Jannik Sinner moves to seventh on ATP Tour's all-time money list

Jannik Sinner moves to seventh on ATP Tour's all-time money list

After winning at Indian Wells and the Miami Open last month, Jannik Sinner has moved past $60m in career prize money.

If you're winning, there's a pot of gold at the end of the ATP Tour.

The four-time Grand Slam winner joined Jim Courier (1991), Michael Chang (1992), Pete Sampras (1994), Marcelo Rios (1998), Andre Agassi (2001), Roger Federer (2005, 2006, 2017) and Novak Djokovic (2011, 2014, 2015, 2016) on the list of men to achieve the incredible feat.

Sinner, though, also created his own piece of history during the American hard-court swing as he became the first player to win both events without dropping a single set as he won 24 consecutive sets across the two tournaments.

Besides picking up 2,000 ranking points and adding two shiny new trophies to his collection, Sinner also went home with a lot of money as both tournaments award the champion $1,151,380 prize cheques.

The world No 2 started the Sunshine Double on $912,500 in earnings for the 2026 season, but he added $1,161,135 to his tally after the Indian Wells Open as he earned $1,151,380 for winning the singles title and $9,755 from his first-round doubles appearance alongside Reilly Opelka (teams earn $19,510 for losing in the first round).

He then picked up another $1,151,380 for his Miami Open win and now sits on $3,225,015 for the year, just behind Carlos Alcaraz on $3,703,785, while Alexander Zverev is a distant third on $1,956,225.

Sinnerâ™s double payday has helped him to move to $61,191,211 in career earnings as he became only the seventh man to break the $60m milestone with Novak Djokovic, Rafael Nadal, Roger Federer, Andy Murray, Alcaraz and Zverev the other players to pass that mark.

Alcaraz, Zverev and Sinner are all likely to pass Murray in the coming months, with the Spaniard and Italian on course to break the $70m mark before the 2026 season is out, going by their earnings in recent years.

In fact, Alcaraz and Sinner could be ahead of former world No 1 Murray when the clay-court swing comes to a conclusion at the French Open at the start of June.

Besides Roland Garros, there are three ATP Masters 1000 events in the coming months, with each tournament offering big cheques to the winners.

Players To Earn $60m In Career Prize Money

1. Novak Djokovic - $193,215,570

2. Rafael Nadal - $134,946,100

3. Roger Federer - $130,594,339

4. Andy Murray - $64,687,542

5. Carlos Alcaraz - $64,336,028

6. Alexander Zverev - $61,319,289

7. Jannik Sinner - $61,191,211

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