Tennis Predictions Today — Expert ATP & WTA Match Forecasts
This page collects all of our daily tennis predictions in one feed: ATP and WTA tour matches, Grand Slam clashes at the Australian Open, Roland Garros, Wimbledon and the US Open, plus season finals and team events. Every forecast is free, published before the match starts and backed by a written statistical analysis.
Daily Tennis Match Predictions Based on Statistics
Every morning our analysts go through the full schedule of professional tennis and prepare predictions for the matches that matter. On a regular tour week that means forecasts for ATP 250, 500 and Masters 1000 draws alongside WTA 250, 500 and 1000 events; during the majors the volume grows dramatically, with predictions for every main-draw match from the first round to the final. What stays constant is the method. Each tennis prediction starts with the numbers: recent results, quality of opposition, head-to-head record, surface splits, serve and return statistics, and situational factors such as fatigue after a long previous round or a quick turnaround between continents. The forecast you see — a projected winner, often with a note on the likely scoreline or competitiveness of the match — is the conclusion of that process, not a starting point. We then add a short analysis in plain language, so even readers new to tennis statistics understand exactly why one player is favoured over the other.
What Data Goes Into Every Tennis Forecast
A reliable tennis forecast is the sum of many small, verifiable inputs rather than one bold opinion. Before any prediction is published on this page, our analysts review the same core checklist for both players, ensuring every matchup is judged by identical standards:
- Form curve — results from the past four to six weeks, weighted by opponent strength;
- Head-to-head record — overall and, more importantly, on the current surface;
- Surface profile — career and season win rates on hard, clay and grass;
- Serve metrics — first-serve percentage, points won behind first and second serve, aces;
- Return and pressure stats — break points created and converted, tie-break record, deciding-set record;
- Context — injuries, retirements in recent matches, scheduling and travel.
When several of these indicators point in the same direction, confidence in the prediction rises; when they conflict, we say so openly and explain which factor we trust most for that particular match.
Predictions by Court Surface: Hard, Clay and Grass
Surface is the single most underrated variable in tennis prediction, and our forecasts treat it accordingly. The same two players can produce opposite results on different courts: a heavy server who dominates on the grass of Wimbledon may struggle through long rallies on the clay of Roland Garros, while a defensive baseliner shows the reverse pattern. That is why our model keeps separate statistics for hard, clay and grass, and why head-to-head records are always filtered by surface before they influence a forecast. Seasonal transitions get special attention too — the first weeks of the grass swing after Roland Garros, or the jump from European clay to North American hard courts, regularly produce upsets that pure ranking-based predictions miss. If a forecast on this page goes against the rankings, the surface data is very often the reason, and the accompanying analysis will tell you exactly what the numbers revealed.
Predictions for Every Tournament Level — From Grand Slams to Challengers
Plenty of sites only wake up four times a year for the majors. AVF Predictions follows the calendar from the first week of January to the ATP and WTA Finals in November, because form is continuous and the best insights often come from the smaller events where favourites are tested by hungry challengers. Here is how our prediction coverage is structured across the season:
| Level | Tournaments | Prediction coverage |
|---|---|---|
| Grand Slams | Australian Open, Roland Garros, Wimbledon, US Open | Every main-draw match, all rounds, men’s and women’s singles |
| Masters / WTA 1000 | Indian Wells, Miami, Monte-Carlo, Madrid, Rome, Canada, Cincinnati | Daily predictions for the full schedule |
| ATP / WTA 500 | Dubai, Barcelona, Queen’s, Halle, Stuttgart, Tokyo | Main-draw matches daily |
| ATP / WTA 250 | Hertogenbosch, Eastbourne, Newport and more | Selected and feature matches |
| Finals & team events | ATP Finals, WTA Finals, United Cup, Davis Cup, Billie Jean King Cup | Full predictions for every tie and group match |
This breadth is not just about volume. Tracking players week after week across every level is what lets us spot a change in form early — often a round or two before it shows up in the rankings or the headlines.
How to Read and Use Our Tennis Predictions
Each prediction on this page follows the same clear format, so you always know what you are looking at. At the top you will find the matchup, tournament, surface and start time. Below that comes the analytical section: a summary of both players’ recent form, the head-to-head story, the key statistical edges and any contextual factors such as injuries or scheduling quirks. The prediction itself states our projected winner and characterises the expected match — straightforward, competitive, or a genuine coin-flip where small margins decide everything. We recommend reading the reasoning rather than skipping straight to the verdict: understanding why a forecast leans one way teaches you far more about tennis than the pick alone. And because every past prediction remains published next to the final result, you can review our track record at any time and judge the quality of the analysis for yourself.
Tips for Combining Predictions With Your Own Analysis
The best way to use this page is as a starting point, not a substitute for your own judgment. Our forecasts compress hours of statistical work into a few paragraphs, but you bring something the data cannot fully capture — the matches you have actually watched. If you saw a player struggling with their serve last week, or noticed a tactical adjustment under a new coach, weigh that alongside our numbers. Pay particular attention to matches where our analysis flags genuine uncertainty: those are the moments to dig deeper rather than rely on any single source. Over time, comparing your own expectations with our predictions and the eventual results is one of the fastest ways to sharpen your understanding of professional tennis.
Frequently Asked Questions About Tennis Predictions
How often are predictions updated? New forecasts are published daily, typically several hours before the first scheduled match, and during Grand Slams the page is refreshed for every session. Are the predictions free? Yes — everything on this page is fully free, with no premium tiers or locked content. Do you cover both men’s and women’s tennis? Absolutely; ATP and WTA matches receive identical analytical treatment, and during the majors we forecast both singles draws in full. Can predictions change after publication? If significant news breaks — a late withdrawal, an injury in warm-up — we update the analysis and clearly mark the revision. How accurate are the forecasts? No honest analyst promises certainty in a sport decided by a handful of points, but our complete archive of predictions and results is open for anyone to verify. That transparency, more than any accuracy claim, is what we ask to be judged on.