The 2024 Australian Open was a Grand Slam level tennis tournament held at Melbourne Park, from 14 to 28 January 2024.[1] It was the 112th edition of the Australian Open, the 56th in the Open Era, and the first major of the year. The tournament consists of events for professional players in singles, doubles and mixed doubles. Junior and wheelchair players competed in singles and doubles tournaments. The tournament's main sponsor is Kia.[2]

2024 Australian Open
Date14–28 January 2024
Edition112th
Open Era (56th)
CategoryGrand Slam
Draw128S / 64D
Prize moneyA$86,500,000
SurfaceHard (GreenSet)
LocationMelbourne, Victoria, Australia
VenueMelbourne Park
Champions
Men's singles
Italy Jannik Sinner
Women's singles
Aryna Sabalenka
Men's doubles
India Rohan Bopanna / Australia Matthew Ebden
Women's doubles
Chinese Taipei Hsieh Su-wei / Belgium Elise Mertens
Mixed doubles
Chinese Taipei Hsieh Su-wei / Poland Jan Zieliński
Wheelchair men's singles
Japan Tokito Oda
Wheelchair women's singles
Netherlands Diede de Groot
Wheelchair quad singles
Netherlands Sam Schröder
Wheelchair men's doubles
United Kingdom Alfie Hewett / United Kingdom Gordon Reid
Wheelchair women's doubles
Netherlands Diede de Groot / Netherlands Jiske Griffioen
Wheelchair quad doubles
United Kingdom Andy Lapthorne / United States David Wagner
Boys' singles
Japan Rei Sakamoto
Girls' singles
Slovakia Renáta Jamrichová
Boys' doubles
United States Maxwell Exsted / United States Cooper Woestendick
Girls' doubles
United States Tyra Caterina Grant / United States Iva Jovic
← 2023 · Australian Open · 2025 →

Novak Djokovic was the defending men's singles champion.[3] He was defeated in the semifinals by Jannik Sinner,[4] who went on to beat Daniil Medvedev in a five-set final to win his first major title.[5] Aryna Sabalenka successfully defended the women's singles title as she claimed her second major singles title, defeating Zheng Qinwen without losing a set during the tournament.[6][7]

In the tournament's 119-year history, this was the first Australian Open Tennis Championships to be held on an opening Sunday.[8]

The tournament featured the following changes from previous tournaments:[9]

  • First-round matches took place over three days instead of two.
  • The daytime sessions on the central courts, Rod Laver Arena and Margaret Court Arena, featured a maximum of two matches instead of three to avoid matches lasting into the early hours of the morning, such as the match between Andy Murray and Thanasi Kokkinakis in 2023, which ended at 4:05 am local time.[10] The John Cain Arena schedule remains the same. However, the success of this policy change is questionable, since some matches at this edition of the tournament still finished after midnight, including one between Daniil Medvedev and Emil Ruusuvuori which finished at 3:40 am local time.[11]
  • The number of game sessions for the event increased from 47 to 52 with the extra day of competition.

The tournament attracted an attendance of 1,020,763 (1,110,657 including pre-tournament qualifiers), making this the highest attended Australian Open ever, as well as the first Grand Slam to attract over a million spectators in a single tournament.[12][13]

