Rome Open prices by round
| Round | 2027 dates | Starting from |
|---|---|---|
| Pre-qualifying | 27–30 April | €50 |
| Qualifying | 3–4 May | €60 |
| 1st round | 5–7 May | €65 |
| 2nd round | 7–9 May | €110 |
| 3rd round | 10–11 May | €100 |
| Quarterfinals | 11–13 May | €80 |
| Semifinals | 14 May | €410 |
| Women’s final | 15 May | €310 |
| Men’s final | 16 May | €700 |
Starting prices on the secondary market, per ticket. They move with demand and availability. 2027 dates are confirmed by the tournament; exact daily order of play follows closer to the event.
See current availability and pricingWhat a ticket gets you
Day Session and Evening Session tickets are for Campo Centrale, the main stadium at ATP Rome, where matches run from the earliest rounds through both finals. A Grounds ticket doesn’t include a seat on Campo Centrale, but it covers everything else on site: the Grand Stand Arena, the Pietrangeli Stadium, and the outer courts, with several matches running at once. It’s the lowest-priced way to spend a full day at the tournament.
What affects the price
Four things move the price of a ticket: the round (finals cost far more than early rounds), the ticket type (Campo Centrale sessions cost more than Grounds access), the session (evening sessions often carry a premium once the draw narrows), and timing (booking early usually means more choice, not necessarily a lower price).
Is the Rome Masters worth attending?
For clay-court tennis at this level, the Internazionali is one of the more affordable majors outside the four Grand Slams. You get top players preparing for Roland Garros, a historic venue at the Foro Italico, and a Grounds ticket that’s genuinely cheap for a full day of tennis in Rome.
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