Tennis | Full History
Four Grand Slams a year — Australian Open, French Open, Wimbledon, US Open — crown the sport's biggest champions.
This is a leaderboard, not a full year-by-year record: with 4 majors a year across more than a century, a complete entry list is out of scope. "Notable Winners" covers every Grand Slam singles final (men's and women's) from 2024 through the 2026 Australian Open; earlier years are not yet included rather than guessed. The all-time title-leaders table combines men's and women's career singles totals (marked M/W) and is verified current through the 2026 Australian Open.
Top 10 Players — Most Titles
Notable Winners | Newest First
18 entries on record
Rybakina's second Grand Slam title.
Alcaraz's seventh major, completing the career Grand Slam as the youngest man ever to do so.
Sabalenka's second consecutive US Open title.
Alcaraz's second US Open title, his sixth major overall.
Świątek's first Wimbledon title, her sixth major overall.
Sinner's first Wimbledon title, his fourth major overall.
Gauff's first French Open title, her second major overall.
Alcaraz's fifth major, coming back from two sets down in the longest French Open final on record.
Keys's first Grand Slam title, upsetting the two-time defending champion.
Sinner's third major title, retaining his Australian Open crown.
Sabalenka's first US Open title.
Sinner's second major of the season.
Krejčíková's first Wimbledon title, her second major overall.
Alcaraz's second straight Wimbledon title.
Świątek's third consecutive French Open title.
Alcaraz's first Roland Garros title, his third major overall.
Sabalenka's second consecutive Australian Open title.
Sinner's first Grand Slam title, rallying from two sets down.