A total of 35 different women won WTA singles titles in 2024, ranging from triumphs at WTA 250 events to three different champions at Grand Slam events.
However, only 11 women were able to win multiple titles across the season; we take a look at all of them here.
=7) Katie Boulter – Two titles
One of the most improved players of the last 18 months, British No 1 Boulter captured her second and third WTA career titles across 2024.
The Brit won the biggest title of her career at the WTA 500 event in San Diego in February, before successfully defending her title on home soil at the Nottingham Open.
=7) Daria Kasatkina – Two titles
The WTA 500 Queen of the WTA, Kasatkina was a consistent force on tour across the season and was rewarded with two titles.
The Russian triumphed in Eastbourne and Ningbo to bring her career haul up to eight titles, while she was also a runner-up in Adelaide, Dubai, Charleston, and Seoul.
=7) Jessica Pegula – Two titles
2024 was a difficult season for Pegula but she still managed to reach the US Open and ultimately win two WTA titles.
The world No 7 triumphed at the Berlin Open in June before successfully defending her Canadian Open crown, also reaching finals in Cincinnati and New York.
=7) Danielle Collins – Two titles
One of the stories of the year was Collins’ spring surge during what was initially her retirement season, with the American winning two big titles on home soil.
The Floridian triumphed in her home state at the Miami Open and won again in Charleston the following week, alongside reaching a further final in Strasbourg.
=7) Jelena Ostapenko – Two titles
A solid season for former French Open winner Ostapenko saw the Latvian finish the year inside the top 15, and win two titles early in the year.
Ostapenko triumphed at the Adelaide Open in the opening weeks of the season, before also prevailing in Linz just a few weeks later.
=4) Elena Rybakina – Three titles
Rybakina’s season certainly had its struggles, but three titles at WTA 500 level for the Kazakh mean there is still plenty for her to be proud of as she reflects on 2024.
The Kazakh was the champion in Brisbane, Abu Dhabi, and Stuttgart, while also finishing as the runner-up at WTA 1000 events in Miami and Doha.
=4) Zheng Qinwen – Three titles
A huge breakout star of 2024, Chinese ace Qinwen soared to the top five of the WTA Rankings in a year that saw her win three WTA titles.
Qinwen made history as she stormed to Olympic gold in Paris, but was also a champion in Palermo and Tokyo – as well as reaching the Australian Open and Wuhan finals.
=4) Coco Gauff – Three titles
In a solid year for the world No 3, Gauff reached three WTA singles finals – and won all three of them.
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The American triumphed at the Auckland Open at the start of the season, before a late surge towards the end of the year saw her triumph in Beijing and at the WTA Finals.
=2) Diana Shnaider – Four titles
One of the surprise packages of 2024, only one woman can claim to have won more singles titles than Shnaider this season.
The rising star won her first WTA title in Hua Hin back in February, before claiming her second title on the grass of Bad Homburg in the summer.
Shnaider then followed that up with a third triumph of the year in Budapest, before ending her season with a fourth career title in Homburg.
=2) Aryna Sabalenka – Four titles
Sabalenka’s rise to year-end world No 1 was powered by winning four WTA Tour titles in 2024 – the most she has ever won in an individual season.
The Belarusian began the year by successfully defending her Australian Open title and later in the season she captured her third Grand Slam title at the US Open in September.
Adding to her two major victories were further WTA 1000 triumphs in Cincinnati and Wuhan, while she was also a beaten finalist in Madrid and Rome this season.
1) Iga Swiatek – Five titles
Swiatek may have been usurped by Sabalenka as the world No 1, though her five WTA Tour titles keep her ahead of her chief rival in these standings.
The Pole began the year with two WTA 1000 titles on hard courts, successfully defending her Doha crown before sealing the second Indian Wells title of her career.
That was followed by a dominant clay season which saw Swiatek triumph in Madrid, Rome, and then at Roland Garros.