Iga Swiatek’s Grand Slam count in 2026: what is confirmed on May 27, 2026
As of May 27, 2026, the current 2026 coverage confirms that Iga Swiatek has won Roland Garros three times. That is a verified French Open count only, and it does not establish her full career Grand Slam total from these materials alone.
| Tournament | Category | Surface | Confirmed titles in corpus | Source |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Roland Garros | Grand Slam | Clay | 3 | WTA Madrid entry list |
| Rome | WTA 1000 | Clay | 2 | WTA Madrid entry list |
| Stuttgart | WTA 500 | Clay | 2 | WTA Madrid entry list |
| Madrid | WTA 1000 | Clay | — | WTA Madrid entry list: “biggest clay-court title missing from her trophy cabinet.” |
What the Madrid entry list confirms
The WTA Madrid entry list is the named item that confirms the three Roland Garros titles. It also sets the broader clay context around Swiatek’s record by saying Madrid is the biggest clay-court title missing from her trophy cabinet.
That same WTA listing places her clay haul at Stuttgart twice, Rome twice and Roland Garros three times. So the number in the headline is not a full career major total; it is the French Open figure that the current 2026 coverage explicitly verifies.
What this count does — and does not — confirm
The current 2026 reporting clearly confirms one thing: Swiatek has three Roland Garros titles. That is the answer to the title-count question in the current coverage.
What it does not do is give a complete career Grand Slam total. From these materials, the safe statement is limited to her French Open count, not a full all-majors tally.
Rome form and why it matters on May 27, 2026
Earlier this month in Rome, the WTA reported that Swiatek beat Coco Gauff to reach a second consecutive WTA 1000 final. The same match report says she has won 11 consecutive matches and that she has played Gauff 11 times, leading the rivalry 10-1.
Tennis365 also reported that Swiatek beat Jessica Pegula to reach the 2026 Italian Open semi-finals. Taken together, those results show her clay form as of May 27, 2026.
They do not change the Grand Slam count confirmed above. They simply explain why the current 2026 conversation around Swiatek is being driven by Rome results and not by any updated major-title total.