Indian Wells 2026: What To Know About The BNP Paribas Open And Laykold's Centenary
Indian Wells returns with a star-studded field and a century-old court underfoot.
The 2026 BNP Paribas Open runs from March 4 to 15 at the Indian Wells Tennis Garden, opening the Masters 1000 portion of the season with Tommy Haas as tournament director and a stacked draw that will test every surface-adjustment trick players can bring.
Tournament Overview
This marks the 50th tour-level edition of Indian Wells, an event first established in 1976 that has grown into a near-Grand Slam stop on the calendar and traditionally attracts the tour’s biggest names, an army of coaches, and plenty of late-winter desert sun for the players to handle.
Qualifying kicks off on Monday, March 2 with main draw action beginning Wednesday, March 4, and match sessions scheduled at 11 a.m. and again at 6 p.m., while doubles and singles finals are slated for March 14 and Sunday March 15 respectively, each with fixed not-before times.
The tournament purse is substantial and meaningful in the race for early-season momentum; Indian Wells pays out serious money and points that can reshape rankings for players who make deep runs at this pivotal hard-court event.
The total prize money is $9,415,725, a haul that underlines the event’s stature, and the payouts are paired with the big Masters 1000 points that attract top names looking to lock down seeding and ranking positions ahead of the bigger slams.
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Laykold is the world’s oldest tennis court surface manufacturer and a global leader in hard court technology.
Laykold
Field And Storylines
The draw reads like a who’s who of contemporary tennis with Carlos Alcaraz, Jannik Sinner, Novak Djokovic and Alexander Zverev headlining, and a supporting cast that includes Alex de Minaur, Lorenzo Musetti and Felix Auger-Aliassime ready to make the week unpredictable.
American interest is high with Ben Shelton, Taylor Fritz, Learner Tien and Tommy Paul leading the home charge, and the tournament notes highlight Taylor Fritz as the last home champion in 2022, adding domestic storylines to the international rivalries.
Defending champion Jack Draper will draw attention after his 2025 breakthrough when he won the Indian Wells singles title 6-2, 6-2 against Holger Rune, while doubles fans will remember Marcelo Arevalo and Mate Pavic defeating Sebastian Korda and Jordan Thompson 6-3, 6-4 in last year’s final.
Watching options include streaming on TennisTV and the ATP’s TV schedule for regional broadcasts, and the tournament maintains an active footprint across YouTube, Facebook, X and Instagram for highlights, interviews and behind-the-scenes coverage throughout the fortnight.
Laykold Centenary And Court Impact
Laykold celebrates 100 years in 2026 and is the official surface at Indian Wells, Miami and the US Open, a continuity that helps define the Sunshine Swing and gives players a consistent hard-court reference point across some of the year’s biggest non-Grand Slam events.
The company highlights its pace precision and says it worked with tournament organisers to optimise court pace ratings for desert conditions, taking into account atmospheric dust and the faster ball speeds caused by thinner air that are typical at Indian Wells.
Laykold’s century of innovation is tied to the sport’s expansion, with historical touchpoints from Don Budge and Bobby Riggs in 1935 through Martina Navratilova and Chris Evert and right up to recent champions such as Mirra Andreeva and Jack Draper who have played on the surface.
On-court, that means players must adjust their footwork, string choices and tempo control to match a surface tuned for pace precision and UV stability, which could tilt close matches toward those who read conditions and adapt quickest.
In short, expect a week of fast, technically demanding tennis where the interplay between elite serve power, movement, and surface setup will determine who walks away with the big checks and the valuable Masters 1000 points.
Singles prize breakdown highlights include the winner earning $1,151,380 and 1000 points, the finalist taking $612,340 and 650 points, and the semi-finalist slot worth $340,190 and 400 points, with additional round payouts detailed in the official release.
Further singles round payouts include Round of 16 at $105,720 for 100 points, Round of 32 at $61,865 for 50 points, Second Round at $36,110 for 30 points and First Round at $24,335 for 10 points, underscoring the deep financial and ranking rewards available even beyond the late rounds.
Laykold’s presence and the star-studded field guarantee storylines across singles and doubles, and Indian Wells remains the early-season measuring stick for players trying to stake their claim before the tour heads into the spring hard-court swing and the clay season that follows.
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