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WTA Tour 2026 | Rankings, Schedule, Results & Betting Tips

The 2026 WTA Tour season has already produced some of the most compelling tennis in years. Aryna Sabalenka holds the No.1 ranking with a commanding points lead, but the depth beneath her is stronger than ever. Elena Rybakina opened the year with a statement Australian Open title, Iga Swiatek continues to build on her 2025 Wimbledon breakthrough, and Coco Gauff is defending her Roland Garros crown. Perhaps most exciting of all is the emergence of a genuine NextGen wave, with Victoria Mboko and Mirra Andreeva both breaking into the top 10 before their 20th birthdays.

This page is your complete guide to the WTA Tour in 2026, covering the latest rankings, key player profiles, the full WTA 1000 schedule, Grand Slam results, live streaming options, and betting tips.

WTA Rankings 2026

The WTA rankings as of March 2026 show Sabalenka with a substantial lead at the top, though Rybakina’s Australian Open triumph has closed the gap significantly. Here are the current top 20.

Rank Player Country Points
1 Aryna Sabalenka Belarus 11,025
2 Elena Rybakina Kazakhstan 7,783
3 Iga Swiatek Poland 7,413
4 Coco Gauff USA 6,748
5 Jessica Pegula USA 6,678
6 Amanda Anisimova USA 6,180
7 Jasmine Paolini Italy 4,232
8 Elina Svitolina Ukraine 4,020
9 Victoria Mboko Canada 3,351
10 Mirra Andreeva Russia 3,066
11 Ekaterina Alexandrova Russia
12 Belinda Bencic Switzerland
13 Linda Noskova Czech Republic
14 Karolina Muchova Czech Republic
15 Naomi Osaka Japan
16 Clara Tauson Denmark
17 Iva Jovic USA
18 Madison Keys USA
19 Elise Mertens Belgium
20 Diana Shnaider Russia

American women’s tennis is in a strong position, with Gauff, Pegula, Anisimova, Jovic, and Keys all inside the top 20. The Czech Republic is also well represented through Noskova and Muchova, while the Italian resurgence continues through Paolini’s consistent results.

Key Players to Watch in 2026

Aryna Sabalenka

Sabalenka is the undisputed No.1, and her 11,025-point tally reflects a level of consistency that no other player on tour can match right now. She has won three Grand Slam titles and reached at least the semi-finals at every Slam in the past two years. Her raw power from the baseline, combined with an increasingly refined net game, makes her the player to beat on every surface. She defends her US Open title later in the year and will be looking to add another Slam to her collection at Roland Garros and Wimbledon.

Elena Rybakina

Rybakina’s Australian Open triumph was the defining result of early 2026. The Kazakh player dismantled Sabalenka in the final with a serving masterclass, confirming that when she is fit and firing, she is capable of beating anyone. Her flat, penetrating groundstrokes and massive serve make her particularly dangerous on faster surfaces. Health has been the only barrier to sustained dominance, and a full, healthy season could see her challenge for the No.1 ranking.

Iga Swiatek

Swiatek remains one of the most complete players in the women’s game. Her clay court record is extraordinary, and the 2025 Wimbledon title showed she can win on grass too. Sitting at No.3 with 7,413 points, she is within range of the top spot if she can replicate her best form during the clay and grass court seasons. Her topspin-heavy game and relentless intensity wear down opponents, and she will be among the favourites for every event she enters between April and July.

Coco Gauff

Gauff continues to mature into one of the most well-rounded players on tour. At 22, the American is the reigning Roland Garros champion and sits comfortably inside the top four. Her improved serve has added a weapon to what was already an excellent all-court game, and her competitive spirit in tight matches sets her apart. She is a genuine contender at every Grand Slam and will be looking to defend her Paris title in June.

Jasmine Paolini

Paolini’s rise from outside the top 50 to a consistent top-10 presence has been one of the best stories in recent WTA history. The Italian’s game is built on variety and intelligence rather than pure power, using well-disguised drop shots, sharp angles, and excellent court coverage to outmanoeuvre taller, harder-hitting opponents. She reached two Grand Slam finals in 2024 and has maintained that level since, making her a factor at every big event.

Victoria Mboko and Mirra Andreeva (NextGen)

The WTA’s NextGen is here. Victoria Mboko, the 19-year-old Canadian, has surged to No.9 in the world with an aggressive, athletic style that has drawn comparisons to a young Serena Williams. Mirra Andreeva, still only 19 herself, sits at No.10 and plays with a tactical maturity well beyond her years. Both players have already won WTA titles and reached Grand Slam quarter-finals. Iva Jovic, the 17-year-old American at No.17, adds to a generational wave that could reshape the top of the rankings within the next two years. The future of women’s tennis looks very bright.