Singles players

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Champion Runner-up
  Jannik Sinner [4]   Daniil Medvedev [3]
Semifinals out
  Novak Djokovic [1]   Alexander Zverev [6]
Quarterfinals out
  Taylor Fritz [12]   Andrey Rublev [5]   Hubert Hurkacz [9]   Carlos Alcaraz [2]
4th round out
  Adrian Mannarino [20]   Stefanos Tsitsipas [7]   Karen Khachanov [15]   Alex de Minaur [10]
  Arthur Cazaux (WC)   Nuno Borges   Cameron Norrie [19]   Miomir Kecmanović
3rd round out
  Tomás Martín Etcheverry [30]   Ben Shelton [16]   Fábián Marozsán   Luca Van Assche
  Sebastián Báez [26]   Tomáš Macháč   Flavio Cobolli (Q)   Sebastian Korda [29]
  Tallon Griekspoor [28]   Ugo Humbert [21]   Grigor Dimitrov [13]   Félix Auger-Aliassime [27]
  Alex Michelsen   Casper Ruud [11]   Tommy Paul [14]   Shang Juncheng (WC)
2nd round out
  Alexei Popyrin   Gaël Monfils   Jaume Munar   Christopher O'Connell
  Hugo Gaston (LL)   Francisco Cerúndolo [22]   Lorenzo Musetti [25]   Jordan Thompson
  Jesper de Jong (Q)   Daniel Elahi Galán   Frances Tiafoe [17]   Aleksandar Kovacevic (Q)
  Matteo Arnaldi   Pavel Kotov   Quentin Halys   Christopher Eubanks
  Holger Rune [8]   Arthur Fils   Zhang Zhizhen   Jakub Menšík (Q)
  Thanasi Kokkinakis   Alejandro Davidovich Fokina [23]   Hugo Grenier (Q)   Emil Ruusuvuori
  Lukáš Klein (Q)   Jiří Lehečka [32]   Giulio Zeppieri (Q)   Max Purcell
  Jack Draper   Jan-Lennard Struff [24]   Sumit Nagal (Q)   Lorenzo Sonego
1st round out
  Dino Prižmić (Q)   Marc Polmans (WC)   Yannick Hanfmann   Andy Murray
  Stan Wawrinka   Alexander Shevchenko   Cristian Garín   Roberto Bautista Agut
  Facundo Díaz Acosta   Roberto Carballés Baena   Marin Čilić (PR)   Dane Sweeny (Q)
  Benjamin Bonzi   James Duckworth (WC)   Aleksandar Vukic   Zizou Bergs (LL)
  Botic van de Zandschulp   Pedro Cachin   Jason Kubler (WC)   J. J. Wolf
  Borna Ćorić   Shintaro Mochizuki (LL)   Alejandro Tabilo   Daniel Altmaier
  Milos Raonic (PR)   Adam Walton (WC)   Arthur Rinderknech   Nicolás Jarry [18]
  Vít Kopřiva (Q)   Lloyd Harris(Q)   Taro Daniel   Thiago Seyboth Wild
  Yoshihito Nishioka   Laslo Djere   Jiří Veselý (PR)   Roman Safiullin
  David Goffin (Q)   Federico Coria   Denis Shapovalov (PR)   Omar Jasika (Q)
  Márton Fucsovics   Sebastian Ofner   Maximilian Marterer   Constant Lestienne
  Dominic Thiem   Alexandre Müller   Patrick Kypson (WC)   Térence Atmane (Q)
  Dominik Koepfer   Kwon Soon-woo (PR)   James McCabe (WC)   Bernabé Zapata Miralles
  Juan Pablo Varillas   Dušan Lajović   Máté Valkusz (Q)   Albert Ramos Viñolas
  Grégoire Barrère   Marcos Giron   Yosuke Watanuki   Rinky Hijikata
  Alexander Bublik [31]   Mackenzie McDonald   Dan Evans   Richard Gasquet
Champion Runner-up
  Aryna Sabalenka [2]   Zheng Qinwen [12]
Semifinals out
  Dayana Yastremska (Q)   Coco Gauff [4]
Quarterfinals out
  Linda Nosková   Anna Kalinskaya   Marta Kostyuk   Barbora Krejčíková [9]
4th round out
  Elina Svitolina [19]   Victoria Azarenka [18]   Jasmine Paolini [26]   Océane Dodin
  Maria Timofeeva (Q)   Magdalena Fręch   Mirra Andreeva   Amanda Anisimova (PR)
3rd round out
  Iga Świątek [1]   Viktorija Golubic   Jeļena Ostapenko [11]   Emma Navarro [27]
  Anna Blinkova   Sloane Stephens   Wang Yafan   Clara Burel
  Elina Avanesyan   Beatriz Haddad Maia [10]   Anastasia Zakharova (Q)   Alycia Parks
  Diane Parry   Storm Hunter (Q)   Paula Badosa   Lesia Tsurenko [28]
2nd round out
  Danielle Collins   McCartney Kessler (WC)   Viktoriya Tomova   Kateřina Siniaková
  Ajla Tomljanović (PR)   Clara Tauson   Elisabetta Cocciaretto   Varvara Gracheva
  Elena Rybakina [3]   Tatjana Maria   Arantxa Rus   Daria Kasatkina [14]
  Katie Boulter   Emma Raducanu (PR)   Martina Trevisan   Jessica Pegula [5]
  Maria Sakkari [8]   Elise Mertens [25]   Caroline Wozniacki (WC)   Alina Korneeva (Q)
  Caroline Garcia [16]   Kaja Juvan   Leylah Fernandez [32]   Caroline Dolehide
  Ons Jabeur [6]   Kamilla Rakhimova   Laura Siegemund   Tamara Korpatsch
  Nadia Podoroska   Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova   Rebeka Masarova   Brenda Fruhvirtová (Q)
1st round out
  Sofia Kenin   Angelique Kerber (PR)   Fiona Ferro (Q)   Marie Bouzková [31]
  Taylah Preston (WC)   Kayla Day   Jaqueline Cristian   Veronika Kudermetova [15]
  Kimberly Birrell (WC)   Petra Martić   Greet Minnen   Camila Giorgi
  Wang Xiyu   Lulu Sun (Q)   Yanina Wickmayer   Markéta Vondroušová [7]
  Karolína Plíšková   Cristina Bucșa   Camila Osorio   Diana Shnaider
  Anhelina Kalinina [24]   Katie Volynets (Q)   Olivia Gadecki (WC)   Peyton Stearns
  Ashlyn Krueger   Yuan Yue   Shelby Rogers (PR)   Sorana Cîrstea [22]
  Zhu Lin [29]   Renata Zarazúa (Q)   Aleksandra Krunić (PR)   Rebecca Marino (Q)
  Nao Hibino   Bai Zhuoxuan   Claire Liu   Mayar Sherif
  Magda Linette [20]   Alizé Cornet (WC)   Sara Sorribes Tormo   Linda Fruhvirtová
  Naomi Osaka (PR)   Daria Saville (WC)   Yulia Putintseva   Anastasia Potapova [23]
  Sára Bejlek (Q)   Daria Snigur (Q)   Léolia Jeanjean (Q)   Anna Karolína Schmiedlová
  Yulia Starodubtseva (Q)   Bernarda Pera   Emina Bektas   Wang Xinyu [30]
  Ekaterina Alexandrova [17]   Sara Errani   Jodie Burrage   Mai Hontama (WC)
  Liudmila Samsonova [13]   Tamara Zidanšek   Taylor Townsend   Donna Vekić [21]
  Lucia Bronzetti   Aliaksandra Sasnovich   Ana Bogdan   Ella Seidel (Q)

