The total prize money for this year’s Wimbledon across the men’s and women’s singles tournaments was up to a record £32,154,000.
It represented an increase of 10.9 per cent from 2022 and the total amount was split equally across the men’s and women’s tournaments.
The winners of the men’s and women’s singles – Marketa Vondrousova and Carlos Alcaraz respectively – took home a record £2.35m, which is an increase of 17.5 per cent on what Novak Djokovic and Elena Rybakina won in 2022.
The runners-up – Ons Jabeur and Novak Djokovic – earned £1.175m for making the final, while the prize money for reaching the first round of the tournament’s main draw was £55,000 – even for the players that exited the competition without winning a single match.
The sums in the doubles were far lower however, with the total prize money for the men’s and women’s doubles, across two events, being £5,164,000, and £448,000 for the mixed doubles.
Wimbledon 2023 prize money
Men’s and women’s singles |
|
Winner |
£2,350,000 |
Runner-up |
£1,175,000 |
Semi-Finalists |
£600,000 |
Quarter-Finalists |
£340,000 |
Fourth Round |
£207,000 |
Third Round |
£131,000 |
Second Round |
£85,000 |
First Round |
£55,000 |
Total prize money |
£32,154,000 |