284 titles for 100 British tennis stars across the 2025 season
• 5 minute read
Britain’s tennis stars have gone from strength-to-strength in 2025, with titles won and records broken across this year’s Grand Slams, ATP, WTA, ITF Tours and more.
This year, British tennis players won 284 unique titles across all the professional tours – the most in at least four years, including a high of 260 in 2024.
2025 also saw 100 different title winners, showing the strength and depth in the British game this season.
Here’s a breakdown of all the key stats:
- 284 individual titles
- 218 non-wheelchair titles
- 66 wheelchair titles
- 100 British title winners
- 130 singles titles
- 154 doubles titles
- Six Grand Slam and one year-end Finals
- 43 titles won on home soil
Grand Slams, year-end finals, Masters and Super Series – the Brits have won silverware at every level of the sport this year.
We look back on the biggest titles, highlights and milestones from the 2025 tennis season:
Six British Grand Slam titles

The Brits continued to star at the Grand Slams this season – bringing home six titles across the four events.
In the men’s doubles, Henry Patten and Finnish partner started the season by winning the Australian Open title – their second Grand Slam trophy in two seasons.
Patten and Heliovaara won an epic three hour final against Simone Bolelli and Andrea Vavassori 6-7(16), 7-6(5), 6-3. Patten is now the fourth British player to win the men’s doubles title in Melbourne (Roger Taylor, Jamie Murray and Joe Salisbury).
Julian Cash and Lloyd Glasspool finished the season as the No.1 ranked doubles team in the world – the first all-British duo to ever achieve this.
The highlight of their incredible season was their Wimbledon title back in July. Competing for their first Grand Slam, Cash and Glasspool beat David Pel and Rinky Hijikata 6-2, 7-6(3) to be crowned the first all-British men’s doubles champions in 89 years.
There was British representation in every Grand Slam men’s doubles final this year, with Salisbury and Neal Skupski finishing runners-up at Roland Garros and the US Open. All five Brits finished the season ranked inside the ATP doubles top 10.

In wheelchair tennis, Alfie Hewett got his year off to a brilliant start with his 10th singles Grand Slam title at the Australian Open, but finished runner-up at the French Open and Wimbledon against Tokito Oda.
Hewett and partner Gordon Reid continued their wheelchair doubles dominance by adding their sixth consecutive Australian Open and Roland Garros titles to their stacked trophy cabinet.
Andy Lapthorne combined with Sam Schroder early in the season to win his eighth Australian Open quad doubles title – beating Guy Sasson and Niels Vink in the final 6-1, 6-4.
Greg Slade made his first Grand Slam final in the quad doubles at Wimbledon, losing out to top seeds Sasson and Vink.
Champion at the season-ending Finals
Patten and Heliovaara bookmarked the season with their two biggest titles – starting with the Australian Open and finishing with the Nitto ATP Finals.
After losing out to Salisbury and Skupski in their second Group Stage match, Patten and Heliovaara bounced back to win their group decider and defeat Bolelli and Vavassori in the semi-final.
In the final they faced a rematch against Salisbury and Skupski, but this time, put in a clinical performance to win 7-5, 6-3 and lift the ATP Finals title.
Patten became only the second British player to win the doubles event at the ATP Finals (Salisbury 2022 and 2023).
Hewett, Reid and Lapthorne all took home runners-up medals at the 2025 Wheelchair Tennis Masters in Huzhou, China, as well.
Draper’s Indian Wells triumph & doubles domination
British No.1 Jack Draper was one of the standout stars during the first half of the season. After starting the year with a career-best fourth round run at the Australian Open – winning three matches in five sets – the British star went on to finish runner-up at the ATP 500 Doha, before turning his attention to Indian Wells.
Known unofficially as the ‘fifth Grand Slam’, Indian Wells is one of the biggest prizes in the game and Draper went on to become only the second British player to lift the title in California.
Draper beat Joao Fonseca, Jenson Brooksby, Taylor Fritz, Ben Shelton, Carlos Alcaraz and finally Holger Rune to get his hands on his first ATP Masters 1000 title. He’s only the fifth British player to achieve this, after Greg Rusedski, Tim Henman, Andy Murray and Cam Norrie.
Draper also reached the final of the Madrid Open just a month later, but injuries after a semi-final run at the HSBC Championships put a hold on his second half of the season.
Meanwhile, as well as the Wimbledon title, Cash and Glasspool won a total of seven ATP Tour-level titles this year, including the ATP Masters Canada.
Patten and Heliovaara finished the season strong with their first ATP Masters 1000 title in Paris, as well as the ATP 500 Beijing.

