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Open Era tennis records – Men's singles

The Open Era is the current era of professional tennis. It began in 1968 when the Grand Slam tournaments allowed professional players to compete with amateurs, ending the division that had persisted since the dawn of the sport in the 19th century. The first open tournament was the 1968 British Hard Court Championships held in April, followed by the inaugural open Grand Slam tournament, the 1968 French Open, a month later. Unless otherwise sourced, all records are based on data from the Association of Tennis Professionals (ATP), the International Tennis Federation (ITF), and the official websites of the four Grand Slam tournaments. All rankings-related records are based on ATP rankings, which began in 1973. The names of active players appear in boldface.

Last updated February 1, 2026

Grand Slam tournaments

Career totals

Matches

Grand Slam tournament achievements

Grand Slam

Non-Calendar Year Grand Slam

Career Grand Slam

Minimum at each Grand Slam tournament totals

Season totals

Most seasons with at least one major title or final

Consecutive seasons with at least one major title or final

Per Grand Slam tournament

Titles per tournament

Finals per tournament

Match record per tournament

Match wins per tournament

  • Top 10 leaders

Events won with no sets dropped

Consecutive totals

▲ indicates an active streak

Spanning consecutive tournaments

Winning streaks

Spanning non-consecutive tournaments

Consecutive titles per tournament

Consecutive match wins per tournament

Court type totals

Match record

Match wins

Year-end championships

There have been three prominent Year-end Championships in the Open Era, each involving only the top performers for the given year. Those championships have been the most coveted titles after the four majors during the Open Era.<br /> (1970–present) This is a combination of the YECs (Year-end Championships) for two separate tours: the ITF Grand Prix that ran until 1989 and the ATP Tour that replaced it. For record-keeping purposes, the ATP has incorporated the entire history of the ITF "Masters Grand Prix" alongside its ATP Finals tournament; thus they are both listed as "ATP" here. In total, these YECs have been held at numerous venues around the globe and played on several surfaces (indoor hard since 2006).<br /> (1971–89) The WCT Finals, as the YEC for the World Championship Tennis tour, was held in Dallas, Texas and played on indoor carpet courts.<br /> (1990–99) The Grand Slam Cup (GSC) was an ITF tournament for the top performers in the year's Grand Slam tournaments. It was held in Munich, Germany and played on indoor carpet courts.

Overall totals

ATP totals

WCT totals

ATP Masters 1000 tournaments

(1970–1989) Before the ATP took control of the men's professional tour in 1990, the Grand Prix Super Series was the highest class of events after the four majors and the Year-end Championships but unlike the Masters series, the participation of the top players was not mandatory.

(1990–present) The ATP 1000 events are an annual series of nine top-level tournaments featuring the top professional men players. The ATP 1000 events along with the Grand Slam tournaments and Year-end Championships constitute the most coveted titles on the annual ATP Tour calendar.

ATP Tour totals

Career Golden Masters

All tournaments

Career totals

Titles & finals

Matches

vs. Top 10

Season totals

Tournament totals

Winning streaks

▲ indicates an active streak

Winning streaks per court type

Court type totals

Titles

Match record

Match wins

Titles per season

Per consecutive seasons

Big Titles

(1990–present) The Grand Slam tournaments, the Masters events and the ATP Finals are the Big Titles of the annual ATP Tour calendar, in addition to the quadrennial Summer Olympics. Between 1970 and 1989, the biggest titles were the four majors, Davis Cup, and the Year-end Championships (ATP Finals, WCT Finals and Grand Slam Cup), in addition to the Grand Prix Super Series events.

ATP Tour totals

  • Players with minimum 10 big titles. Active players and records in bold.

Big Titles Sweep

Olympic tournaments

Tennis was reinstated as an official Olympic sport in 1988. There have been ten tournaments in the Open Era.

ATP rankings achievements

ATP rankings began in 1973. These weekly rankings determine tournament eligibility and seedings. At the end of each year they also become the official ATP season rankings.

Rankings weeks

Consecutive weeks

Year-end rankings

Consecutive years

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Prize money

Prize money has increased throughout the Open Era, in some cases greatly in a short time span. For example, the Australian Open winner received A$3,400 in 1970, A$103,875 in 1987, A$916,000 in 2004, and A$4,150,000 in 2026.

  • Career totals include doubles prize money and are not inflation-adjusted.
  • <section end=PrizeMoney/>

Miscellaneous

Youngest and oldest

All tournaments

Grand Slam tournaments

No. 1 & Top 10

Win percentage

Consecutive

Sets statistics

Set and game winning percentages

Consecutive sets won

Consecutive sets won per court type

See also

Notes

References