The International Tennis Integrity Agency has confirmed that Serena Williams will finish her six-month reentry period in the anti-doping testing pool on February 22, 2026, making her eligible to compete again. This update follows months of speculation about the 23-time Grand Slam champion's possible comeback. Williams has not commented publicly on her plans.
The International Tennis Integrity Agency (ITIA) updated its list of reinstated players on February 9, 2026, stating that Serena Williams will complete her six-month reentry period on February 22. This administrative step clears the final hurdle for the 44-year-old American to return to professional tennis across singles, doubles, or mixed doubles formats.
Tennis journalist Ben Rothenberg highlighted the news on social media, writing, “The Serena comeback is now officially official.” The confirmation allows Williams potential participation in upcoming events, including the ATP-WTA 1000 Indian Wells tournament starting March 4, or others like Miami, Madrid, Rome, Roland Garros, and Wimbledon.
In December 2025, the ITIA informed BBC Sport that Williams had rejoined the registered drug-testing pool, requiring daily one-hour whereabouts updates for testing. Williams responded on social media shortly after, stating, “I’m NOT coming back. This wildfire is crazy.” However, during a late January 2026 appearance on the Today Show, she said, “I don’t know, I’m just going to see what happens,” without clarifying her testing status.
Williams has consistently avoided the term “retirement,” describing her 2022 US Open exit as “evolving away” from the sport. American player Alycia Parks, ranked World No. 77, recently practiced with Williams and noted, “She is in great shape. So I think she would kill it on tour.”
Speculation persists, with figures like former coach Patrick Mouratoglou expressing support for a 2026 return, citing her physical readiness. Greg Rusedski suggested a possible doubles reunion with sister Venus Williams, while Venus is entered in doubles at the Austin Open, starting February 23—one day after Serena's eligibility date. Jim Courier emphasized the demands of the testing system, noting that rejoining it typically signals competitive intent.
Williams' record includes 23 Grand Slam singles titles, second only to Margaret Court and Novak Djokovic in the Open era. With her sister, she won 14 Grand Slam doubles titles and three Olympic golds.