Miami Open Masters 2025 Prize Money: Purse and Earnings Info for Men, Women's Bracket
Miami Open Masters 2025 Prize Money: Purse and Earnings Info for Men, Women's Bracket

Despite being without defending champion Jannik Sinner, who is serving out the remainder of his three-month doping ban from tennis, the Miami Open is set to welcome back Novak Djokovic this week.
The 24-time Grand Slam champion has not played in the Miami Open since 2019 and is one title away from becoming the third-ever player (Jimmy Connors, Roger Federer) to win 100 tour-level titles.
In the women's draw, 17-year-old wunderkind Mirra Andreeva is looking to continue to defy odds.
With back-to-back WTA Masters 1000 titles, Andreeva enters the Miami Open on a 12-match winning streak, boasting victories over world No. 2 Iga Swiatek and a thrilling come-from-behind win against world No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka in the BNP Paribas final.
The Miami Open may not be one of the four Grand Slam events, but as a Masters 1000 event, it still offers a heavy purse for its participants.
Here's everything you need to know about the 2025 Miami Open, from its prize money to previews of both draws.
ATP and WTA Prize Money

Winner: $1,124,380
Runner-up: $597,890
Semifinalists: $332,160
Quarterfinalists: $189,075
Men's and Women's Preview

Novak Djokovic enters his first Miami Open since 2019 in search of becoming the third-ever player (Jimmy Connors, Roger Federer) to win 100 tour-level titles.
The former world No. 1 has struggled as of late, losing his first match played in back-to-back tour-level events.
Djokovic is more than capable of accomplishing the elusive feat this week but will face considerable competition with Daniil Medvedev likely looming in the quarterfinals.
Meanwhile, Carlos Alcaraz will look to get back on track after falling to Jack Draper in the BNP Paribas semifinal.
The latter, who went on to win the BNP Paribas title—his first-ever ATP Masters 1000 title—should be considered a dark-horse contender to win the 2025 Miami Open.
In the women's draw, Aryna Sabalenka will look to get back on track after falling to Mirra Andreeva in the BNP Paribas final.
Sabalenka is no doubt the toughest player to face on the hard-court surface, but it's been Andreeva's play as of late, which has closely mirrored the former.
The 17-year-old has won back-to-back WTA Masters 1000 titles and comes into Miami with legitimate chances of continuing her dominance.
Apart from Sabalenka and Andreeva, world No. 2 Iga Swiatek is considered a favorite, while Coco Gauff will look to put a slow start to the season behind her.