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The Prague Open returns to Prague, Czechia for its 2026 edition, played from 13–19 Jul on Clay.

What's at stake

At 250 ranking points to the winner, this sits at the foundation of the tour calendar. It’s where lower-ranked players earn ATP/WTA points to climb, and where top players occasionally drop in to fine-tune ahead of bigger events.

The Prague Open starts in 75 days. The draw lands a few days before the first ball is struck — we'll publish the bracket here as soon as it's set.

The conditions

Clay is the slowest surface on tour — the ball sits up, points get longer, and the bigger your topspin, the more you control the rally. At Prague, expect heavy court coverage to count more than raw power.

Topspin baseliners and movers tend to dominate clay events of this size. The week’s pace and bounce will favour those who arrive with rhythm — watch the warm-up events on the same surface for an early read on form.

How to follow it

The full schedule, daily order of play and broadcaster list are below. Switch country in the header to see the rightsholder showing the Prague Open where you live, and use the daily order-of-play page on match days to track start times in your local timezone.

Frequently asked

When is the Prague Open 2026?

The Prague Open 2026 runs from 13–19 Jul in Prague, Czechia.

What surface is the Prague Open played on?

The Prague Open is played on Clay.

Where can I watch the Prague Open 2026 live?

Coverage of the Prague Open 2026 is available on the broadcasters listed in your country guide. Tennis TV streams the WTA globally for fans without a regional rightsholder.

View the full tournament page

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Key facts

Surface: Clay

Tour: WTA

Category: WTA 250

Dates: 13–19 Jul

Status: Upcoming