ITF WJ. Luikham vs C. R. Sama · 6-3 4-6 1-0 · Set 3 · W35 Tumkur (India)ITF WA. Ishii vs M. Aikawa · 4-6 4-6 · Finished · W35 FukuokaITF WS. Nishimoto vs S. Oigawa · 6-4 · Set 2 · W35 FukuokaITF WI. Yamazaki vs N. H. Kang · 6-1 3-6 1-1 · Set 3 · W35 ChangwonITF WS. Lee vs Y. Kim · 5-4 · Set 1 · W35 ChangwonCHE. S. Liang vs T. Preston · 2-0 · Set 1 · Jiujiang (China) - QualificationCHX. Yao vs H. Kaji · 6-4 2-3 · Set 2 · Jiujiang (China) - QualificationITF MM. Sureshkumar vs S. Rawat · 3-6 6-4 7-5 · Finished · M25 Nakhon Pathom 2 (Thailand)ITF MM. Malaszszak vs D. Javia · 2-2 · Set 1 · M25 Nakhon Pathom 2 (Thailand)ITF MC. Hewitt vs K. Samrej · 6-4 · Set 2 · M25 Nakhon Pathom 2 (Thailand)CHM. Lajal vs M. Kukushkin · 7-6 4-4 · Set 2 · WuxiWTAA. Eala vs M. Frech · 11:00 · RomeWTAM. Linette vs T. Maria · 11:00 · RomeWTAL. Stefanini vs J. Ostapenko · 11:00 · RomeITF WJ. Luikham vs C. R. Sama · 6-3 4-6 1-0 · Set 3 · W35 Tumkur (India)ITF WA. Ishii vs M. Aikawa · 4-6 4-6 · Finished · W35 FukuokaITF WS. Nishimoto vs S. Oigawa · 6-4 · Set 2 · W35 FukuokaITF WI. Yamazaki vs N. H. Kang · 6-1 3-6 1-1 · Set 3 · W35 ChangwonITF WS. Lee vs Y. Kim · 5-4 · Set 1 · W35 ChangwonCHE. S. Liang vs T. Preston · 2-0 · Set 1 · Jiujiang (China) - QualificationCHX. Yao vs H. Kaji · 6-4 2-3 · Set 2 · Jiujiang (China) - QualificationITF MM. Sureshkumar vs S. Rawat · 3-6 6-4 7-5 · Finished · M25 Nakhon Pathom 2 (Thailand)ITF MM. Malaszszak vs D. Javia · 2-2 · Set 1 · M25 Nakhon Pathom 2 (Thailand)ITF MC. Hewitt vs K. Samrej · 6-4 · Set 2 · M25 Nakhon Pathom 2 (Thailand)CHM. Lajal vs M. Kukushkin · 7-6 4-4 · Set 2 · WuxiWTAA. Eala vs M. Frech · 11:00 · RomeWTAM. Linette vs T. Maria · 11:00 · RomeWTAL. Stefanini vs J. Ostapenko · 11:00 · Rome
Home/Tournaments/Chile Open
Surface
Clay
Category
ATP 250
Dates
23 Feb – 1 Mar
Location
CL Santiago
Sponsored · Stream live on Stake.usLive now · 11
Stream every ATP & WTA match live on Stake.us.
Free to register · stream every match · cash out, in-play markets, 24/7 support.
Register and stream →
18+. Gamble responsibly. Always check local laws, service availability varies by country. begambleaware.org
Tournament wrap, 2026 edition

The Chile Open 2026 has wrapped

The Chile Open 2026 finished on 1 March, an ATP 250 stop on clay that ran from 23 February to 1 March in Santiago, Chile. Below are the finals, the points and prize money lifted, and a quick look ahead to next year.

Returns: the Chile Open is expected back around 28 February 2027, we update this card once the 2027 calendar is confirmed.

Where to watch

How to watch the Chile Open 2026

Coverage is country-aware. Pin your country in the header and the broadcaster panel below switches to the rightsholder showing the Chile Open where you live.

Full US coverage

The story of the Chile Open

Why the Chile Open matters in 2026

The Chile Open runs in Santiago, Chile from 23 Feb – 1 Mar, played on slow red clay. Bounces sit higher than on any other tour surface and rallies run longer, which suits heavy topspin and punishes flat hitters. It is an ATP 250 event. The singles champion takes ranking points and prize money, and a useful chunk of the season prize pool.

The 2026 edition has wrapped. The full results sit below; the recap and the 2027 dates are above.

Read the full Chile Open preview

Key dates

Chile Open 2026 schedule and key sessions

The shape of the week, day by day. Start times for individual matches are published the night before each session in the order of play and convert to your local timezone on the daily schedule.

