The United Cup is a mixed-team international tennis event where countries compete using a combination of men’s and women’s matches. It is staged at the start of the season and serves as a lead-in to the Australian Open.
Unlike the Davis Cup and Billie Jean King Cup, which are long-running ITF team championships, the United Cup is a modern mixed event built around short-form ties and a group stage leading into knockout rounds.
This guide explains how the United Cup format works, how teams advance and why it matters on the early-season calendar.
What Is the United Cup?
The United Cup is a nation-based team competition featuring:
- Men’s singles
- Women’s singles
- Mixed doubles
Teams earn tie wins through results across those matches.
The event is designed to showcase both tours together in one competition and create a national-team atmosphere without the two-day “five-match tie” structure used in classic team tennis.
How the Format Works
The United Cup typically uses:
- Group stage
- Knockout rounds
- Final
Group Stage
- Nations are placed into groups
- Teams play ties against other nations in their group
- The best-performing teams advance
Knockout Rounds
- Top teams advance to semifinals and final
- Tie structure remains the same, with men’s and women’s singles plus mixed doubles
What a “Tie” Includes
A United Cup tie generally includes:
- One men’s singles match
- One women’s singles match
- One mixed doubles match
A nation wins the tie by winning the majority of matches.
Mixed doubles becomes a swing match in many ties, especially when teams split the singles.
How Teams Qualify
United Cup entry is nation-based and typically includes:
- Direct entry for top nations based on player rankings
- Additional places for other nations selected through qualification criteria set for that season
Because it is a new-format event, selection and qualification rules can evolve year to year.
Does the United Cup Count for Rankings?
Often, yes, depending on the edition and tour policies. Points policies can vary, so treat it as a tournament where ranking impact should be checked for that season.
For overall ranking system context, see Tennis Rankings Explained.
Why the United Cup Matters
The United Cup matters because it:
- Launches the season with meaningful matches
- Creates high-leverage mixed doubles pairings
- Builds momentum ahead of the Australian Open
- Provides a rare team environment that includes both ATP and WTA players
For some players, it functions as a competitive alternative to standard warm-up tournaments.
United Cup vs Davis Cup vs Billie Jean King Cup
| Event | Type | Typical Structure |
|---|---|---|
| United Cup | Mixed teams | Group stage + knockout |
| Davis Cup | Men’s teams | Home/away ties + Finals |
| Billie Jean King Cup | Women’s teams | Home/away ties + Finals |
United Cup is mixed and designed for short-form event pacing. Davis Cup and BJK Cup are legacy team championships built around national federations.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is the United Cup the same as the Davis Cup?
No. Davis Cup is men’s-only and uses a different tie structure.
Is the United Cup the same as the Olympics?
No. The Olympics are a medal tournament held every four years with knockout draws.
Does United Cup include mixed doubles?
Yes, and it often decides ties.



