Elena Rybakina collected $4.9 million for winning the WTA Finals in Riyadh last November, the largest single prize awarded in women's sports history. The figure doubles the $2.4 million she earned for the same title in 2023 and eclipses the $3 million Coco Gauff took home as the 2023 champion. Saudi Arabia's Public Investment Fund underwrites the event through 2026 under a three-year deal signed in April 2024, with guarantees that push total prize money above $15 million annually.
The WTA moved the season-ending championship from Fort Worth and Cancún to Riyadh as part of a broader Gulf recalibration. The tour had cycled through Shenzhen, Singapore, and Guadalajara since 2019, never settling on a host willing to match the capital Saudi Arabia deployed. Prize structure mirrors the playbook: the $4.9 million payout assumes an undefeated champion wins all five round-robin and knockout matches. A winless finalist still clears $1.2 million, more than the runner-up took home at any prior edition.
Player reaction fractured along predictable lines. Aryna Sabalenka and Ons Jabeur praised the prize pool and logistics. Chris Evert called the Saudi deal "complicated" but acknowledged the financial reality. Martina Navratilova refused to attend, citing human rights concerns, though she noted the WTA has limited leverage when ATP events already operate in the region. The tour's board approved the Riyadh move by majority vote, with Steve Simon noting the WTA had turned down Saudi offers for three years before accepting terms that included $15 million in annual prize money, player accommodation at the St. Regis, and guaranteed court time at a purpose-built venue.
Sponsor interest accelerated. SAP extended its WTA partnership through 2027 within weeks of the Riyadh announcement. Porsche, the tour's automotive partner since 2019, added activation at the Finals after skipping the 2023 Cancún edition. The economics shift downstream: players ranked 20-30 now price Middle East exhibition appearances at $150,000 to $250,000, up from $75,000 in 2022, because Saudi and UAE events establish the rate card. Family offices in Riyadh and Abu Dhabi have started calling agents about player-equity stakes in tech ventures, the same pattern that followed LIV Golf.
The tour's 2026 calendar anchors around three Gulf weeks: Dubai in February, Doha in March, and Riyadh in November. Indian Wells and the French Open remain the prestige stops, but the financial center of gravity moved. The WTA's total prize money for 2024 crossed $350 million, up 18% year-over-year, with Saudi capital funding roughly $45 million of that increase when you include the Finals and a new $15 million event planned for Jeddah in 2026.
Rybakina, who represents Kazakhstan but trains in Dubai, has positioned herself as the Gulf circuit's signature athlete. She holds three Middle East titles since 2023 and appeared in Saudi tourism ads that ran during the Finals broadcast. Her agent, Max Eisenbud at Excel Sports, has fielded inquiries from two Saudi-backed consumer brands about endorsement deals that would pay north of $2 million annually, according to a person familiar with the conversations.
The WTA's next board meeting is scheduled for March 2025 in Indian Wells. Extension talks with Saudi Arabia are expected to begin by June, with the kingdom pushing for a second annual event and the tour weighing whether to move the year-end championship to a rotating model that includes Riyadh every other year. Prize money for the 2025 Finals is already confirmed at $15.25 million, a 2% bump that keeps pace with the tour's stated goal of matching ATP payout growth through 2027.