Alexander Zverev has earned various rewards after winning the French Open, which represents his first Grand Slam title.
That will likely be the most significant honor for Zverev, who had previously lost all three of his Grand Slam finals.
But he ended that nightmare run by defeating Flavio Cobolli in the final of the 2026 French Open, winning their match 6-1, 4-6, 6-4, 6-7(5-7), 6-1.
It represents the 25th ATP title of his stellar career, for which Zverev has received congratulations from Rafael Nadal.
But also going the way of the German is €2.8million ($3.26million) in prize money, which has had a significant impact on his total career earnings.
Prove me wrong – Alexander Zverev will win multiple Grand Slam titles now
He's finally got his first!
Alexander Zverev’s career earnings vs Carlos Alcaraz and Jannik Sinner
After his lucrative success in the French capital, Zverev now finds himself with career prize money of $65,845,262.
And that is not only significant in terms of his own career, but he’s also now ahead of the two biggest superstars on the ATP Tour.
Seven-time Grand Slam champion Carlos Alcaraz has earned $64,997,598, while world number one Jannik Sinner has earned $64,837,801.
Of course, none come close to 24-time Grand Slam champion Novak Djokovic, who is top of the pile with $193,469,626.

Alexander Zverev’s ATP record after French Open title
Zverev has managed to increase both his career earnings and his ATP title count, but his ranking remains unchanged.
Despite Sinner losing in the French Open second round and Alcaraz missing the Grand Slam through injury, they remain in first and second place respectively.
But the German has managed to take his 2026 win-loss tally to 35-9, with his career tally standing impressively at 555-232.
| 2026 | Career | |
| 3 | Rank | 2 |
| 1 | Titles | 25 |
| 35-9 | Win-loss | 555-232 |
| $6,344,797 | Prize money | $65,845,262 |
He will now deservedly celebrate his major success, but it should also make the 29-year-old hungry to win another sooner rather than later.
Whether or not that arrives at Wimbledon remains to be seen, although that is unlikely given that it has historically represented his worst Grand Slam.
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