Ben Jones (born 19 May 1998) is a British tennis player. He has a career high singles ranking of No. 620 achieved on 19 May 2025 and a career high doubles ranking of No. 183 achieved on 30 March 2026. He has won one professional singles title on the ITF World Tennis Tour and 21 doubles professional doubles titles - 20 ITFs and one ATP Challenger Tour event.
He won his first professional doubles title in June 2019 at the $15k ITF World Tour event in Netanya, Israel, with Ukrainian partner Vladyslav Orlov defeating home pair Yannai Barkai and Jordan Hasson 7âÂÂ6(4) 6âÂÂ2 in the final. Partnering Daniel Little, he won successive tournaments at M15 events in Sharm El Sheikh in 2021. He teamed up with Little again to win an M25 title in Toulouse in March 2022.
In August 2023, he won back-to-back doubles titles on the ITF tour in Israel alongside James Davis, defeating David Poljak and Hamish Stewart in the final of the second week at the M25 Herzlia event.
Alongside Charles Broom he won the final of the Kachreti Challenger in Georgia on 25 May 2024 against Evgeny Karlovskiy and Evgenii Tiurnev 3âÂÂ6, 6âÂÂ1, 10âÂÂ8. This was his first title at ATP Challenger level.
In August 2024, Jones won his first professional singles title at the AIG Irish Open, an M15 event, defeating Polish player Filip Pieczonka in the final 6-4 7-6. He also won the doubles event here with Australian partner Joshua Charlton.
Playing with Marvin Möller, Jones won the doubles title at the ITF M15 tournament in Växjö, Sweden, in September 2024.
From Suffolk, he helped the county win the national county title in 2018. He also attended the University of Bath where he studied Chemistry and won the Men's Doubles title at the BUCS Individual Championships alongside partner Tiarnan Brady in March 2018. While attending Bath, Jones represented the Great Britain students' team on three occasions (2018, 2019 and 2022) at the Master'U BNP Paribas event hosted in France - he played a pivotal role in securing a silver medal for the team in each of his three appearances. Ben also suffers from ulcerative colitis and has completed fundraisers to raise money for Crohn's and Colitis UK.