Sat 21 Feb to Sun 1 Mar
Qualifying. Final qualifying rounds run 21 Feb to 22 Feb, with the last 16 spots in the main draw on the line.
Mon 23 Feb
Main draw begins. First-round matches across both tours, with the higher seeds spread evenly across the bracket.
Wed 25 Feb
Round of 32. The seeded names start meeting unseeded survivors. Upsets here typically reshape one half of the draw.
Fri 27 Feb
Round of 16. The eight seeds in each half of the draw narrow to four. Form usually starts to separate from reputation around here.
Sun 1 Mar
Quarter-finals. Best-of-three (or best-of-five at Slams) on the show courts, with the eight quarter-finalists locked in by the night before.
Fri 27 Feb
Semi-finals. The four-into-two cut. Schedules are usually split women on the Friday, men on the Saturday, with start times announced the previous evening.
Sun 1 Mar
Finals. Champion crowned in Santiago on the closing day. Trophy ceremonies follow on court immediately after match point.
Surface and conditions

How clay plays at the Chile Open

The clay sits red and slow underfoot, with the topspin ball jumping up to shoulder height and the slice skidding less than it would on grass or fast hard. First-strike serving is muted because the surface absorbs flat first deliveries rather than springing them off the line, and the third-shot pattern after the serve carries less of the load than on a quicker court. The longer rallies and the slower-paced ball reward the player who runs an extra five percent in the early rounds, which is why second-week clay tennis usually looks like a different sport from second-week hard.

Tactically the cross-court forehand to the deuce corner is the spine of every point, and the player who breaks pattern with a heavy down-the-line backhand at the right moment is usually the one who controls the rally. Sliding into recovery shots becomes a default, footwork has to be deeper, and a player who arrives without proper clay match practice tends to look a step late through every changeover. Best-of-three keeps the format honest; best-of-five exposes anyone whose conditioning is not at slam standard.

Names to follow

Players to watch at the Chile Open

Jannik Sinner
World No. 1 on the men's side. Standard top-quarter pick at every event he enters.
Carlos Alcaraz
Three-time Slam winner with the highest ceiling on tour when fit. Always the bottom-half draw spotlight.
What's on the line

Ranking points by round

Singles ranking points awarded for reaching each round of the ATP 250 draw. Doubles points are typically half of the singles tally per round.

Round reachedSingles points
Winner250
Runner-up165
Semi-final100
Quarter-final50
Round of 1625
Round of 320
Where it's played

Venue and travel notes

Match start times convert to your local timezone everywhere on the site, but the published schedule and ticket information runs on the venue's local clock below.

CityCL Santiago, Chile
Time zoneAmerica/Santiago
FormatATP only
Quick facts

Chile Open 2026 at a glance

Edition2026
TourATP
CategoryATP 250
SurfaceClay
Dates23 Feb – 1 Mar
VenueSantiago, Chile
Time zoneAmerica/Santiago
FAQ

Chile Open 2026, your questions, answered

When is the Chile Open 2026 played?

The Chile Open 2026 runs from 23 Feb – 1 Mar. The order of play for each session is published the night before, and start times on this page convert to your local timezone.

What surface is the Chile Open played on?

The Chile Open is played on clay. Rallies run longer on clay and the bounce sits higher, which favours heavy topspin and deeper court positioning.

Where is the Chile Open held?

The Chile Open is held in Santiago, Chile.

How can I watch the Chile Open 2026?

The broadcaster panel above lists the rightsholder showing the Chile Open in your country, pin your country in the header to switch the panel. Tennis TV (men) and WTA TV (women) carry most non-Slam events worldwide.

How many ranking points does the Chile Open winner earn?

The singles champion takes 1,000 ranking points.

How much prize money does the Chile Open pay?

ATP 250 and WTA 250 events run a smaller purse than the bigger Masters and Slam events, but still offer meaningful prize money to quarter-finalists and beyond. The exact breakdown is published by the tour the week before the main draw begins, and is mirrored on the official tournament site.

How does qualifying work at the Chile Open?

A 28-player main draw runs across the week, with qualifying played in the 2 days before. There are no byes, every seed plays a first-round match. The qualifying draw is published a week ahead of main-draw entry lists.

What betting markets work best at the Chile Open?

Clay rewards heavy topspin, deep court positioning, and high physical engine. Underdog grinders cover spreads more often here than on faster surfaces, and game-handicap markets tend to be more reliable than two-way moneylines. Always cross-check the latest odds on the live odds panel above before staking.