ATP Dubai Open 2026 Payouts: How much did Daniil Medvedev, Tallon Griekspoor & others earn in prize money?

(Courtesy : @medwed33/Instagram)
Medvedev won the ATP Dubai Open 2026 title after Tallon Griekspoor withdrew due to injury.
For the first time in his career, Daniil Medvedev claimed his second title at the same event. His 23rd overall career title, and second in Dubai, came after a sensational performance backed by excellent serving and consistency in return games.
The maximum games dropped by the Russian in a match was six, against top seed Felix Auger Aliassime in the semi-finals. The former US Open champion also registered impressive wins including those over Stan Wawrinka and Jenson Brooksby.
Tallon Griekspoor, the 2026 Dubai finalist could have registered his career’s biggest title triumph. But his participation in the final always seemed uncertain.
While he overcame Andrey Rublev in straight sets, he was visibly struggling with an injury and admitted that he could have forfeited, had he lost the opening set.
“Not how I want to win a final. Hoping the injury for (Griekspoor) is not too bad and wishing him a speedy recovery”, said Medvedev, after winning the trophy without taking the court in the title clash.
Check the breakdown of the prize money by round for singles and doubles below.
ATP Dubai Open 2026 prize money breakdown
Singles
| Round | Prize Money (in $ USD) | Players |
|---|---|---|
| Winner | $619,160 | Daniil Medvedev |
| Runner-up | $333,160 | Tallon Griekspoor |
| Semifinal | $177,555 | Felix Auger Aliassime, Andrey Rublev |
| Quarterfinal | $90,710 | Jenson Brooksby, Jiri Lehecka, Arthur Rinderknech, Jakub Mensik |
| Round of 16 | $48,420 | Stan Wawrinka, Karen Khachanov, Giovanni Mpetshi Perricard, Pablo Carreno Busta, Alexander Bublik, Ugo Humbert, Alexei Popyrin, Jack Draper |
| Round of 32 | $25,825 | Moez Echargui, Benjamin Hassan, Quentin Halys, Shang Juncheng, Denis Shapovalov, Alexander Shevchenko, Fabian Marozsán, Jan-Lennard Struff, Otto Virtanen, Arthur Fils, Stefanos Tsitsipas, Kamil Majchrzak, Hubert Hurkacz, Valentin Royer |
Doubles
| Round | Prize Money (in $ USD) | Players |
|---|---|---|
| Winner | $203,390 | Harri Heliövaara / Henry Patten |
| Runner-up | $108,470 | Mate Pavić / Marcelo Arévalo |
| Semifinal | $54,880 | Julian Cash / Lloyd Glasspool, Simone Bolelli / Andrea Vavassori |
| Quarterfinal | $27,450 | Théo Arribagé / Albano Olivetti, Alexander Bublik / Juncheng Shang, Petr Nouza / Patrik Rikl, Francisco Cabral / Lucas Miedler |
| Round of 16 | $14,200 | Adam Pavlásek / John-Patrick Smith, Jeevan Nedunchezhiyan / Ramkumar Ramanathan, Yuki Bhambri / André Göransson, Rinky Hijikata / Hendrik Jebens, Tallon Griekspoor / Arthur Rinderknech, Sriram Balaji / Neil Oberleitner, Francisco Cabral / Lucas Miedler, Karol Drzewiecki / Piotr Matuszewski |
Who won the men’s singles title at ATP Dubai Open 2026?
Daniil Medvedev won the title, his second in Dubai after his final opponent Tallon Griekspoor withdrew due to injury.
How much did champion Daniil Medvedev earn in prize money at ATP Dubai Open 2026?
As the champion, Medvedev pocketed $619,160 (Rs 5.64 crore approx.) in prize money from the event.
How much did runner-up Tallon Griekspoor earn in prize money at ATP Dubai Open 2026?
Despite not being able to play the final, Griekspoor took home $333,160 (Rs 3.03 crore approx.) as his share of the prize purse.
How much did doubles champions Harri Heliovaara/Henry Patten earn in prize money from ATP Dubai Open 2026?
As the winners, the Finnish/British duo bagged $203,390 (Rs 1.85 crore approx.) from the ATP 500 event.
For more updates, follow Khel Now on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram; download the Khel Now Android App or IOS App and join our community on Whatsapp & Telegram
Aniruddh Seshadri Iyer is a passionate sports journalist at Khel Now, specializing in tennis and Olympic sports. An engineer by training, he found his storytelling passion through iconic Grand Slam and Olympic moments. Known for sharp analysis and insightful coverage, he draws inspiration from Novak Djokovic’s resilience. Outside journalism, he enjoys reading, traveling, and playing the guitar.