Loading...
Follow the live action at Wimbledon
Skip to content

A general view of the court at Arthur Ashe stadium in New York
Grand Slam

What tennis events are on after Wimbledon in 2025?

• 4 MINUTE READ

Enjoyed Wimbledon and want to watch more great tennis this year? Well, you’re in luck because there’s a whole lot more to come throughout the remainder of the season.

The final Grand Slam, Tour Finals, ATP Masters and WTA 1000 tournaments, team events and World Cups – it’s all still to come in the final months of the year as the world’s best tennis stars get set for even more drama and excitement on tour.

Here’s your rundown on all the key tennis events to keep an eye out for over the rest of the 2025 season.

US Open

  • Dates: 18 August – 7 September
  • Location: USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center, Flushing Meadow, New York

The US Open is the final Grand Slam of the year and one of the can’t miss events in the sporting calendar.

Played on the hard courts of New York, it’s the players final chance of the season to etch their names in history as one of the few players to lift a major title.

Last year, current world No.1s Jannik Sinner and Aryna Sabalenka took home the singles titles, while Britain’s Jack Draper made his first Grand Slam semi-final.

The US Open has seen plenty of British success in the past as well – Andy Murray won the title in 2012, Emma Raducanu made history as the only champion to come through qualifying in 2021, Joe Salisbury won three straight men’s doubles titles between 2021 and 2023, and Alfie Hewett has won four of his 10 major singles titles in New York.

This year promises plenty more excitement and drama – can Draper go one better? Will Raducanu show the level she brough to Wimbledon? Can Cam Norrie continue to rise on the big occasion? Will there be a surprise British contender?

You’ll be able to watch all the action live on Sky Sports Tennis and on NOW TV.

ATP Masters & WTA 1000s

Western-and-Suthern-Open-Centre-Court.jpg

The ATP Masters and WTA 1000 events are the crown jewels in the tour calendars and are the biggest tournaments in the world outside of the four Grand Slams.

The combined men’s and women’s event in Canada is always a standout in the tennis calendar – this year with the men playing in Toronto and women competing in Montreal.

Cincinnati is one of the tournaments to watch out for in the season as the final event going into the US Open.

Over the last two years, the Cincinnati champion has gone on to win the women’s singles title in New York – Coco Gauff (2023) and Sabalenka (2024). On the men’s side, eight men have completed the Cincinnati US Open double, including Roger Federer, Rafael Nadal, Novak Djokovic and last year’s champion Sinner.

The tours then split ways for the Asian swing with tournaments held in Beijing, Shanghai and Wuhan before the final ATP Masters 1000 in Paris.

Tournament calendar:

Date

Tournament

Location

27 July – 7 August

National Bank Open Presented by Rogers

Toronto, Canada (ATP)

 

Montreal, Canada (WTA)

7-18 August

Cincinnati Open

Cincinnati, USA

24 September – 5 October

China Open (WTA)

Beijing, China

1-12 October

Rolex Shanghai Masters (ATP)

Shanghai, China

6-12 October

Wuhan Open (WTA)

Wuhan, China

27 October – 2 November

Rolex Paris Masters (ATP only)

Paris, France

Billie Jean King Cup

2025-BJK-Cup-Qualified.jpg

  • Dates: 16-21 September
  • Location: Shenzhen Bay Sports Centre Arena, Shenzhen, China

The women’s World Cup of tennis - the Billie Jean King Cup - enters its final stage in September as the top eight teams head to the Finals in Shenzhen.

Amongst them will be Great Britain, who enjoyed a fantastic win over the Netherlands in their qualifying tie back in April – thanks to wins from Sonay Kartal, Katie Boulter and Jodie Burrage.

The win secured their place in the Finals where they will take on Japan in the quarter-finals of a straight knockout tournament. A win would see them face either USA or Kazakhstan in the semis before a potential final, where they would bid to bring home GB’s first-ever title.

Expect loud crowds, crazy atmospheres and amazing action on court from the very best players in the women’s game.

Davis Cup

2025-Davis-Cup-Qualifiers-Jacob-Fearnley.jpg

  • Dates: 12-14 September (Second Qualifiers & Play-Offs) / 18-23 November (Finals)
  • Location: Various (Second Qualifiers & Play-Offs) / Bologna Italy (Finals only)

Like the Billie Jean King Cup, the Davis Cup is the men’s World Cup of tennis – with national teams competing for the prize of becoming world champions.

Teams compete in Qualifiers throughout the year, leading up to the Finals between the top eight nations in Bologna, Italy at the end of the season.

This year, Great Britain narrowly lost in their first qualifier against Japan and will therefore play in a Play-Off match in September to secure a place in the Qualifiers for 2026. They will face a tricky away tie in Poland.

WTA Finals & Nitto ATP Finals

2023-Nitto-ATP-Finals-General-View-Singles.jpg

  • Dates: 1-8 November (WTA Finals) / 9-16 November (ATP Finals)
  • Location: Riyadh, Saudi Arabia (WTA Finals) / Turin, Italy (ATP Finals)

It all comes down to this – the top eight players and eight doubles teams from the 2025 season do battle in the Nitto ATP Finals in Turin and the WTA Finals in Riyadh.

The Finals are just that – they are the last events in both the ATP and WTA Tour calendars and the titles are two of the most sought-after trophies in any player’s career.

Players compete in round-robin groups before progressing to the semi-finals and eventually the final.

Last year, Gauff won the WTA title for the first time in her career, while world No.1 Sinner also claimed his first Finals trophy.

The Brits have had success at the ATP event over the last decade – Murray won the singles in 2016, while Salisbury claimed back-to-back doubles titles in 2022 and 2023.

Laver Cup

2024-Europe-Laver-Cup.jpg

  • Dates: 19-21 September
  • Location: San Francisco, USA

Another team event to circle in the tennis calendar is the annual Laver Cup – this year taking place in San Francisco.

The Laver Cup is contested between two teams – Team Europe and Team Rest of the World – in a similar style to the Ryder Cup in golf.

Each team is made up of six of the best players from either Europe or the Rest of the World, with each team captained by legends of the sport.

There are 12 matches played across the three days – combining singles and doubles – with each match worth a different number of points. The team that scores more than 13 points at the end of the weekend wins.

Players confirmed for this year include Carlos Alcaraz, Alexander Zverev, Taylor Fritz, Holger Rune, Tommy Paul, Ben Shelton and Joao Fonseca.

ITF Wheelchair Masters

2024-Gordon-Reid-Wheelchair-Masters-final.jpg

  • Dates: TBC
  • Location: TBC

Like the ATP and WTA Finals, the ITF also hosts its annual end of season event for the world’s best men’s, women’s and quad wheelchair players.

Last year the tournament celebrated its 30th year anniversary with Tokito Oda, Yui Kamiji and Niels Vink all following up their gold medal-winning performance at the Paris 2024 Paralympics winning the Masters singles titles.

British stars Hewett, Gordon Reid and Andy Lapthorne are all past champions at the Masters. Most recently Hewett won his third singles title in 2023, where he and Reid also clinched the doubles crown.

Last year, Reid made the singles final for the first time since 2017 but narrowly lost out to Oda in three sets.

Cookies on LTA site

We use cookies on our site to ACE your experience, improve the quality of our site and show you content we think you’ll be interested in. Let us know if you agree to cookies or if you’d prefer to manage your own settings.