List of Grand Slam and related tennis records

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These are records for Grand Slam tournaments, also known as majors, which are the four most prestigious annual tennis events: Australian Open, French Open, Wimbledon, and US Open. All records are based on official data from the majors. In the case of ties, players are listed in chronological order of reaching the record. The names of active players appear in boldface for their career totals and currently active streaks.

Singles career totals (all time)

Men's singles

Women's singles

Singles title leaders timeline

Most singles titles and finals (all time)

Includes all players with at least four singles titles. {|

Men

Women

Most singles titles and finals (Open Era)

Players with at least 5 singles titles during the Open Era.

Most titles

Most finals

Players who reached at least 10 singles finals during the Open Era.

Records across all disciplines (all time)

Most titles

Players with at least 18 titles in any combination.

Most wins per event

Most titles in a year

In 1965, Margaret Court won a record nine titles out of twelve available to a player in the same year: the singles, doubles and mixed doubles at all four Grand Slam tournaments. In 1985, Martina Navratilova reached the final in all Grand Slam events held that year, equaling the record of eleven final appearances set by Court in 1963 and repeated a year later. Twelve unique players (nine women and three men) have won at least six major championships in one calendar year.

Triple Crown

The Triple Crown refers to winning the singles, doubles, and mixed doubles titles at one event, in the same week. This has become an increasingly rare accomplishment in the sport, partly because the final matches in all three disciplines often likely take place concurrently in the same day, and not in separate days. Doris Hart for example attained her first Triple Crown after playing three Wimbledon final matches held in one single day. Notes: {|

Men

Women

Miscellaneous records

Youngest and oldest singles champions

Men

Women

Youngest and oldest singles competitors

Men

Won a title without losing a set

The tables below don't include Wimbledon and U.S. Challenge Round eras. {|

Men's singles

Women's singles

Men's doubles (Open Era)

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Women's doubles (Open Era)

Mixed doubles (Open Era)

Won a title at first appearance

These players won the title the first time they played in that particular Grand Slam tournament (in the main draw).

Men

Women

Won a title at final appearance

These players won the title of the final Grand Slam tournament they played. {|

Men

Women

Won a title after saving match points

These players saved at least one match point during their listed title runs. The accompanying number of match points saved and final match score are also listed.

Men

Women

Fewest career first-round losses

Must have won at least 2 singles titles and played at least 20 first round matches (does not include second round matches after a bye in the first round, walkovers, or challenge rounds).

Participation

Note: Played at least one main draw singles match per event. Active streaks listed in bold. Current as of 2024 Wimbledon.

Men

Women

Most doubles titles (all time)

Per team

Pairs that won at least four titles together. {|

Men

Women

Per player

Players with at least four titles. {|

Men

Women

Most mixed doubles titles (all time)

Per team

Pairs that won at least four titles together.

Per player

Players with at least four titles. {|

Men

Women

Most wheelchair tennis titles (all time)

Men's singles

Women's singles

Men's doubles

Women's doubles

Quad singles

Quad doubles

Grand Slam, Year-End Championship and Olympics

Grand Slam

A player who wins all four majors in the same year is said to have achieved a "Grand Slam".

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Non-calendar-year Grand Slam

A player who wins all four majors consecutively across two calendar years is said to have achieved a "Non-calendar-year Grand Slam".

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Career Grand Slam

A player who wins all four majors during his or her career is said to have achieved a "Career Grand Slam".

Golden Slam

A player who wins all four majors and the Olympic gold medal (or a Paralympic gold medal) in a single season is said to have achieved a "Golden Slam".

Non-calendar-year Golden Slam

A player who wins all four majors and the Olympic gold medal (or a Paralympic gold medal) consecutively across two calendar years is said to have achieved a "Non-calendar-year Golden Slam".

Career Golden Slam

A player who wins all four majors and the Olympic gold medal (or a Paralympic gold medal) during his or her career is said to have achieved a "Career Golden Slam".

Super Slam

A player who wins all four majors, the Olympic gold medal (or a Paralympic gold medal) and the year-end championships (currently, the ATP Finals for the men's tour, WTA Finals for the women's tour, and the Wheelchair Tennis Masters for the wheelchair tennis tour) in a single season is said to have achieved a "Super Slam".

Non-calendar-year Super Slam

A player who wins all four majors, the Olympic gold medal (or a Paralympic gold medal) and the year-end championships (currently, the ATP Finals for the men's tour, WTA Finals for the women's tour, and the Wheelchair Tennis Masters for the wheelchair tennis tour) consecutively across two calendar years is said to have achieved a "Non-calendar-year Super Slam".

Career Super Slam

A player who wins all four majors, the Olympic gold medal and the year-end championship throughout his or her career is said to have achieved a "Career Super Slam".

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