Carlos Alcaraz and Jannik Sinner cemented their position as the top dogs of the ATP Tour in 2025. After splitting the four Majors between them in 2024, they repeated the feat yet again this year. They also bagged four of the nine Masters 1000 titles, and contested the ATP Finals final, which was won by the Italian.
Winning the tour's biggest trophies also results in a hefty payday. While Alcaraz and Sinner both made a killing this year, the latter pipped the former to be the highest earner of 2025 by making $19,114,396. The Spaniard was right behind his chief rival with $18,803,427 in prize money.
Sinner's $5.07 million paycheck at the ATP Finals was the most a player made from a single tournament. His Australian Open triumph was worth $2.1 million, while his victory at Wimbledon fetched him $4.1 million. His runner-up finish at the US Open added $2.5 million to his bank account.
Sinner's $19.1 million total doesn't include his $6 million payday from the Six Kings Slam. Prize money from exhibition events isn't counted towards earnings from official ATP tournaments.
Nearly a third of Alcaraz's $18.8 million in prize money came from his US Open winnings, which stood at $5 million. He won three Masters 1000 titles, with each title adding over $1 million to his tally. He made close to $3 million as the French Open champion.
Alcaraz and Sinner made a combined $37.9 million this year, while the rest of the top 10 combined earned $39.8 million. The duo's current fortune places them high up among the all-time prize money earners list.
Carlos Alcaraz and Jannik Sinner's career prize money haul puts them in the top 10 of the all-time list

Carlos Alcaraz and Jannik Sinner's career prize money total stands at $57.4 million and $56.6 million respectively after the conclusion of the 2025 season. The Spaniard's haul puts him in fifth place on the all-time list, while the Italian's total places him in seventh position.
Novak Djokovic leads the list with a whopping $191 million in career prize money. Rafael Nadal is in second place with $134 million, followed by Roger Federer with $130 million.
They are the only players to cross the $100 million mark in the history of the sport. With Alcaraz and Sinner still being quite young, they're likely to join the three legends of the sport in crossing the $100 million threshold in the near future.