The 2025 WTA season ended with broad dominance by the United States in terms of singles titles—a total of 14 won by 8 different representatives. Unlike on the men's side, the American tennis players managed to translate their massive presence in the elite into trophies, boasting 16 players inside the Top 100 and 9 inside the Top 40.
Regarding singles titles, there was no debating the USA's leadership, as they secured more than double the tally of the second-place nation. World No. 6
Jessica Pegula contributed the most to this statistic with three titles (Charleston, Bad Homburg, and Austin). Also making significant contributions were titles from
Coco Gauff (French Open, Wuhan), Amanda Anisimova (Beijing, Doha), and Madison Keys (Adelaide, Australian Open). Other 2025 champions included Emma Navarro, McCartney Kessler, Iva Jovic, and Ann Li.
In second place—albeit by a wide margin—are the Russian players, with a total of 6 singles titles. Although they play without a flag, Russian representatives took the runner-up spot, driven by Mirra Andreeva’s two WTA 1000 titles (Indian Wells, Dubai), alongside trophies from Ekaterina Alexandrova, Diana Shnaider, Anastasia Potapova, and Anna Blinkova—each contributing one title.
Third place belongs to Canada, where their two main representatives secured two titles each. This includes 19-year-old Victoria Mboko (No. 18), who took home trophies from the Canadian Open and Hong Kong, as well as 23-year-old Leylah Fernandez, who added two trophies to her cabinet by triumphing at the DC Open and in Osaka.
Tied with Canada is Belarus, with a single representative winning titles: World No. 1
Aryna Sabalenka. While she also does not compete under her national flag, her individual performances allowed her country to reach the podium of nations with the most singles trophies in 2025.
Swiatek and Rybakina carry nations
Slightly further back, in 4th place, there is another tie between two nations that owe their titles to a single player. Poland achieved three titles, all thanks to the performances of World No. 2 Iga Swiatek, who triumphed at Wimbledon, the Cincinnati Open, and in Seoul, making Poland one of only six countries to win at least three WTA singles trophies this year.
The last country to join this group is Kazakhstan—who also appeared high in the men's rankings. Former Wimbledon champion Elena Rybakina had a great end to the season, finishing 2025 with the WTA Finals title—her third of the season after winning the WTA 500 Strasbourg Open and Ningbo Open earlier in the year.
Further down the rankings, a total of six countries secured two titles during 2025: the Czech Republic (Marketa Vondrousova, Marie Bouzkova); Australia (Maya Joint); Belgium (Elise Mertens); Romania (Sorana Cirstea, Irina-Camelia Begu); France (Lois Boisson, Tiantsoa Rakotomanga Rajaonah); and Switzerland (Belinda Bencic).
Titles won by nation (Singles – WTA)
1. USA: 14
2.*Russia: 6
3. Canada, *Belarus: 4
4. Poland, Kazakhstan: 3
5. Czech Republic, Australia, Belgium, Romania, France, Switzerland: 2
*Officially, players from Russia and Belarus compete without a flag in official WTA tournaments.
Doubles shake-up: USA extends lead while Italy and Czech Republic surge
When considering the total trophy count by including those won by doubles players, the USA's tally rises considerably, reaching 27 titles—including another 13 in doubles. Standouts include Taylor Townsend (4), Nicole Melichar-Martinez (3), and Asia Muhammad (2). With this, the Americans reached triple the total trophies achieved by the second place on the list: the Czech Republic. Led by Doubles No. 1 Katerina Siniakova, the Czechs added another 5 titles—for a total of 9 combined between singles and doubles.
Italy is another country that secured a good portion of its trophies on the WTA Tour thanks to its doubles campaigns. The duo of Jasmine Paolini and Sara Errani totaled 5 trophies together, while Sara Errani contributed another three titles in mixed doubles, partnered with Andrea Vavassori. Italy reached 8 titles in 2025, and only one of them came in the singles category.
Slightly further back are Canada—with Gabriela Dabrowski contributing three titles—and China, which benefited from the contribution of doubles specialists Jiang Xinyu and Guo Hanyu. Both countries tie for 4th place with 7 titles, although in the case of the Asian nation, all of them came in doubles tournaments.
Titles won by nation (Singles + Doubles)
1. USA: 27
2. Czech Republic: 9
3. Italy: 8
4. Canada, China: 7
5. Australia, Hungary: 6
6. Poland, Kazakhstan, Belgium, Brazil: 5