The Nitto ATP Finals 2025 will once again bring the world’s best male tennis players to Turin, Italy, for the final battle of the ATP season. This is where the top eight men of the year fight for glory, ranking points, and one of the biggest paydays in the sport.
Below is your complete guide to all you need to know ahead of the finals. We have dates, start times, where to watch, venue info, prize money, format, and how to follow every point live on Flashscore.
ATP Finals key information
Date: 9–16 November 2025
Venue: Inalpi Arena, Turin
Surface: Indoor hard court
What’s the format?
The event uses a round-robin format, with the players split into two groups of four, meaning each player is guaranteed three group matches before the semi-finals. Every set matters, as in the case of a tie, sets and games won percentages decide who goes through.
After the round robin, the top two players in each group progress to the semi-finals, with first place playing second place from the other group. The winners of the semi-finals then go to the finals, and we get our winner at the end of that. Both the singles and doubles follow the same format.
Who’s qualified?
Eight of the top singles and doubles players will be heading to Turin to battle it out for the season-ending title. On the singles side, home favourite and reigning champion, Jannik Sinner, and his biggest rival, Carlos Alcaraz, will both be taking part.
Filling the other spots are huge names like Ben Shelton, Alexander Zverev, Taylor Fritz, Alex de Minaur, Lorenzo Musetti and Felix Auger-Aliassime.
The eight players are split into two groups, with the Jimmy Connors Group having Alcaraz, Fritz, De Minaur and Musetti in it. The Bjorn Borg Group includes Sinner, Zverev, Shelton and Auger-Aliassime.
On the doubles side, there is British interest with the top seeds British pair Julian Cash and Lloyd Glasspool. The duo won the doubles title at Wimbledon this year and look the team to beat in Turin. They will be in the Peter Fleming Group with Marcel Granollers and Horacia Zeballos, Kevin Krawietz and Tim Puetz, and Simone Bolelli and Andrea Vavassori.
The other doubles group, the John McEnroe Group, consists of British pair Joe Salisbury and Neal Skupski, Harri Heliovaara and Henry Patten (another Brit), Marcelo Arevalo and Mate Pavic, and Christian Harrison and Evan King.
Where are they playing?
Since 2021, Turin’s Inalpi Arena has hosted the ATP Finals, following London’s O2 legacy. The indoor venue holds over 12,000 fans and delivers an electric atmosphere worthy of the season finale.
With the venue being indoors, it means that the surface is a hard court, like the US and Australian Opens. Sinner started the year winning the Australian Open title over Zverev, whereas at the US Open in September, Alcaraz took the title by beating Sinner in the final.
What’s the schedule?
The Group stages start on November 9 and run until November 13. There’s one rest day and then the semi-finals take place on November 15, with the final on November 16.
Two sessions will run each day, starting at 12:00 CET, before the evening session at 19:00 CET.
Prize money
The ATP Finals are the richest event in men’s tennis outside the Grand Slams. Money is awarded per win, and an undefeated singles champion can earn over $4.5 million. The total prize pot for foubles teams is $3 million.
