The French Open main draw begins on Sunday twenty five May and concludes with the women’s final on Saturday seven June and the men’s final on Sunday eight June. Qualifying starts a week earlier while junior events occupy the final six days.
Organisers confirmed day sessions will open at eleven in the morning local time on all courts except Philippe Chatrier, which retains a twelve noon start to accommodate broadcast windows in Asia. Night matches again carry a separate ticket beginning at eight fifteen.
Prize money rises 5.21% to just above fifty six million euro, with winners receiving 2.9m and first round participants earning seventy eight thousand. The increase matches inflation but preserves Roland Garros as the lowest paying major.
Daily results will post on the official Roland Garros website within ten minutes of match completion, while a new mobile app tab labelled Momentum offers real time win probability graphs created by tournament statisticians.
Fans seeking on site experiences can purchase grounds passes for forty two euro during the first week, granting access to outside courts and practice sessions. Evening weather forecasts will inform court scheduling to maximise full stadium play.
Broadcast partners France Télévisions and Amazon Prime will share domestic coverage, ensuring every singles point appears free to air or via subscription, with English language commentary available through the International World Feed.