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Roland-Garros: planning around the Paris Grand Slam

Roland-Garros, one of tennis's four Grand Slam tournaments, is held in Paris in late spring, with the full calendar and ticketing published on its official site.

By Paris Sport Desk · Published 16 July 2026

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Roland-Garros: planning around the Paris Grand Slam
Photo: Arne Müseler / Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA 3.0 de)

Roland-Garros is one of the four Grand Slam tournaments in tennis and the only one played on clay, held each year at Stade Roland-Garros in the west of Paris. For fans planning a visit, the tournament's official site is the reliable place to confirm the calendar, sessions and ticketing for the coming edition. It is one of the highlights of the Paris sporting calendar and draws visitors from around the world.

The event runs across roughly two weeks in late spring, beginning with qualifying rounds and building through the main draw to the finals. The official schedule sets out the specific dates for qualifying, the start of the singles main draw and the finals weekend, so checking it is the best way to decide which days to attend rather than relying on memory from a previous year.

For anyone considering a visit, the choice of days depends on what you want to see. Early rounds spread play across many courts, which suits fans who like variety and want to see a lot of tennis in a day, while the later stages concentrate the biggest matches on the show courts. The official site publishes session details to help plan around that, and demand for the show courts is naturally higher.

The venue sits in the west of Paris and is straightforward to reach by public transport. Planning a match day is largely about confirming the date and session on the official site, deciding how to travel and leaving time for entry, since a Grand Slam draws large crowds each day and security checks take time. Arriving early tends to make the day less stressful.

None of the planning requires guessing at results or making claims about who will win. The useful information is the confirmed structure of the event and its dates, all of which the official site publishes, along with guidance on grounds access and what you can bring. Confirm the specifics there, pick the sessions that suit you and plan the day around the Paris venue and its clay-court setting.

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