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Who are all the champions from AO 2025?

  • ausopen.com

The last ball has been struck, the courts are once again quiet, and the crowds have departed. The Australian Open is over for another year.

With the addition of the boys' and girls' wheelchair singles and doubles events at AO 2025, an impressive 19 trophies have been awarded.  

Here's a list of all the trophy winners, whose names will be added to the Australian Open Honour Roll

Men's singles

No.1 seed Jannik Sinner secured a second successive Australian Open title with a 6-3 7-6(4) 6-3 win over No.2 seed German Alexander Zverev

READ MORE: Jannik's back - Sinner successfully defends AO title

Women's singles

In her 11th appearance at the Australian Open, American No.19 seed Madison Keys beat defending champion Aryna Sabalenka 6-3 2-6 7-5 to take her first Grand Slam title. 

READ MORE: Keys plays all the right notes for maiden major at AO 2025

Men's doubles

Finland's Harri Heliovaara and partner Henry Patten of Great Britain combined as No.6 seeds to take the men's doubles title with a thrilling 6-7(16) 7-6(5) 6-3 win over No.3 seeds Italians Simone Bolelli and Andrea Vavassori. 

READ MORE: Heliovaara/Patten win dramatic decider

Women's doubles

Katerina Siniakova and Taylor Townsend added the Australian Open women’s doubles title to the one they won together at Wimbledon last year with a 6-2 6-7(4) 6-3 victory over Hsieh Su-Wei and Jelena Ostapenko.

READ MORE: Townsend returns to Rod Laver to take doubles title with Siniakova

Mixed doubles

In the first all-Australian mixed doubles final in the Open era history of the event, Olivia Gadecki and John Peers beat Kimberly Birrell and John-Patrick Smith 3-6 6-4 [10-6].

READ MORE: Gadecki and Peers take mixed doubles title in all-Aussie final

Boys' singles

Two 17-year-olds battled it out for the title, with Switzerland's No.8 seed Henry Bernet getting the better of American Benjamin Willwerth 6-3 6-4.

READ MORE: Bernet taking Federer comparisons in his stride

Girls' singles

Seventeen-year-old Wakana Sonobe became the first Japanese player to win the Australian Open girls' singles title with a 6-0 6-1 victory over American Kristina Penickova

READ MORE: 'I fight hard and I pray hard': Sonobe claims junior girls' title

Boys' doubles

No.2 seeds 17-year-old American Maxwell Exsted and 18-year-old Czech Jan Kumstat beat the pairing of Ognjen Milic and Egor Pleshivtsev 7-6(6) 6-3 in a tight final.

Girls' doubles

Kristina Penickova and her twin sister Annika combined to lift the girls' doubles title with a 6-4 6-2 win over Australia's Emerson Jones and Hannah Klugman of Great Britain.

READ MORE: Juniors wrap - Doubles joy for Penickova twins 

Men's wheelchair singles

Great Britain's Alfie Hewett secured a second AO title and 10th Grand Slam trophy overall with a 6-4 6-3 victory over Japanese rival Tokito Oda.

READ MORE: Hewett takes second AO title

Women's wheelchair singles

No.1 seed Yui Kamiji from Japan secured her ninth Grand Slam singles title with a 6-2 6-2 victory over Dutch rival Aniek Van Koot

READ MORE: Kamiji secures ninth Grand Slam singles victory

Quad wheelchair singles

In an all-Dutch final, No.1 seed Sam Schroder, fresh from victory in the quad wheelchair doubles, lifted the singles trophy for the fourth year in succession with a win over No.2 seed Niels Vink 7-6(7) 7-5.

READ MORE: Schroder joins esteemed quartet with title

Men's wheelchair doubles

No.1 seeds Brits Alfie Hewett and Gordon Reid clinched their sixth successive AO men's wheelchair doubles title, and 22nd Grand Slam trophy together, following a 6-2 6-4 victory over the Spanish-French pairing of Daniel Caverzaschi and Stephane Houdet

READ MORE: Hewett, Reid among familiar faces headlining AO champions

Women's wheelchair doubles

In an exciting final China's Wang Ziying and Li Xiaohui beat Manami Tanaka of Japan and China's Zhu Zhenzhen 6-2 6-3.

READ MORE: Hewett, Reid among familiar faces headlining AO champions

Quad wheelchair doubles

Great Britain's Andy Lapthorne picked up his eighth quad wheelchair doubles trophy, this time alongside Dutchman Sam Schroder. The No.2 seeds delivered a decisive 6-1 6-4 victory over Schroder's compatriot Niels Vink and Israel's Guy Sasson - the No.1 seeds. 

READ MORE: Hewett, Reid among familiar faces headlining AO champions

Boys' wheelchair singles

In the first edition of junior wheelchair events at Australian Open, the USA's Charlie Cooper took the first title in boys' singles with victory over Belgium's Alexander Lantermann 6-2 6-2.

READ MORE: Cooper hails 'inspiration' of new AO junior wheelchair events

Girls' wheelchair singles

Having already met over the net in the girls' wheelchair doubles final, Brazil's Vitoria Miranda came from a set down to beat American Sabina Czauz 0-6 6-3 7-6(4).

READ MORE: Cooper hails 'inspiration' of new AO junior wheelchair events

Boys' wheelchair doubles

The Brazil-USA pairing of Luiz Calixto and Charlie Cooper beat Belgium's Alexander Lantermann and Aussie Benjamin Wenzel 6-3 6-0 to lift the inaugural AO boys' wheelchair doubles trophy.

READ MORE: Cooper hails 'inspiration' of new AO junior wheelchair events

Girls' wheelchair doubles

Belgium's Luna Gryp and Vitoria Miranda of Brazil took the first AO girls' wheelchair doubles title with a 6-1 6-1 victory over American Sabina Czauz and partner Ailina Mosko of Latvia.

READ MORE: Cooper hails 'inspiration' of new AO junior wheelchair events