Carlos Alcaraz and Jannik Sinner have narrowed the gap to Andy Murray's all-time ATP prize money total following recent tournament earnings and a profit-sharing distribution. Alcaraz trails Murray by about $413,000 after his Indian Wells semifinal run and additional payments. Sinner surpassed $60 million in career earnings after winning the BNP Paribas Open.
Andy Murray retired in August 2024 with $64,687,542 in prize money earned over 19 years. Carlos Alcaraz, currently ranked No. 4 on the all-time list, closed the gap significantly. Before the BNP Paribas Open at Indian Wells, Alcaraz trailed by about $1.3 million. His semifinal appearance earned $340,190, reducing the difference to around $413,000 after updates. The ATP's latest prize money list, released on Monday, included profit-sharing distributions from the 2024 season. Alcaraz received $600,197 from this, totaling $940,387 added to his earnings recently. A Miami Open final could push him past Murray, with the winner earning $1.1 million and runner-up $612,000. Jannik Sinner, now No. 7, received the largest 2024 distribution share of around $1.3 million, boosted by his Miami Open and Cincinnati Open titles that year. His Indian Wells victory added $1.1 million, pushing career totals past $60 million. He trails No. 6 Alexander Zverev by less than $1 million. The ATP introduced profit-sharing in 2022 to reward ranking points at ATP 1000 events, with $18.3 million distributed for 2024. Sinner won the BNP Paribas Open final over Daniil Medvedev. In the 2025 ATP Prize Money Leaders list, Alcaraz remains first, Sinner second after jumping seven spots, Medvedev third, and Novak Djokovic sixth.