01/02/2026
Australian Open 2026 sets records with A$111.5M prize pool. Champions Carlos Alcaraz and Aryna Sabalenka each pocketed A$4.15 million. The 16% increase across all rounds marks the biggest jump in tournament history.
Record Prize Pool Breakdown
Total prize money reached A$111.5 million, up from A$96.5M in 2025. Every round saw increases of 13-19%, benefiting early exits most significantly. First-round losers guaranteed A$150K, ensuring wildcards start strong.
Men’s & Women’s Singles (AUD):
Alcaraz & Sabalenka’s Haul
Alcaraz earned A$4.15M (~US$2.79M) defeating Djokovic in the final. Sabalenka matched this in women’s singles. Semifinalists Djokovic and Sinner each took A$1.25M (~US$840K).
Doubles & Qualifying Payouts
Doubles winners received A$621K (US$418K), with first-round doubles at A$30K. Qualifying rounds offered up to A$83.5K per round, with Q3 losers earning A$83.5K each.
Comparison with Other Majors
Australian Open’s A$111.5M trails US Open’s US$90M but leads Wimbledon (US$73.5M). AO champions’ A$4.15M falls short of US Open’s US$5M but exceeds Wimbledon’s US$4.07M.
Qualifying Breakdown (AUD) Australian Open 2026 Prize Money
This historic payout reflects tennis’s growing commercial power. Early-round increases support lower-ranked players, while top prizes keep stars motivated..
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