How much money and how many points did Jannik Sinner, Taylor Fritz and Carlos Alcaraz earn at 2024 ATP Finals?
Jannik Sinner has added yet another big title to his collection as he has been crowned 2024 ATP Finals champion, beating Taylor Fritz in the final in Turin.
The Italian – who also won the Australian Open and US Open this campaign – went through the tournament undefeated as he claimed his maiden title at the season-ending event, becoming the first Italian to do so in the process.
Sinner’s five wins from five matches earned him an incredible cheque of $4,881,100 as he took his prize-money earnings for the 2024 season to $16,946,149.
The 23-year-old’s $4,881,100 earnings for the year-end tournament is now the biggest prize cheque in official tennis events as it surpassed Novak Djokovic’s $4,740,300 from the 2022 ATP Finals when the Serbian also won the tournament without losing a match.
Let’s not forget that Sinner also won $6m at the Six Kings Slam in Saudi Arabia, but that of course was an exhibition tournament and not part of the ATP Tour.
How did Sinner get to that $4.8m mark at the ATP Finals?
It is made up of a $331,000 participation fee for his three matches while he collected $1,189,500 for his three round-robin wins ($396,500 per win). He earned $1,123,400 for beating Casper Ruud in the semi-final and $2,237,200 for winning the final itself.
Fritz, meanwhile, went home with $2,247,400 as he collected a $331,000 participation fee, $793,000 for winning two matches in the group phase and $1,123,400 for winning his semi-final.
Alexander Zverev and Ruud exited the tournament in the semi-final stage and the former earned $1,520,500 ($331,000 participation fee and $1,189,500 for three round-robin wins) while the Norwegian won $1,124,000 as he secured only two group match victories.
Carlos Alcaraz, Daniil Medvedev, Andrey Rublev and Alex de Minaur were the four players who failed to make it past the round-robin phase.
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Jannik Sinner gets record prize money cheque as he breaks Roger Federer ATP Finals record
Alcaraz and Medvedev won one match each so went home with $727,500 (participation fee plus $396,500 for a win) while Rublev and De Minaur didn’t win any matches so only earned a $331,000 participation fee.
Grigor Dimitrov and Stefanos Tsitsipas were the two alternates and received $155,000 for travelling to Turin.
As for points, Sinner earned a maximum of 1,500 points (600 for three group wins, 400 for a semi-final win and 500 for the final win) while Fritz added 800 points to his tally (400 for two group wins and 400 for the semi-final win).
Zverev had three group wins (600 points) and Ruud only had two (400). Alcaraz and Medvedev earned 200 points each for the single group wins.