British No. 1 Emma Raducanu has significantly strengthened her financial standing in 2025, despite withdrawing from next month’s lucrative exhibition events in the United States.
Raducanu pulled out of scheduled matches in Newark and Miami, set for December 7 and 8, after reportedly suffering mild bone bruising in her right foot. The injury follows an early end to her season, which was disrupted by illness during the Asian swing and forced her to withdraw from her final two official tournaments of the year.
Yet, despite missing out on sizeable appearance fees, Raducanu’s year has been far from a financial setback.
The 23-year-old earned an estimated $1.45 million (£1.1m) in WTA Tour prize money in 2025 alone—not including sponsorship income, bonuses, or other appearance fees. Her on-court earnings push her career prize money to a substantial $5.96m (£4.56m).
Raducanu’s commercial strength remains one of the most notable in the sport. As one of the WTA Tour’s most heavily endorsed players, filings from Companies House for 2023 showed a net worth of £8m and assets totalling £10.2m—figures that have likely risen significantly with her 2024–2025 activity.
While her win–loss record this season (28–22) isn’t eye-catching, Raducanu proved she can still challenge the world’s best, pushing world No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka at both Wimbledon and Cincinnati.
If she stays healthy, Raducanu is well-positioned to increase her earnings further in 2026, with hopes of securing a seeded slot at January’s Australian Open.
