Live ATP Rankings 2026 – Updated Men’s Tennis Rankings

Live ATP Rankings 2026 – Updated Men’s Tennis Rankings

The latest ATP singles rankings for 2026, updated weekly. Jannik Sinner remains world No. 1 on 13,500 points, and his lead over Carlos Alcaraz (9,960) has grown to over 3,500 points after Alcaraz, the two-time defending champion, sat out Roland Garros. Alexander Zverev’s maiden Grand Slam title in Paris (+1,600 points) cements him at world No. 3, while runner-up Flavio Cobolli surges four places to a career-high No. 10. Jakub Mensik is the biggest mover, climbing 10 spots to No. 17, and teenagers Rafael Jódar (No. 23) and Joao Fonseca (No. 25) both hit new career highs.

For Alexander Zverev’s breakthrough in Paris, see our Zverev wins Roland-Garros 2026 report. With the clay season over, the tour now turns to the grass-court swing and Wimbledon 2026.

ATP Singles Rankings 2026 – Top 20

Updated post-Roland Garros (8 June 2026). Verify latest standings at atptour.com.

Rank Player Country Points Movement
1 Jannik Sinner Italy 13,500 =
2 Carlos Alcaraz Spain 9,960 =
3 Alexander Zverev Germany 7,305 =
4 Felix Auger-Aliassime Canada 4,440 +2
5 Ben Shelton USA 3,920 =
6 Alex de Minaur Australia 3,905 +1
7 Novak Djokovic Serbia 3,760 -3
8 Daniil Medvedev Russia 3,760 =
9 Taylor Fritz USA 3,720 =
10 Flavio Cobolli Italy 3,540 +4
11 Alexander Bublik Kazakhstan 2,930 -1
12 Jiri Lehecka Czechia 2,575 =
13 Andrey Rublev Russia 2,460 =
14 Casper Ruud Norway 2,425 +2
15 Karen Khachanov Russia 2,320 =
16 Lorenzo Musetti Italy 2,315 -5
17 Jakub Mensik Czechia 2,300 +10
18 Luciano Darderi Italy 2,300 -1
19 Learner Tien USA 2,270 -1
20 Valentin Vacherot Monaco 2,145 -1

Biggest Movers Post-Roland Garros

Player Movement Reason
Alexander Zverev +1,600 pts (No. 3, =) Won Roland Garros 2026 — maiden Grand Slam title, def. Cobolli in five sets
Flavio Cobolli +4 (No. 14 → No. 10) career-high Roland Garros runner-up — first Grand Slam final, beat compatriot Matteo Arnaldi in the semis
Jakub Mensik +10 (No. 27 → No. 17) Biggest riser of the fortnight after a deep Roland Garros run
Rafael Jódar +6 (No. 29 → No. 23) career-high Continued his clay-season surge in Paris at just 19
Joao Fonseca +5 (No. 30 → No. 25) career-high Breakout Roland Garros run for the 19-year-old
Felix Auger-Aliassime +2 (No. 6 → No. 4) Strong Roland Garros to climb back into the top four
Carlos Alcaraz -2,000 pts (No. 2, =) Two-time defending champion sat out Roland Garros, shedding 2,000 points

British Players in the ATP Rankings

Cameron Norrie is the current British No. 1 at ATP No. 29 — a career-fightback from his 2023 slump that saw him reclaim the top British ranking from Jack Draper (No. 28) in April 2026 off the back of an Indian Wells quarter-final and Barcelona quarter-final. Draper remains a genuine top-10 talent when fit, with his 2025 Madrid final and 2024 Grand Slam semi-final underlining his ceiling. Jacob Fearnley continues to climb through the rankings and sits inside the top 80, making him one of the most exciting young British prospects on tour.

How ATP Rankings Work

ATP singles rankings are calculated on a rolling 52-week points basis. Every tournament a player enters awards ranking points based on the round reached and the category of the event. Those points drop off exactly 52 weeks after they were earned, which is why players refer to “defending points” at events they performed well in during the previous year.

Grand Slam winners earn 2,000 ranking points. ATP Masters 1000 winners earn 1,000, ATP 500 winners earn 500 and ATP 250 winners earn 250. The higher the event, the more points available at every round, which is why the Grand Slams and Masters events have such a disproportionate impact on the overall standings.

ATP Race to Turin 2026

The ATP Race to Turin tracks ranking points earned from 1 January of the current calendar year only. The top eight players in the Race standings at the end of the regular season qualify for the ATP Finals in Turin. Unlike the main rankings, the Race resets completely each January, making it a pure measure of current-season form.

Post-Roland Garros: Sinner leads the Race to Turin from Alcaraz, with Alexander Zverev closing fast after his Roland Garros title and runner-up Flavio Cobolli climbing the season standings. The full Race table below will be refreshed once post-Roland Garros year-to-date points are pulled.

Pos Player Points
1 Jannik Sinner 5,910
2 Carlos Alcaraz 3,650
3 Alexander Zverev 2,950
4 Arthur Fils 1,890
5 Daniil Medvedev 1,820
6 Ben Shelton 1,580
7 Novak Djokovic 1,410
8 Alex de Minaur 1,315
9 Flavio Cobolli 1,280
10 Jiri Lehecka 1,245

Race to Turin standings shown as of the last pre-Roland Garros update (18 May 2026) — to be refreshed with post-Roland Garros year-to-date points; verify against atptour.com. Top 8 qualify for the ATP Finals.

Frequently Asked Questions

When are ATP rankings updated?

ATP rankings are updated every Monday after the completion of the previous week’s tournaments.

What is the difference between ATP rankings and the Race to Turin?

The main ATP rankings use a rolling 52-week window. The Race to Turin counts only points earned from 1 January of the current year and determines who qualifies for the ATP Finals.

Who is currently world number one in men’s tennis?

Jannik Sinner reclaimed the world No 1 ranking on 14 April 2026 after winning the Monte Carlo Masters, his first ATP Masters 1000 title on clay. The Italian moved one week clear of Carlos Alcaraz in total weeks at No 1, and has held top spot through Roland Garros.

What was Vacherot’s ranking jump?

Valentin Vacherot’s Monte Carlo SF run as a wildcard propelled him from outside the top 100 into the top 20 for the first time — the biggest single-tournament rankings jump of the 2026 season so far.