Wimbledon unveiled a sweeping prize money increase on Thursday, boosting total payouts by 20 percent in what the All England Club described as by far the largest annual increase in the tournament’s history. Singles champions at the grass-court Grand Slam will take home 3.6 million pounds, equivalent to roughly 4.8 million dollars, when the event begins on June 29.
Total prize money including player per diems will reach 64.2 million pounds, or approximately 85.8 million dollars. The announcement comes at a moment of genuine tension between the sport’s biggest stars and the Grand Slam tournaments over how revenues are divided, with players growing increasingly organized in their push for a larger share.
A significant offer that still falls short of player demands
The gap between what players asked for and what Wimbledon delivered is not trivial. Ahead of the announcement, player representatives had advocated for a total prize pool of 71 million pounds, nearly seven million pounds more than what the club offered. Those discussions involved Larry Scott, the former WTA chief executive who has been advising players in their negotiations with the four Grand Slams.
The All England Club’s chair acknowledged the distance between the two positions while defending the scale of the increase as meaningful and substantial. She expressed hope that players would recognize the significance of what was being offered, pointing to improvements across every round of the draw including qualifying, which will see a 25 percent overall increase. First-round prize money will rise 21 percent to 80,000 pounds per player. Runners-up in both singles draws will receive 1.8 million pounds each, an 18 percent jump from last year.
Players have been vocal and increasingly coordinated
The prize money dispute did not emerge in isolation. More than a year ago, 20 leading players signed a joint letter addressed to the heads of all four Grand Slams, requesting both higher prize money and a more meaningful role in tournament decision-making. The situation escalated ahead of the French Open, when top-ranked players on both tours spoke publicly about the need for collective action. One of the sport’s top women’s players raised the possibility of a boycott if demands continued to go unmet, while several men’s players echoed similar frustrations.
At Roland Garros, the protest took a structured form. Top-ten players limited their media availability to 15 minutes each in a coordinated symbolic gesture directed at the tournament and its revenue distribution practices. The move signaled that player sentiment had shifted from private negotiation to public pressure.
The financial balance Wimbledon must maintain
Raising prize money at Wimbledon is not purely a matter of choosing a number. Ninety percent of any distributable financial surplus generated by the tournament flows directly to the Lawn Tennis Association, the governing body for tennis and padel in Britain. The LTA uses those funds to support grassroots participation, renovate community courts, develop elite players, and operate the warm-up grass-court events that lead into Wimbledon each summer.
In 2025, the Wimbledon surplus reported by the LTA fell four percent compared to the prior year, landing at 48.6 million pounds. Total LTA revenue still grew two percent, aided in part by the addition of a women’s tour event at Queen’s Club. That financial context shapes every conversation about how much more the tournament can direct toward players without affecting the broader ecosystem it funds.
Wimbledon remains the oldest and most prestigious Grand Slam. Iga Swiatek returns as the defending women’s champion. Carlos Alcaraz, last year’s men’s finalist, will be absent due to a wrist injury, leaving the men’s draw without one of its most anticipated storylines.

