The 2026 tennis season begins in style next week, when some of the world’s best talents converge on Australia for the United Cup.
The fourth edition of the mixed-gender team competition will take place from January 2 to January 11, with 18 nations competing for the title.
The United States is the defending champions, having won the inaugural event in 2023. Germany won the title in 2024, whereas Poland finished second the previous two years.
The event will feature four of the world’s top ten men: Alexander Zverev, Felix Auger Aliassime, Taylor Fritz, and Alex de Minaur, with Jack Draper withdrawing due to an injury. Three of the world’s top ten women, Iga Swiatek, Coco Gauff, and Jasmine Paolini, are also participating.
Ties will be played in Perth and Sydney, with the tournament serving as an excellent preparation for the Australian Open, which begins in Melbourne on January 12.
Olympics.com has compiled a comprehensive overview of the United Cup 2026.
The Format:
Six groups of three teams compete in a round-robin format. Three groups will compete in Perth, and three in Sydney.
Each tie includes three matches played on the same day: one men’s singles, one women’s singles, and one mixed doubles. Singles matches are best of three tiebreak sets. Mixed doubles matches are best of two tie-break sets, with a 10-point tie-break at one set apiece.
The top team from each group will advance to the quarterfinals, with one knockout spot reserved for the best runner-up in both Perth and Sydney.
The winners will advance to the semi-finals and final, all of which will take place in Sydney.
The groups
Perth
Group A
- United States
- Spain
- Argentina
Group C
- Italy
- France
- Switzerland
Group E
- Great Britain
- Greece
- Japan
Sydney
Group B
- Canada
- Belgium
- People’s Republic of China
Group D
- Australia
- Czech Republic
- Norway
Group F
- Germany
- Poland
- Netherlands
The players
United States
- Coco Gauff
- Varvara Lepchenko
- Nicole Melichar-Martinez
- Taylor Fritz
- Mackenzie McDonald
- Christian Harrison
Spain
- Jessica Bouzas Maneiro
- Andrea Lazaro Garcia
- Yvonne Cavalle-Reimers
- Jaume Munar
- Carlos Taberner
- Iñigo Cervantes
Argentina
- Solana Sierra
- Maria Lourdes Carle
- Nicole Fossa Huergo
- Sebastian Baez
- Marco Trungelliti
- Guido Andreozzi
Italy
- Jasmine Paolini
- Nuria Brancaccio
- Sara Errani
- Flavio Cobolli
- Andrea Pellegrino
- Andrea Vavassori
France
- Lois Boisson
- Leolia Jeanjean
- Tiantsoa Rakotomanga Rajaonah
- Arthur Rinderknech
- Geoffrey Blancaneaux
- Edouard Roger-Vasselin
Switzerland
- Belinda Bencic
- Celine Naef
- Naima Karamoko
- Stan Wawrinka
- Jakub Paul
- Luca Castelnuovo
Great Britain
- Emma Raducanu
- Katie Swan
- Olivia Nicholls
- Billy Harris
- Neal Skupski
Greece
- Maria Sakkari
- Despina Papamichail
- Sapfo Sakellaridi
- Stefanos Tsitsipas
- Stefanos Sakellaridis
- Petros Tsitsipas
Japan
- Naomi Osaka
- Nao Hibino
- Shintaro Mochizuki
- Yasutaka Uchiyama
Canada
- Victoria Mboko
- Kayla Cross
- Gabriela Dabrowski
- Felix Auger-Aliassime
- Alexis Galarneau
- Cleeve Harper
Belgium
- Elise Mertens
- Greet Minnen
- Lara Salden
- Zizou Bergs
- Kimmer Coppejans
- Sander Gille
People’s Republic of China
- Zhu Lin
- You Xiaodi
- Zhang Zhizhen
- Te Rigele
- Wang Aoran
Australia
- Maya Joint
- Maddison Inglis
- Storm Hunter
- Alex De Minaur
- Jason Kubler
- John-Patrick Smith
Czech Republic
- Barbora Krejcikova
- Linda Fruhvirtova
- Miriam Skoch
- Jakub Mensik
- Dalibor Svrcina
- Adam Pavlasek
Norway
- Malene Helgo
- Astrid Brune Olsen
- Ulrikke Eikeri
- Casper Ruud
- Viktor Durasovic
Germany
- Eva Lys
- Laura Siegemund
- Mina Hodzic
- Alexander Zverev
- Patrick Zahraj
- Kevin Krawietz
Poland
- Iga Swiatek
- Katarzyna Kawa
- Katarzyna Piter
- Hubert Hurkacz
- Daniel Michalski
- Jan Zielinski
Netherlands
- Suzan Lamens
- Eva Vedder
- Demi Schuurs
- Tallon Griekspoor
- Guy Den Ouden
- David Pel
The schedule
2 January
- Perth – Group A – Spain v Argentina
- Perth – Group E – Greece v Japan
3 January
- Sydney – Group B – Belgium v People’s Republic of China
- Sydney – Group D – Australia v Norway
- Perth – Group C – France v Switzerland
- Perth – Group A – USA v Argentina
4 January
- Sydney – Group F – Germany v Netherlands
- Sydney – Group B – Canada v People’s Republic of China
- Perth – Group E – Great Britain v Japan
- Perth – Group C – Italy v Switzerland
5 January
- Sydney – Group D – Czech Republic v Norway
- Sydney – Group F – Germany v Poland
- Perth – Group A – USA v Spain
- Perth – Group E – Great Britain v Greece
6 January
- Sydney – Group B – Canada v Belgium
- Sydney – Group D – Australia v Czech Republic
- Perth – Group C – Italy v France
7 January
- Sydney – Group F – Poland v Netherlands
- Perth – Quarter-Final 1 – Winner Group A v Best Runner-Up
- Perth – Quarter-Final 2 – Winner Group C v Winner Group E
8 January
- Sydney – Quarter-Final 3 – Winner Group B v Best Runner-Up
9 January
- Sydney – Quarter-Final 4 – Winner Group D v Winner Group F
10 January
- Sydney – Semi-Final 1 – Winner Quarter-Final 2 v Winner Quarter-Final 3
- Sydney – Semi-Final 2 – Winner Quarter-Final 1 v Winner Quarter-Final 4
11 January
- Sydney – Final – Winner Semi-Final 1 v Winner Semi-Final 2
How to Watch
Fans in the United States, Great Britain, Austria, Ireland, Germany, Switzerland, Spain, and India will be able to watch all of the 2026 United Cup matches live on the Tennis Channel.
The tournament will also be broadcast on several TV channels throughout the world.
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