Elena Rybakina Takes Home $4.8M at WTA Finals, Largest Single Payout in Women's Sports
Saudi-backed Riyadh event doubles prior record as tour navigates sportswashing debate with eight-figure checks.
Elena Rybakina collected $4.8 million for winning the WTA Finals in Riyadh, the largest single-event payout in women's sports history and more than double the $2.05 million Iga Świątek earned for the same title twelve months earlier in Cancún.
The total prize pool reached $15.25 million, up from $9 million in 2023, funded by Saudi Arabia's Public Investment Fund as part of a multi-year hosting agreement the WTA signed in April. The undefeated champion's check eclipses the $3 million Coco Gauff earned at this year's Miami Open and dwarfs the $2.6 million Aryna Sabalenka took from the Australian Open in January. Runner-up Zheng Qinwen left with $2.5 million, more than most Grand Slam winners received a decade ago.
The money is working exactly as intended. Player objections to staging the tour's crown jewel in a country where women's rights groups documented systemic legal discrimination softened once the deposit cleared. Ons Jabeur, who declined to compete in Riyadh on principle in 2023, showed up this year. Jessica Pegula and Danielle Collins, both vocal about human rights during the initial Saudi negotiations, played without public comment. The WTA required all qualified players to attend barring injury, but the fine structure became moot when the альтернатива was leaving $4.8 million on the table.
The deal reshapes the tour's economics in ways that extend past October. Riyadh's $15.25 million pool exceeds the $14.5 million available across all four Grand Slams for women's singles champions combined this year. The gap creates bargaining leverage for WTA leadership as the tour renegotiates media rights in North America and Europe before the current NBC and beIN contracts expire in December 2025. Saudi capital also funds the $9 million WTA 1000 event in Riyadh launching next February, meaning the kingdom controls roughly $24 million in annual prize money before accounting for exhibition fees paid directly to top players for off-season appearances in Diriyah and Jeddah.
Sponsors are watching the player-headcount math. Porsche, Rolex, and Wilson staffed activation booths in Riyadh despite internal ESG committees flagging reputational risk in March planning meetings. The brands followed the athletes, who followed the money. Meanwhile, the ATP Finals in Turin distributed $15.25 million across its field using an identical pool, the first time men's and women's year-end payouts reached parity. The symbolic win cost the WTA nothing; Saudi Arabia wrote the check.
The Saudi commitment runs through 2027, with the PIF holding an option to extend another three years at $18 million minimum purse. The WTA's next decision point arrives in late 2025, when officials must either lock the extension or begin quiet conversations with Dubai, Doha, and Singapore about alternate hosts willing to match Riyadh's nine-figure pledge. Beijing made a preliminary offer at $12 million in September but withdrew after the WTA declined to guarantee a November slot that conflicts with the ATP's Shanghai Masters.
Player agents are already adjusting off-season calendars. Rybakina's $4.8 million haul surpasses her $6.1 million in official prize money from nineteen other tournaments combined this season. That ratio tells rising stars where leverage sits: show up in Riyadh or explain to your coach why you forfeited more than you'd earn winning Indian Wells, Miami, and Rome together. The tour's top ten will each bank Saudi money at the 1000 event in February, with guarantees rumored between $500,000 and $1.2 million depending on ranking and semifinal commitments.
The WTA declined to disclose hosting fees paid by Riyadh beyond prize money, but comparable sporting events suggest the true cost exceeds $40 million annually when including venue construction, player hotels, and production. The PIF spent $6.8 billion on sports investments in 2023 alone; the tennis line item rounds to zero.
Watch whether Świątek or Sabalenka skip injury-risk hardcourt events in the spring to preserve health for the Saudi swing, and whether the February 1000 event pulls withdrawals from Australian Open quarterfinalists still nursing December injuries. The WTA medical timeout rules tighten in January, requiring third-party physician review for any withdrawal within two weeks of a $1 million-plus purse.