It was also an impressive season for Britain’s Olivia Nicholls on the WTA Doubles Tour. Nicholls and Slovakian partner Tereza Mihalikova won their best title together on the grass courts at the WTA 500 Berlin.
Nicholls and Mihalikova also made the final at Indian Wells – their first WTA 1000 final – and the British star reached a career-high world No.27.
British doubles star Luke Johnson also added his second and third ATP titles in Hong Kong and Barcelona alongside regular partner Sander Arends.
British success in the ITF Super Series
ITF Super Series events are the biggest wheelchair tennis tournaments in the tour calendar outside of the Grand Slams – the equivalent of the ATP Masters 1000 and WTA 1000 events.
Four British players won Super Series events in 2025. Hewett won Britain’s only Super Series singles title this year in Baton Rouge with a 6-0, 6-3 win over Martin De La Puente in the final.
Hewett also made the Melbourne Open final and won ITF 1 events in Munich, Rome, Paris and the Lexus British Open Roehampton.
Hewett and Reid also won the doubles event in Baton Rouge this year as well as the Melbourne Open Super Series.

Lucy Shuker won her first Super Series title since 2018 in Baton Rouge alongside Dutch star Aniek Van Koot. The duo beat Manami Tanaka and Zhenzhen Zhu in the final 6-2, 7-6(1).
Finally, Lapthorne closed out his season with the French Riviera Open title – teaming up with Australia’s Heath Davidson.
British breakthroughs at WTA 125 tournaments
Francesca Jones and Katie Boulter won the biggest women’s singles titles of the year competing on the WTA 125 Tour.
Jones has hit new heights in 2025, breaking into the top 100 for the first time in her career after two titles in Contrexeville and Palermo.
The Yorkshire-born star won the biggest title of her career at the Grand Est Open 88 after defeating home favourite Elsa Jacquemot in the final.
Just weeks later, Jones went to the Palermo Ladies Open, winning the title without dropping a set all week and finishing with a 6-3, 6-2 win over Anouk Koevermans.

Meanwhile, Boulter won her first career title on clay at the Trophy Clarins in Paris, ahead of Roland Garros.
Boulter came back to beat Chloe Pacquet in the final 3-6, 6-2, 6-3 to seal a landmark victory on the clay.
Maia Lumsden won two WTA 125 doubles titles this season – the L'Open 35 de Saint Malo with Makoto Ninomiya and the Full Protein Caldas da Rainha Ladies Open with fellow Brit Harriet Dart.
Record 15 ATP Challenger titles
British players won a record 15 singles titles on the ATP Challenger Tour this season.
Leading the charge with four Challenger titles this year was Jan Choinski with an impressive four trophies in Troyes, Bunschoten, Bad Waltersdorf and Valencia – all coming on clay.
Jack Pinnington Jones marked his first season on the professional tour with two Challenger trophies – including the Nottingham Challenger on grass.
Jay Clarke had a strong end to the season – winning the Skopje and Islamabad Challengers to add to his three ITF trophies earlier in the year.
Toby Samuel will be one to watch in 2026, after winning back-to-back Challengers in Soma Bay and Manama.
Here’s a breakdown of all the ATP Challenger singles champions this year:
- Jan Choinski (4)
- Jack Pinnington Jones (2)
- Jay Clarke (2)
- Toby Samuel (2)
- Arthur Fery
- Billy Harris
- George Loffhagen
- Harry Wendelken
- Ryan Peniston
British champions on home soil

The British players continued to have great success competing at tournaments on home soil as part of the LTA Performance Competitions Calendar – designed to give enhanced opportunities for British players at each age and stage of the performance player pathway.
British players won 41 titles at events in Great Britain this year. The biggest win of the season of course came from Cash and Glasspool at Wimbledon, but the duo also won ATP titles at the HSBC Championships and the Lexus Eastbourne Open as part of an astonishing run on the grass.
The new-look Lexus Wrexham Open W100 event saw an all-British final between two of the brightest young talents in the game – with Mimi Xu beating Mika Stojsavljevic. Stojsavljevic had won the Lexus British Pro Series Birmingham title just weeks before.
Pinnington Jones won his first ATP Challenger singles title in Nottingham, while Josh Paris, James Mackinlay and Scott Duncan all won Challenger doubles trophies.
Hewett, Reid, Shuker, Lapthorne, Slade and Joshua Johns all lifted wheelchair titles in Great Britain this season at a variety of events. Hewett and Reid were champions at the Lexus British Open Roehampton, Shuker, Lapthorne and Slade had success in Eastbourne and Johns was a doubles champion in Abingdon. Slade also took home three of the four titles on offer at the Bolton ITF2 and ITF3 events.