The ATP Finals and WTA Finals are the season-ending championships of professional tennis. Unlike The ATP Finals and WTA Finals are the season-ending championships of professional tennis. Unlike regular tour events, they feature only the top performers of the year and use a round-robin format before the knockout stage.
These tournaments close the calendar season and can influence the year-end No. 1 ranking.
What Is the ATP Finals?
The ATP Finals feature the top eight men’s singles players of the season, based on the ATP Race standings.
Key features
- Eight-player singles field
- Round-robin group stage
- Semifinals and final
- Best-of-three sets
- Typically played indoors on hard courts
Players are split into two groups of four. Each player competes in three group matches. The top two from each group advance to the semifinals.
What Is the WTA Finals?
The WTA Finals are the season-ending championship for the women’s tour and follow a similar concept.
Key features
- Eight-player singles field
- Round-robin group stage
- Semifinals and final
- Best-of-three sets
Qualification is based on the WTA Race to the Finals.
How Players Qualify
Qualification is determined by the Race, not the 52-week rankings.
- Race points reset at the start of the calendar year
- Only current-season results count
- The top eight players in the Race qualify
If a qualified player withdraws, alternates may replace them.
Ranking Points at the Finals
The Finals offer significant ranking points, but totals vary because of the round-robin format.
ATP Finals points (singles)
- Each round-robin win earns points
- An undefeated champion can earn up to 1,500 points
WTA Finals points (singles)
Points are similarly high, with total points depending on how many group matches a player wins and whether they win the title.
Because points depend on wins during the group stage, the Finals do not have a single fixed “winner points” value the way a Masters 1000, WTA 1000 or Grand Slam does.
How the Round-Robin Format Works
Unlike Grand Slams or most tour events, the Finals begin with a group stage:
- Two groups of four players
- Each player plays three matches
- Top two advance to semifinals
- Semifinal winners advance to final
Tiebreakers in the group standings are typically determined by:
- Match wins
- Head-to-head result
- Sets won and lost
- Games won percentage
This format guarantees multiple matches for every participant.
Why the Finals Matter
The season-ending championships:
- Reward season-long consistency
- Provide one of the strongest fields of the year
- Offer high ranking-point upside
- Often shape the year-end No. 1 outcome
Winning the Finals is widely considered one of the sport’s most significant non-Grand Slam achievements.
Finals vs Grand Slams
| Event | Field Size | Max Points | Format |
|---|---|---|---|
| Grand Slam | 128 | 2,000 | Knockout |
| ATP/WTA Finals | 8 | Up to 1,500 | Round robin + knockout |
Grand Slams are the sport’s defining championships. The Finals are the elite season-ending test.



