or
Sign in with lockrMail
valerie juliet valdez circle inset image templates  x  px
Source: Renith R/Unsplash

Richest Female Tennis Players Ranked by Earnings, Career Success, and Lifestyle

May 15 2026, Published 2:02 p.m. ET

Link to FacebookShare to XShare to Email

Women’s Tennis Has Become One of the Strongest Earning Platforms in Individual Sports

Article continues below advertisement

How Female Tennis Players Turned Success Into Serious Wealth

Female tennis players have come a long way, not only in media attention but in what the sport now pays them. For example, in the 1970s, Billie Jean King pushed the equal-pay fight after winning just $600 for the Italian Open. It sounds absurd now, but that was the reality.

That gap has changed. The best female tennis players can now earn millions from a Grand Slam run, and prize money is only the first layer. Endorsements, investments, business projects, fashion deals, and media work can turn a strong tennis career into a serious fortune.

Even though they play an individual sport, with no club salary or franchise contract, the biggest names have learned how to make success pay.

Now, it’s time to know who the richest female tennis players are:

Richest Female Tennis Players

Serena Williams

Serena Williams is rightly viewed by many as the top of the greatest female tennis players of all time, with that argument backed by the numbers she has amassed during her career, 23 Grand Slam singles titles and the sort of aura that few athletes ever get close to.

Most estimates put her net worth in the $300 million range, but over 95M earned on-court courtesy of prize money is only part of a larger story. Then, with the help of Nike, she became an international icon. More reach with additional sponsors —JPMorgan Chase among them. Her field with Serena Ventures shifted her to investment.

Maria Sharapova

Maria Sharapova won five Grand Slam titles, which already makes her career elite. Still, her biggest achievement may be how well she converted tennis fame into business power.

Sharapova became one of the most successful female tennis players commercially, with endorsements from Motorola, Land Rover, Tiffany, Nike, and Porsche. Her image had a clear value: polished, competitive, global.

Then came Sugarpova, her candy brand, along with investments that kept her name active after retirement. Her net worth is commonly estimated at around $200 million. Some players fade after tennis. Sharapova did the opposite.

Steffi Graf

Steffi Graf had her period of making money in a different age. No social media machine. No daily content cycle. No athlete-as-influencer model. Her value came from domination.

Graf earned approximately $22 million in prize money, a staggering number at the time behind only the iconic Pete Sampras on the men's side for annual income, and developed lasting relations with brands like Adidas. Some savvy business decisions later forced her wealth north of $145 million.

Naomi Osaka

Naomi Osaka is THE representation of a New Age Tennis Tycoon. She was the first Asian player to ascend the top of singles, winning four Grand Slam titles and extending a brand that travels well beyond tennis.

As for why her profile is so large, check out the endorsement list: Nike, Louis Vuitton, Mastercard, Yonex, TAG Heuer, Panasonic, Nissan and Beats. Her Nike sponsorship alone has been reported as approaching USD 10 million annually.

The fortune of Osaka is somewhere $120 million. She is also too young and still healthy enough to inscribe major chapters. Both in her game and off it, she headlines.

Caroline Wozniacki

Caroline Wozniacki may not have the same global celebrity glow as Serena, Sharapova, or Osaka, but leaving her out would be lazy.

Her accomplishments include winning the 2018 Australian Open and becoming the world's dominant No. 1 for 71 weeks, plus over $35 million in prize money.

That includes the sponsorship deals she has with Adidas, Yonex, Rolex and other partners, which gives her an estimated net worth of approximately $80 million.

Wozniacki’s career shows another path to wealth: consistency. Staying elite for years can be just as valuable.

Article continues below advertisement

What Female Tennis Player is a Billionaire?

Jessica Pegula is the name that usually appears here, but the answer needs context. She is the daughter of Terry Pegula, whose fortune comes from energy and sports franchises. That family wealth is massive, but Jessica has said people often confuse her background with her own bank account.

Her personal net worth is usually estimated much lower, around $20 million, built through prize money and sponsorships. As a player, she is not really a billionaire. She is a wealthy athlete from an even wealthier family.

Who is the Highest-Paid Female Tennis Player of All Time?

Simply put, the strongest answer is Serena Williams. As of May 2026, her total tournament earnings are over 95 million dollars, the highest in women’s tennis history. Throw in product endorsements, business interests, investments, and an ownership stake, and she places herself further apart still.

What do Female Tennis Players Eat?

It is long-lasting energy that a professional tennis diet revolves around. They require endurance, but they must also be lightweight, fast and cerebral.

High-quality carbohydrates, moderate protein, healthy fats, and continuous hydration are components of most plans. Common foods are oats, rice, pasta, fruit and vegetables; chicken or fish; eggs; nuts; and electrolyte drinks. The specifics with regard to player, body type, training load and match schedule vary.

Advertisement

Get On the List.

Say Morning Honey! Sign up here.

More Stories

Opt-out of personalized ads

© Copyright 2026 MORNING HONEY™️. A DIVISION OF MYSTIFY ENTERTAINMENT NETWORK INC. MORNING HONEY is a registered trademark. All rights reserved. Registration on or use of this site constitutes acceptance of our Terms of Service, Privacy Policy and Cookies Policy. People may receive compensation for some links to products and services. Offers may be subject to change without notice.