Status: Completed · Tour: ATP & WTA · Level: Masters · Surface: clay court · Location: Madrid · Dates: Apr 21, 2026 – May 3, 2026
Defending Champion (2025): Casper Ruud · Aryna Sabalenka.
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 Madrid Open into a season-long fantasy league or build a salary-cap contest roster — free to play. Follow alongside today's scores.
Matches: 257 · Completed: 190 · Players in draw: 196
Madrid Open 2026 bracket — late-round matchups from R16 through the Final. Scroll horizontally to see every round; tap any match for the live score, set-by-set stats, and head-to-head history.
Full Madrid Open 2026 results — 190 completed matches so far, grouped by round below. Tap any match for the live set-by-set score, point-by-point flow, and head-to-head history.
| Year | Champion |
|---|---|
| 2026 | Marta Kostyuk · Jannik Sinner |
| 2025 | Casper Ruud · Aryna Sabalenka |
| 2024 | Andrey Rublev · Iga Swiatek |
| 2023 | Carlos Alcaraz · Aryna Sabalenka |
Compare Madrid Open 2026 against other Masters events the same season.
Madrid Open 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 Madrid Open'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.
The Madrid Open was born in 2002, but not as the clay event it is today. It initially replaced the now-defunct Stuttgart tournament on the ATP calendar and was held indoors at the Madrid Arena from 2002 to 2008; in 2009 it moved outdoors, switched to clay, and was simultaneously elevated to include a premier women's contest. That addition made it a combined Masters 1000 / WTA 1000 stop — the only such co-sanctioned event in Europe and the first outside the Indian Wells–Miami Sunshine Double. It now sits between Monte Carlo and the Italian Open as the spring clay swing tightens toward Roland-Garros.
The defining trait is the venue and the air around it. Matches play out at the Caja Mágica — the "magic box" — a retractable-roof complex in Park Manzanares. Madrid's altitude thins the air and speeds the ball through the court, an oddity on a surface built to slow it down, which historically rewards bigger serves and flatter, first-strike hitters more than orthodox clay-grinders. The tournament is also a serial experimenter: the 2012 edition introduced blue clay to improve television visibility, drew safety criticism from players including Nadal and Djokovic, and reverted to red clay the following year.
The honor roll skews toward the game's ceiling. Rafael Nadal holds the singles record with five titles, while Carlos Alcaraz, at 19 in 2022, is the youngest champion. That run — Alcaraz beating Nadal, Djokovic and Zverev in succession — was seminal, and he defended the title a year later. On the women's side, the 2025 doubles final saw Granollers and Zeballos defend their crown, while recent singles editions ran through Aryna Sabalenka and Iga Swiatek, who traded the 2023, 2024 and 2025 finals among themselves.
The 2026 edition, held 22 April to 3 May at the Caja Mágica, is now directed by Feliciano Lopez and Garbiñe Muguruza, with prize money set at €8,235,540. The reigning women's champion is Mirra Andreeva, with Novak Djokovic and Alexander Zverev among the marquee names on the men's side.