With the 2025 ATP Tour season now concluded, Italy and Spain emerged as the dominant nations of the season, securing the most singles titles between their representatives. It was a year defined by Carlos Alcaraz and Jannik Sinner, and fittingly, their nations finished as the ones with the most silverware in 2025.

Although Alcaraz surpassed Sinner in terms of individual titles—8 to 6—the Spaniard was the sole trophy winner for his country this year. “Carlitos” claimed two Grand Slams and three Masters 1000s among his haul, allowing him to finish the season as World No. 1. However, he wasn’t backed up by the large Spanish contingent; most notably, his compatriot Alejandro Davidovich Fokina lost four finals, even squandering match points in two of them.

Sinner was the Italian leader with 6 titles—including two Majors and the ATP Finals. However, the Italians can boast trophies from other representatives, including three ATP 250s from Luciano Darderi and two from Flavio Cobolli, including an ATP 500 in Hamburg. Curiously, World No. 8 Lorenzo Musetti was unable to contribute to this tally, falling in all three finals he contested this season.

Moving down the rankings, Canada appears in third place for the most titles of the season, with a total of 6 trophies in 2025. World No. 5 Felix Auger-Aliassime led his country with three ATP 250 titles won in Adelaide, Montpellier, and Brussels. He was joined by Denis Shapovalov, with titles in Dallas and Los Cabos, as well as Gabriel Diallo, who inaugurated his trophy cabinet on the grass courts of ‘s-Hertogenbosch.

USA’s “title efficiency” problem and Djokovic’s milestone

While the Americans can boast another strong season in terms of rankings, they fell somewhat short regarding titles, taking a total of 5 trophies throughout the year—a figure not particularly high for a nation that has 9 players inside the Top 50 and 15 inside the Top 100. They were led by Top 10 stars Taylor Fritz (two ATP 250 titles) and Ben Shelton, champion of his first Masters 1000 at the Canadian Open. Adding to the count were Learner Tien in Metz and Jenson Brooksby in Houston.

Fifth place is a tie between two nations without many representatives at the top level, far from the depth of countries like Italy or the USA. Serbia could not be missing from this ranking with four trophies, two of them coming from 24-time Grand Slam champion Novak Djokovic, who reached 101 career titles after crowning himself champion at the Geneva Open and in Athens. He was joined by compatriots Miomir Kecmanovic (champion in Delray Beach) and Laslo Djere (champion in Santiago).

Tied with Serbia is the surprise presence of Kazakhstan, though their title count relies on a single player: Alexander Bublik. The World No. 11 had a remarkable second half of 2025, winning four titles—including the ATP 500 Halle Open and three other ATP 250 tournaments. After several irregular months, Bublik finished on the verge of entering the Top 10 and single-handedly kept the Kazakh flag flying high among the countries with the most singles titles of the season.

Titles Won by Nation (Singles – ATP)

1. Italy: 11

2. Spain: 8

3. Canada: 6

4. USA: 5

5. Serbia: 4

6. Kazakhstan: 4

7. France: 3

8. Czech Republic: 3

9. Brazil: 2

10. Norway: 2

Doubles shake-up: Italy maintains lead as UK and USA surge

When considering doubles titles, there are some changes at the top, thanks especially to various doubles specialists pushing their countries much higher up the ranking. Italy comfortably maintains its first place, thanks to specialists Andrea Vavassori and Simone Bolelli, who combined for four trophies, along with three mixed doubles trophies from Vavassori (partnered with Sara Errani).

Second place is a tie between the United States and Great Britain, with 14 trophies each. The Americans secured doubles titles through the duo of Christian Harrison/Evan King (3), in addition to others involved in championship pairs like Austin Krajicek and Rajeev Ram. In the case of the British, they were led by Julian Cash and Lloyd Glasspool, champions of 7 titles this season, as well as Henry Patten—champion of the ATP Finals alongside his Finnish partner Heliövaara.

Other countries finishing high in total titles when including doubles include Spain (13), France (11), Argentina, and the Netherlands (8).

Titles won by nation (Singles + Doubles)

1. Italy: 18

2. USA: 14

3. Great Britain: 14

4. Spain: 13

5. France: 11

6. Argentina, Netherlands: 8

7. Canada: 6

8. Serbia, Czech Republic, Brazil, Australia, Croatia: 4