2025 French Open – Men's singles final

2025 French Open Men's Final
Jannik Sinner (1) vs. Carlos Alcaraz (2)
Set 1 2345
Jannik Sinner 6 7746362
Carlos Alcaraz 4 64677710
Date8 June 2025
TournamentFrench Open
LocationParis, France
Chair umpireEva Asderaki
Duration5 hours, 29 minutes

The 2025 French Open Men's Singles final was the championship tennis match of the men's singles tournament at the 2025 French Open. A significant part of the Alcaraz–Sinner rivalry, it pitted top-ranked Jannik Sinner against second-ranked and defending champion Carlos Alcaraz for the first time in a major final. After 5 hours and 29 minutes of play, Alcaraz defeated Sinner 4–6, 6–7(4–7), 6–4, 7–6(7–3), 7–6(10–2), in what was the longest French Open final in history and the second-longest major final, behind only the 2012 Australian Open men's singles final. It was the first time in French Open history that a match tiebreaker decided a singles final.

Alcaraz saved three championship points, the most in a men's major final in the Open Era, and overturned a two-set deficit to claim his fifth major. He became the third man in the Open Era to win a major after being championship points down, after Gastón Gaudio in the 2004 French Open final and Novak Djokovic in the 2019 Wimbledon final. Alcaraz's two-sets-to-love down comeback was the sixth time that such a comeback has occurred in a French Open final in the Open Era, after the finals in 1974, 1984, 1999, 2004, and 2021. The match also marked the first time that Alcaraz came back from two-sets-to-love down in his career.