WTA 1000 Schedule 2026

The WTA 1000 events are the biggest tournaments on the women’s calendar outside the Grand Slams, offering 1,000 ranking points to the champion and attracting the strongest fields. Here is the 2026 schedule for the major WTA events.

Tournament Dates Surface Location
Indian Wells Open 5 – 16 Mar Hard Indian Wells, USA
Miami Open 17 – 29 Mar Hard Miami, USA
Madrid Open 20 Apr – 3 May Clay Madrid, Spain
Italian Open (Rome) 4 – 17 May Clay Rome, Italy
Canadian Open 4 – 10 Aug Hard Montreal/Toronto, Canada
Cincinnati Open 11 – 17 Aug Hard Cincinnati, USA
China Open (Beijing) 27 Sep – 5 Oct Hard Beijing, China
WTA Finals 3 – 9 Nov Hard (Indoor) TBC

Indian Wells and Miami have already been played, with the tour now heading into the European clay court swing. Madrid and Rome are key preparation events for Roland Garros, and both tend to produce high-quality draws as players jockey for ranking points ahead of the second Slam of the year. The hard court swing in August features back-to-back WTA 1000 events in Canada and Cincinnati before the US Open. The season culminates with the China Open and the WTA Finals, where the top eight players of the year compete for the biggest title outside the Grand Slams.

WTA Grand Slam Champions 2026

Here is a summary of Grand Slam results on the women’s side in 2026, updated as each tournament concludes.

Australian Open (19 Jan – 1 Feb): Elena Rybakina defeated Aryna Sabalenka in straight sets to win her second Grand Slam title. Rybakina served 14 aces and won 82% of first-serve points in a commanding final performance. It was a significant statement from the Kazakh player, who had been hampered by injury for parts of 2025 but arrived in Melbourne fully fit and in exceptional form.

Roland Garros (24 May – 7 Jun): Coco Gauff is the defending champion after winning her second Slam title in Paris in 2025. The American’s improved clay court game made her a deserving winner, and she will start among the favourites again this year. Swiatek, a four-time Roland Garros champion, will also be in the conversation, along with Sabalenka.

Wimbledon (29 Jun – 12 Jul): Iga Swiatek defends the title she won in a historic 2025 final. Her Wimbledon victory was widely considered the most impressive result of her career, proving she could win on grass after years of being considered primarily a clay court specialist. Rybakina and Sabalenka will be among the main challengers on the lawns of SW19.

US Open (31 Aug – 13 Sep): Aryna Sabalenka is the defending champion at Flushing Meadows. She has been particularly strong on the US Open hard courts, reaching at least the semi-finals in each of her last four appearances. Gauff, the 2023 champion, and Pegula, who has a strong hard court record, will be among the contenders.

How to Watch the WTA Tour

Bet365 offers the widest live streaming coverage of WTA tennis in the UK. With a funded account, you can watch thousands of WTA matches throughout the season, from the biggest WTA 1000 events to the smaller 250-level tournaments. It is the single best platform for tennis fans who want to follow the women’s tour in depth.

Sky Sports broadcasts selected WTA events as part of their tennis coverage, including the Grand Slams and the WTA Finals. For free-to-air viewing, the BBC covers Wimbledon, and selected WTA matches are available on other terrestrial channels during the Grand Slams.

For a complete guide to every streaming and broadcast option for WTA tennis, including international coverage, visit our tennis live streaming guide.

WTA Betting Tips

The WTA Tour provides excellent betting opportunities for those who follow the women’s game closely. With a deeper field than ever and more competitive matches across the draw, finding value in the WTA betting markets rewards research and form analysis.

Our tennis betting tips page covers WTA events alongside ATP coverage, with daily match previews, predictions, and recommended bets. We look at head-to-head records, surface form, recent results, and fitness updates to identify the strongest selections. WTA accumulator tips are also available for the bigger events, where multiple matches on the same day create opportunities for combined bets.

For the latest welcome bonuses and free bet offers from top bookmakers, visit our best tennis betting offers page. Whether you are opening a new account or taking advantage of existing customer promotions, these deals can boost your WTA betting. You can also bet on WTA tennis at Bet365, which offers comprehensive match and outright markets for every WTA event.

Plan your WTA betting around the full season schedule with our 2026 tennis calendar.