The
French Open is due to take place between 24 May - 7 June, 2026 with Jannik Sinner favourite to scoop the title later this week.
Carlos Alcaraz defeated Jannik Sinner in the final, 4–6, 6–7(4–7), 6–4, 7–6(7–3), 7–6(10–2) but Alcaraz won't return to play this year. Novak Djokovic, Alexander Zverev, Felix Auger-Aliassime, Ben Shelton among others lead the way when it comes top seeds.
Also Gaël Monfils is set to make his final appearance at
Roland Garros, same can be said for Stan Wawrinka with both heralding the end of an era and potentially the continuation of the Sinner domination.
Entry List French Open Roland Garros ATP 2026
| # | Player | Ctry |
| 1 | Jannik Sinner | ITA |
| 3 | Alexander Zverev | GER |
| 4 | Novak Djoković | SRB |
| 5 | Félix Auger-Aliassime | CAN |
| 6 | Ben Shelton | USA |
| 7 | Alex de Minaur | AUS |
| 8 | Taylor Fritz | USA |
| 10 | Daniil Medvedev | RUS |
| 11 | Alexander Bublik | KAZ |
| 12 | Casper Ruud | NOR |
| 13 | Jiří Lehečka | CZE |
| 14 | Karen Khachanov | RUS |
| 15 | Andrey Rublev | RUS |
| 16 | Flavio Cobolli | ITA |
| 17 | Valentin Vacherot | MON |
| 18 | Tommy Paul | USA |
| 19 | Francisco Cerúndolo | ARG |
| 20 | Frances Tiafoe | USA |
| 21 | Luciano Darderi | ITA |
| 22 | Learner Tien | USA |
| 23 | Alejandro Davidovich Fokina | ESP |
| 24 | Cameron Norrie | GBR |
| 25 | Jakub Menšík | CZE |
| 26 | Arthur Rinderknech | FRA |
| 29 | Tomás Martín Etcheverry | ARG |
| 30 | Arthur Fils | FRA |
| 31 | Corentin Moutet | FRA |
| 32 | Tallon Griekspoor | NED |
| 33 | Brandon Nakashima | USA |
| 34 | Ugo Humbert | FRA |
| 35 | João Fonseca | BRA |
| 36 | Alex Michelsen | USA |
| 37 | Gabriel Diallo | CAN |
| 38 | Jaume Munar | ESP |
| 39 | Denis Shapovalov | CAN |
| 40 | Zizou Bergs | BEL |
| 41 | Térence Atmane | FRA |
| 42 | Fábián Marozsán | HUN |
| 43 | Sebastian Korda | USA |
| 44 | Mariano Navone | ARG |
| 45 | Alejandro Tabilo | CHI |
| 46 | Adrian Mannarino | FRA |
| 47 | Tomáš Macháč | CZE |
| 48 | Marin Čilić | CRO |
| 49 | Botic van de Zandschulp | NED |
| 50 | Ethan Quinn | USA |
| 51 | Yannick Hanfmann | GER |
| 52 | Nuno Borges | POR |
| 53 | Giovanni Mpetshi Perricard | FRA |
| 54 | Márton Fucsovics | HUN |
| 55 | Rafael Jódar | ESP |
| 56 | Daniel Altmaier | GER |
| 57 | Sebastián Báez | ARG |
| 58 | Miomir Kecmanović | SRB |
| 59 | Alexei Popyrin | AUS |
| 60 | Ignacio Buse | PER |
| 61 | Román Andrés Burruchaga | ARG |
| 62 | Jenson Brooksby | USA |
| 63 | Hubert Hurkacz | POL |
| 64 | Camilo Ugo Carabelli | ARG |
| 65 | Raphaël Collignon | BEL |
| 66 | Lorenzo Sonego | ITA |
| 67 | Stefanos Tsitsipas | GRE |
| 68 | Reilly Opelka | USA |
| 69 | Juan Manuel Cerúndolo | ARG |
| 70 | James Duckworth | AUS |
| 72 | Alexander Blockx | BEL |
| 73 | Kamil Majchrzak | POL |
| 74 | Thiago Agustín Tirante | ARG |
| 75 | Aleksandr Shevchenko | KAZ |
| 76 | Marcos Giron | USA |
| 77 | Valentin Royer | FRA |
| 78 | Vít Kopřiva | CZE |
| 79 | Mattia Bellucci | ITA |
| 80 | Marco Trungelliti | ARG |
| 81 | Jan Lennard Struff | GER |
| 82 | Damir Džumhur | BIH |
| 83 | Cristian Garín | CHI |
| 84 | Zachary Svajda | USA |
| 85 | Eliot Spizzirri | USA |
| 86 | Sebastian Ofner | AUT |
| 87 | Dino Prižmić | CRO |
| 88 | Hamad Medjedović | SRB |
| 89 | Aleksandar Vukic | AUS |
| 90 | Quentin Halys | FRA |
| 91 | Matteo Berrettini | ITA |
| 92 | Francisco Comesaña | ARG |
| 93 | Roberto Bautista Agut | ESP |
| 94 | Pablo Carreño Busta | ESP |
| 95 | Alexandre Müller | FRA |
| 96 | Patrick Kypson | USA |
| 97 | Adolfo Daniel Vallejo | PAR |
| 98 | Jacob Fearnley | GBR |
| 99 | Aleksandar Kovačević | USA |
| 100 | Luca Van Assche | FRA |
| 101 | Martin Landaluce | ESP |
| 102 | Yibing Wu | CHN |
| 103 | Rinky Hijikata | AUS |
| 104 | Daniel Mérida | ESP |
| 105 | Matteo Arnaldi | ITA |
| 106 | Benjamin Bonzi | FRA |
| 107 | Stan Wawrinka | SUI |
| 239 | Zhizhen Zhang (PR) | CHN |
| 892 | Thanasi Kokkinakis (PR) | AUS |
| 103 | Adam Walton (WC) | AUS |
| 109 | Titouan Droguet (WC) | FRA |
| 118 | Hugo Gaston (WC) | FRA |
| 143 | Arthur Géa (WC) | FRA |
| 168 | Clément Tabur (WC) | FRA |
| 222 | Gaël Monfils (WC) | FRA |
| 313 | Moise Kouamé (WC) | FRA |
| 623 | Nishesh Basavareddy (WC) | USA |
When is the draw confirmed for French Open 2026?
