ATP 500 action returns to Germany as top-ranked players, including Jannik Sinner, Alexander Zverev, Daniil Medvedev, Stefanos Tsitsipas, and Joao Fonseca prepare to compete at the Terra Wortmann Open in Halle. The grass-court tournament is scheduled from June 16-22 at the OWL Arena in Halle, Germany. Ralf Weber serves as the tournament director.
The field features defending champion Sinner alongside notable players such as Zverev, Medvedev, Tsitsipas, Fonseca, Arthur Fils, and Felix Auger-Aliassime. The singles draw will be conducted on Saturday, June 14.
Qualifying matches are set for June 14-15 at 11 a.m., while main draw matches will occur from June 16-20 starting at 11:30 a.m., with play beginning at 12:30 p.m. on June 21. The doubles final is scheduled for June 22 at 12:30 p.m., followed by the singles final not before 3 p.m.
The prize money for the event totals €2,522,220. Singles winners will receive €471,755 and earn 500 points; finalists get €253,790 and 330 points; semi-finalists receive €135,255 and 200 points; quarter-finalists earn €69,100 and gain 100 points; round of sixteen participants collect €36,885 with fifty points; while round of thirty-two competitors receive €19,670 without earning points.
In doubles competition per team: winners claim €154,930 with five hundred points; finalists secure €82,620 with three hundred points; semi-finalists get €41,800 along with one hundred eighty points; quarter-finalists take home €20,910 earning ninety points; round of sixteen teams obtain €10,820 without additional point earnings.
Live coverage is available on Tennis TV. Updates can be followed using #TWO25 across various social media platforms including Facebook (ATPHalle), X (@ATPHalle), YouTube (TerraWortmannOpen), and Instagram (@atphalle_official).
Last year’s singles title was claimed by Jannik Sinner who defeated Hubert Hurkacz in two tie-break sets. Simone Bolelli and Andrea Vavassori triumphed in doubles over Kevin Krawietz and Tim Puetz.
Roger Federer holds several records at this tournament including most singles titles (ten) and most match wins (sixty-nine). He also stands as both the oldest champion (thirty-seven years old in two thousand nineteen) and highest-ranked champion alongside Jannik Sinner when ranked number one globally during their victories.
Florian Mayer was the last home champion in two thousand sixteen when he won as the lowest-ranked champion ever recorded here being ranked number one hundred ninety-two globally.
