Status: Upcoming · Tour: ATP · Level: Masters · Surface: hard (indoor) court · Location: Turin · Dates: Nov 10, 2026 – Nov 17, 2026
Live tournament updates, live draw, set-by-set match scores, point-by-point flow, live point predictions, live game predictions, live match predictions, point-by-point probabilities, player stats, head-to-head history, surface form, and round-by-round fantasy scoring.
Draft players from ATP Finals into a season-long fantasy league or build a salary-cap contest roster — free to play. Follow alongside today's scores.
Compare ATP Finals 2026 against other Masters events the same season.
ATP Finals 2026 is open as a free fantasy contest on The Drop Shot. Build a salary-cap roster from the field in a single-tournament contest, or draft a season-long team across the full ATP and WTA calendar in a snake-draft fantasy tennis league. Pricing weights surface history and recent form against ATP Finals's surface — so a clay specialist costs more here than at a hard-court event. Every match on the draw above scores live for your fantasy team, with pre-match win probabilities, set-by-set stats, and live point-by-point updates.
Tennis's season-ending championship is the oldest of the sport's marquee non-major titles, founded in 1970 as the Masters Grand Prix before cycling through names and homes — the Tennis Masters Cup, the ATP World Tour Finals at London's O2 from 2009 through 2020, and the current ATP Finals, staged on indoor hard at Turin's Inalpi Arena since 2021. It closes the calendar in mid-November, after the Masters 1000 hardcourt swing through Shanghai and Paris, as a reward and a reckoning for the year's best.
What sets it apart from the four Slams is structure. There is no draw to hide in: only the eight players who earned the most ranking points across the season qualify, and they're split into two round-robin groups where every match counts toward the semifinals. A bad first day doesn't end your week, but it can't be erased either — there are no easy openers and no anonymous early rounds. The indoor hard surface rewards flat, first-strike tennis and big serving, the antithesis of Roland-Garros clay.
The recent ledger belongs to the game's two poles. Novak Djokovic defeated Jannik Sinner in Turin for his record-breaking seventh title, having previously shared the record with Roger Federer's six. Sinner then made the arena his own: he defended his crown by beating Carlos Alcaraz in 2025, and since the start of the 2024 edition had not lost a set across nine matches at the season finale. This century only Djokovic, Federer and Lleyton Hewitt have won the event in consecutive years — and Sinner joined them.
Djokovic remains the format's defining figure: first champion here in 2008 and most recently in 2023, with two of the four Turin editions and a 50-18 record at the event. Sinner enters 2026 as the man to dislodge — twice a champion on home soil, with Alcaraz the standing obstacle to a three-peat.