Events

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Men's singles

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Women's singles

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Men's doubles

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Women's doubles

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Mixed doubles

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Wheelchair men's singles

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Wheelchair women's singles

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Wheelchair quad singles

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Wheelchair men's doubles

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Wheelchair women's doubles

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Wheelchair quad doubles

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Boys' singles

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Girls' singles

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Boys' doubles

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Girls' doubles

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Points and prize money

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Point distribution

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Below is a series of tables for each competition showing the ranking points offered for each event.[14][15][16]

Senior points

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Event W F SF QF Round of 16 Round of 32 Round of 64 Round of 128 Q Q3 Q2 Q1
Men's singles 2000 1300 800 400 200 100 50 10 30 16 8 0
Men's doubles 1200 720 360 180 90 0 N/A
Women's singles 1300 780 430 240 130 70 10 40 30 20 2
Women's doubles 10 N/A

Prize money

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The Australian Open total prize money for 2024 increased by 13.07% year on year to a tournament record A$86,500,000. Most of the increases were distributed to qualifying and the early rounds of singles and doubles, with First round main draw singles players receiving A$120,000, up 12.94 per cent vs 2023.[17] The total represented a 162% increase in prize money over the last ten years, from the A$33 million on offer in 2014.

Event W F SF QF Round of 16 Round of 32 Round of 64 Round of 128 Q3 Q2 Q1
Singles A$3,150,000 A$1,725,000 A$990,000 A$600,000 A$375,000 A$255,000 A$180,000 A$120,000 A$65,000 A$44,100 A$31,250
Doubles A$730,000 A$400,000 A$227,500 A$128,000 A$75,000 A$53,000 A$36,000 N/A
Mixed doubles A$165,000 A$94,000 A$50,000 A$26,500 A$13,275 A$6,900 N/A
Wheelchair singles A$ A$ A$ A$ N/A
Wheelchair doubles A$ A$ A$ N/A
Quad singles A$ A$ A$
Quad doubles A$ A$ N/A

References

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  1. ^ "Australian Open 2024 schedule: When does play start UK time? When is the draw? When do the sessions start?". eurosport.com. 20 December 2023.
  2. ^ "Australian Open and Kia extend historic partnership to 2028". ausopen.com. 10 January 2023.
  3. ^ "Perfect 10: Djokovic Returns To No. 1 With 22nd Major At AO". 29 January 2023.
  4. ^ "Sinner Surprise: Italian dethrones Djokovic to reach first Grand Slam final". 26 January 2024.
  5. ^ Australian Open: Sinner beats Medvedev to win first Grand Slam title, BBC
  6. ^ Jonathan Jurejko (27 January 2024). "Australian Open 2024 women's final result: Aryna Sabalenka beats Zheng Qinwen in Melbourne". BBC.
  7. ^ "Still her Aryna: Brutal blowout as Sabalenka claims second straight Aus Open title". foxsports.com.au. 27 January 2024.
  8. ^ "Australian Open set for historic Sunday start". ausopen.com. 3 October 2023.
  9. ^ "FECHAS OPEN AUSTRALIA 2024: EL PRIMER GRAND SLAM DEL AÑO SE REINVENTA Y PASA A DISPUTARSE EN 15 DÍAS" (in Spanish). Eurosport.com. 10 October 2023. Retrieved 1 January 2024.
  10. ^ "ANUNCIAN CAMBIOS EN FORMATO DEL ABIERTO DE AUSTRALIA" (in Spanish). Sportsmedia.com. 3 October 2023. Retrieved 1 January 2024.
  11. ^ "Daniil Medvedev beats Emil Ruusuvuori in 'tough' 3.40am Australian Open finish". The Guardian. 18 January 2024. Retrieved 26 January 2024.
  12. ^ "2024 Australian Open breaks attendance records". Austadiums. Retrieved 4 February 2024.
  13. ^ Patrick Durkin (29 January 2024). "Young guns rise at 'record breaking' Australian Open". Australian Financial Review.
  14. ^ "ATP Releases Pepperstone ATP Rankings Breakdown Updates | ATP Tour | Tennis". ATP Tour.
  15. ^ "2024 WTA RANKING POINT CHART" (PDF). International Tennis Federation.
  16. ^ "REGULATIONS FOR WHEELCHAIR TENNIS 2024" (PDF). www.itftennis.com. International Tennis Federation.
  17. ^ "Australian Open Prize Money 2024". Perfect Tennis. Archived from the original on 29 December 2023. Retrieved 29 December 2023.
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