Jannik Sinner surpasses 60 million dollars in career prize money following Indian Wells

Jannik Sinner had a breakthrough two weeks at Indian Wells this year, not only winning the Masters 1000 event for the first time, but also completing his career set of Masters 1000 hard-court titles.

He’s the youngest man ever to achieve that last feat.

But there’s some icing on the cake—the 24-year-old Italian has just surpassed $60 million in career prize money, too.

He went into Indian Wells with $57,544,926, and with his $1,151,380 winner’s cheque—as well as ATP profit sharing money that was added to a swath of players’ career totals during the tournament—he just sneaks over the $60 million milestone to $60,039,831.

Sinner is just the second tennis player born in the 2000s to hit that number, after Carlos Alcaraz, who’s currently at $64,274,163.

And he isn’t the only player who hit a big prize money milestone after Indian Wells and ATP profit sharing numbers were added…

Alexander Zverev also surpasses $60 million in career prize money, going from $59,390,927 to $60,969,344 (he was a semifinalist at Indian Wells, which earned him $340,190 of that pay bump).

Daniil Medvedev cracks $50 million, going from $49,938,657 to $51,150,419 (he was a finalist at Indian Wells, earning $612,340).

And world No. 7 Taylor Fritz cracks $30 million, going from $29,839,634 to $30,319,179, joining an exclusive group of just six American tennis players ever to cross that milestone after the Williams sisters, Pete Sampras, Andre Agassi and Coco Gauff.

TOP 10 MOST CAREER PRIZE MONEY IN TENNIS HISTORY, ATP AND WTA (as of March 16th, 2026):

$193,215,570: Novak Djokovic
$134,946,100: Rafael Nadal
$130,594,339: Roger Federer
$94,816,730: Serena Williams
$64,687,542: Andy Murray
$64,274,163: Carlos Alcaraz
$60,969,344: Alexander Zverev
$60,039,831: Jannik Sinner
$51,150,419: Daniil Medvedev
$47,875,138: Aryna Sabalenka