Jordan Thompson: The highest combined ATP world ranking

Thanks to his continued success in both singles and doubles, Jordan Thompson owns by far the best combined ranking of any ATP player currently on tour.


Thursday 03 April 2025
Matt Trollope
Melbourne, VIC, Australia
January 13: Jordan Thompson (AUS) during Round 1 on Margaret Court Arena at the Australian Open at Melbourne Park on Monday, January 13, 2025. Photo by TENNIS AUSTRALIA/ JOSH CHADWICK

When he arrived at Indian Wells, Jordan Thompson was the only man in the world to own a top-50 ATP ranking in both singles and doubles.

He's now one of just two, after Sebastian Korda joined him inside the world's doubles top 50 thanks to their run to the final in the Californian desert.

Still, Thompson maintains the highest combined ATP ranking of anyone in the world - the number generated by adding a player's singles and doubles rankings together.

With his singles ranking of world No.35 added to his No.5 doubles ranking, Thompson's combined ranking is 40, by far the best of any player competing on the ATP Tour today.

PlayerSingles rankDoubles rankCombined rank
Jordan Thompson35540
Sebastian Korda254671
Tomas Machac217596
Alexander Zverev298100
Alex Michelsen3480114
Ben Shelton14124138
Zhizhen Zhang5388141
Max Purcell13212144
Nuno Borges43101144
Alejandro Tabilo32118150

In an era where the singles and doubles competitions are increasingly divergent, Thompson flourishes in both arenas and has been ranked even higher in the two disciplines.

The 2024 US Open doubles champion and 2024 Wimbledon finalist peaked at world No.3 in doubles last November and hit a high of world No.26 in singles that same month, not long after reaching his first ATP Masters quarterfinal in Paris.

Last year in New York he reached the fourth round in singles during the same fortnight he won the doubles title.

At Australian Open 2025 he was seeded for the first time in a Grand Slam singles draw, helping the host nation break a 25-year drought with three men seeded.

In a demonstration of his enduring fitness at the age of 30, Thompson last year posted a singles win-loss record of 35-24 plus 48-13 in doubles - a total of 120 matches.

He continues to compete in both disciplines this season, reaching the singles quarterfinals at the Brisbane International and the third round of the Miami Masters while building a 7-3 record in doubles with quarterfinals in Miami and Houston following his Indian Wells final.

In this week's ATP rankings, Thompson is one of just seven players - ahead of Korda, Tomas Machac, Alexander Zverev, Alex Michelsen, Zhang Zhizhen and Mackenzie McDonald - inside the top 100 of both singles and doubles.

Thompson and Korda remain the only players to simultaneously hold top-50 singles and doubles rankings.