the template now exists for other leagues to copy without waiting for a sovereign wealth fund to arrive.
The takeaway
PIF funds the WTA's first maternity program with income replacement and ranking protection, creating a negotiation template other women's leagues will replicate.
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