- Iga Swiatek – 9,785 points
- Aryna Sabalenka – 9,716 points
- Coco Gauff – 5,983 points
- Jessica Pegula – 5,785 points
- Elena Rybakina – 5,481 points
- Jasmine Paolini – 5,323 points
- Zheng Qinwen – 4,480 points
- Emma Navarro – 3,698 points
- Danielle Collins – 3,177 points
- Beatriz Haddad Maia – 3,096 points
Gauff has climbed to No 3 in the world, pushing Jessica Pegula down to No 4. At the top, just 69 points separate world No 1 Swiatek from the in-form Sabalenka, who is aiming to finish the year as No 1.
In the lower ranks of the WTA top 10, Brazil’s Beatriz Haddad Maia has returned to her career high of No 10 in the world for the first time since June 2023. This change sees Barbora Krejcikova dropping three places to No 13.
Frech’s Rise Continues
Magdalena Frech’s impressive performance at the end of the 2024 season has propelled her to a new career high of No 24 in the world after reaching the quarter-finals of the Wuhan Open last week.
Anna Kalinskaya is also making strides in the WTA rankings, reaching a career high of No 12 in the world.
Notable movers in the rankings include Ekaterina Alexandrova (up six spots to No 27), Leylah Fernandez (down six to No 34), Xinyu Wang (up 12 to No 39), and Bernarda Pera (up 16 to No 79).
Hailey Baptiste and Olga Danilovic have also made significant progress, moving up 22 and 17 spots to their respective career highs of No 80 and No 86 in the world.
Meanwhile, Laura Seigemund’s ranking continues to decline, dropping 21 spots to No 89 in the world. Yulia Starodubtseva has also fallen, down 12 places to No 91 in the world.