French Open Tennis Tickets
French Open tickets are some of the most highly prized tennis tickets on the market. French Open tickets have given tennis fans the chance to see such greats as Bjorn Borg, Pete Sampras, Martina Navratilova, and Stefi Graf. Let GOtickets find you your French Open tickets today!
Available Tickets
Travel Packages for French Open
Need more than just French Open tickets? GoTickets also offers travel packages that can include options like hotel stays and transportation to make your French Open experience hassle free. Check out our French Open travel packages today!
What Kind of Tickets are Available?
Center Court Tickets Philippe Chatrier
These Tickets give you access to Center Court and the outside courts EXCEPT for Suzanne Lenglen (Court #1). Suzanne Lenglen tickets are ticketed seperately.
Center Court tickets have 2 different sections.
Lower Level seating starts 2-10 rows off the court above the Corporate seats. Lower Level ticketing consists in sections AB,BB,CB & DB.
Upper Level seating is above the Lower Level seating Upper Level ticketing consists of sections A,B & D
Grounds Passes/Annexe Tickets
These tickets give you access to all side courts. You DO NOT HAVE ACCESS to courts Phillippe Chatrier/Center Court or Suzanne Lenglen/Court 1.
About The French Open
The allure of the romantic French venue brings added luster to a French Open ticket, as tennis fans converge from all over the world for French Open action
The history of the French Open, known more properly as the Tournoi de Roland-Garros begins in 1891 as a tournament to decide the French National Championship. It was opened to international competition in 1925, and in 1928 a new stadium was built at Porte d’ Auteuil. The stadium was named Stade Roland Garros after a French tennis player and war hero, and this is where the tournament is still held today. The French Open was also the first tennis Grand Slam event to allow both professional and amateurs to compete, and is the second leg of the tennis world’s Grand Slam.
French Open tickets are a ticket to the only Grand Slam event played on clay. This adds to the excitement of the event, throwing an air of uncertainty into the tournament, as many of the world’s top tennis players, such as Pete Sampras, have had difficulty adjusting to the surface. Although Sampras won every other Grand Slam tournament, he never took home a win from the French Open.
The 2008 French Open tickets gave tennis fans the chance to see the emergence of Spaniard Rafael Nadal, who got his first French Open victory with a win over the unseeded Mariano Puerta, recovering from a first set loss to hoist the trophy. In the women’s championship, Henin-Hardenne defeated Mary Pierce, 6-1, 6-1, her second Roland Garros title in three years.
2010 French Open tickets will see an even heavier demand than usual. Organizers of the French Open are planning to move the opening day of the tournament to Sunday, rather than the traditional Monday, a move that will make tickets to the 2010 French Open one of the most sought after in years. With the change in opening day, the tournament will span three weekends, increasing the popularity and visibility of the French Open, and making a weekend trip to Stade Roland Garros, available to more holders of 2010 French Open tickets.
Disclaimer
We do not sell French Open tickets for face value. We are not associated with Roland Garros Stadium or the French Open. The tickets we sell are based on supply and demand and ARE NOT SOLD AT FACE VALUE


