| Paris Masters | |
|---|---|
| ATP Tour | |
| Founded | 1969; 56 years ago (1969) |
| Editions | 53 (2025) |
| Location | Nanterre France |
| Venue | Stade Pierre de Coubertin (1969–1982) Accor Arena (1986–2024) La Défense Arena (2025–)[1] |
| Category | ATP 1000 |
| Surface | Carpet (indoor) (1969–1970, 1986–2006) Hard (indoor) (1972–1982, 2007–) |
| Draw | 56S / 28Q / 24D |
| Prize money | €6,128,940 (2025) |
| Website | rolexparismasters.com |
| Current champions (2025) | |
| Singles | |
| Doubles | |
TheParis Masters, known as theRolex Paris Masters forsponsorship reasons (formerly theParis Open), is an annual indoortennis tournament for male professional players held inNanterre, France, a western suburb of Paris, atLa Défense Arena, and is held in early November. It is part of theATP Masters 1000 events on theAssociation of Tennis Professionals (ATP) Tour.

The tournament evolved from theFrench Covered Court Championships. Beginning with theOpen Era, it was held at theStade Pierre de Coubertin until 1982.[2] In 1989 it was upgraded to theGrand Prix Tour (Grand Prix Super Series). The event is usually the final tournament on the calendar before the season-endingATP Finals. For sponsorship reasons, the event was officially known from 2003 to 2016 as BNP Paribas Masters, and from 2017 has been called the Rolex Paris Masters. When it was held atAccor Arena in the Bercy neighborhood of Paris, the event was often referred to as theParis Indoor event and asBercy to distinguish it from the other significant tennis tournament held in Paris, theFrench Open, which is held outdoors in the 16th arrondissement of Paris. In 2025, the event was moved out of Bercy to theLa Défense suburb west of Paris.

It is the last of the top nine tournaments to be held indoors. The surface used to be one of the fastest courts in the world which rewarded bold attacking tennis, but since 2011 it has followed the general slow-down of most courts on the tour.[3]Ilie Năstase,Andre Agassi,Roger Federer andNovak Djokovic are the only singles players to have won both Parisian tournaments (Bercy and the French Open). Năstase, Agassi and Djokovic are the only three to win the double in a season, with Djokovic doing so twice.[4][5] Djokovic is also the most successful singles player in the tournament's history with seven titles, and is the only player to defend the title (2013–2015).
| Most titles | 7 | |
|---|---|---|
| Most finals | 9 | |
| Most consecutive titles | (2013, 2014, 2015) | 3 |
| Most consecutive finals | (2013, 2014, 2015) (2021, 2022, 2023) | 3 |
| Most matches played | 59 | |
| Most matches won | 50 | |
| Most consecutive matches won | 2013 (5), 2014 (5), 2015 (5), 2016 (2) | 17 |
| Most editions played | 17 |
| Most titles | 4 | |
|---|---|---|
| Most finals | 6 | |
| Most consecutive titles | (1996, 1997) | 2 |
(2013, 2014) |