The men's and women's singles draws are expected to take place on May 21.
When is the schedule confirmed for French Open 2026?
The schedule is confirmed before play begins Sunday but it all begins on Sunday with the first round with the top names not expected until Wednesday.
Predictions French Open Roland Garros
Samuel Gill, Head Editor for TennisUpToDate sees Jannik Sinner winning it as expected.
Unlike the women's which is a bit of a mixed bag and you could pick from any number, the men's game is very much the opposite. Jannik Sinner case closed.
It isn't even sure if Djokovic will play; Alcaraz isn't. Half the supporting cast either fear him or are injured. I'll throw Zverev, Medvedev, Shelton, and Musetti in there. But I doubt any will get anywhere near him.
*** Jannik SInner
** Alexander Zverev, Daniil Medvedev
* Ben Shelton, Lorenzo Musetti
Jannik Sinner of Italy lifts the tropy as he celebrates the victory of the Internazionali BNL d'Italia 2026 tennis tournament at Foro Italico in Rome
Cristhian Avila, Editor for TennisUpToDate sees Jannik Sinner as champion.
For years we had not arrived at a major with such an absolute candidate – and the absence of Carlos Alcaraz makes it difficult to give a name capable of surpassing Jannik Sinner. The dominance he has transferred onto the courts makes him the clear favourite, and very few exceptions could change things in Paris.
The name of Novak Djokovic emerges as the main chance of seeing a champion different from Sinner. The Serbian already defeated him at the Australian Open and is one of the few players who has enough to surprise him over five sets. But for that, he needs to arrive in excellent physical condition – and even hope that Sinner does not play at his best level. The 24-time Grand Slam champion is always a contender, it is just that this time the gap is very wide for him to realistically overcome Sinner.
Alexander Zverev is another player called to challenge the Italian, although consistently throughout his career he has come up short. Will this be his great chance? Without a doubt, an inspired Zverev would trouble Sinner, but maintaining consistency from beginning to end looks complicated – and the recent defeat in Madrid made clear the wide difference separating them.
Among the possible surprises, Arthur Fils is a name who could think about taking new steps forward at a Grand Slam tournament, and it would not be a surprise to see him eliminating practically anyone inside the top 10. We will also have to watch what the Spaniards Rafael Jodar and Martin Landaluce do, as during this swing they went from being unknown names to players feared on clay courts. With the level they showed in Madrid and Rome, surely nobody wants to face them in the draw – much less in the early rounds.
*** Jannik Sinner
** Novak Djokovic, Alexander Zverev
* Arthur Fils, Rafael Jodar, Martin Landaluce
Lucas Michael, Editor for TennisUpToDate.com also sees Jannik Sinner sealing the title.
The clay swing may be coming to an end, but there is still one more tournament left:
Roland Garros. It does not get much better than this, but from an ATP point of view the writing may already be on the wall for the competition.
Jannik Sinner looks unbeatable. He has adapted to a surface that has not been his favourite in recent times, but all the while is still too good for anyone. He goes to Paris searching for the final Grand Slam that evaded him last year after spurning a two-set lead and three match points. With Carlos Alcaraz not competing and the motivation for redemption, I can see no other result that Sinner lifting the title, and quite comfortably.
So, the bigger question is who will he face in the latter stages? Novak Djokovic has to be in the hunt. The 24-time Grand Slam champion defeated the Italian in a stunning five-set battle in Melbourne earlier that year. How much of that performance was down to his laid-back run to that stage could have been a factor, and fitness may also halt his charge in Paris.
Alexander Zverev will likely be in the business end but I do not see a world where he gets past Sinner, or even Djokovic if he is 100% healthy. Alex de Minaur’s form has dropped off a cliff, Felix Auger-Aliassime and Taylor Fritz are not notorious clay players, and Ben Shelton has not hit his stride since winning in Munich.
Other contenders include players outside the top 10. Casper Ruud is returning to his best on a favourable clay surface. The two-time Roalnd Garros finalist will be a huge threat, and so will the Italian duo of Flavio Cobolli and Luciano Darderi who could go on a deep charge.
However, the Italian contingent will only come to see one man, who for my money will not only win Roland Garros, but will do it without dropping a set.
*** Jannik Sinner
** Novak Djokovic, Casper Ruud
* Alexander Zverev, Ben Shelton, Flavio Cobolli