Most Libéma Open Titles (Women)

Table: From 1996 onward, Most Libéma Open Titles (Women), WTA 250, ‘s-Hertogenbosch, Netherlands, Tennis, Ranked.

ACTIVEPLAYERTITLES
Justine Henin2
Tamarine Tanasugarn2
Coco Vandeweghe2
AEkaterina Alexandrova2
ARobin Montgomery1
AElise Mertens1
Anke Huber1
Ruxandra Dragomir1
Julie Halard-Decugis1
Kristina Brandi1
Martina Hingis1
Eleni Daniilidou1
Kim Clijsters1
Mary Pierce1
Klára Koukalová1
AMichaëlla Krajicek1
Anna Chakvetadze1
Roberta Vinci1
Nadia Petrova1
Simona Halep1
Camila Giorgi1
Anett Kontaveit1
AAleksandra Krunić1
AAlison Riske1
ALiudmila Samsonova1

2026 Finals Robin Montgomery won the women’s singles title after Barbora Krejčíková withdrew from the final due to illness. It was her first WTA Tour title. Ranked No. 484, Montgomery became the lowest-ranked woman to win a WTA Tour title on grass courts. 

Altitude ‘s-Hertogenbosch sits at approximately 7 meters (23 feet) above sea level in the southern Netherlands, making it essentially flat terrain. At this near-sea-level elevation, the ball travels at a completely neutral pace — conditions here are shaped entirely by the grass surface and weather, not geography.

Humidity June in ‘s-Hertogenbosch brings typical northern European summer weather, with average temperatures between 12°C and 21°C (54°F–70°F). Humidity is consistently high, often exceeding 75%, influenced by the region’s flat, low-lying geography and proximity to rivers. Frequent morning dew can make the grass courts slippery in early sessions, and afternoon showers are common — court officials must be prepared to halt play quickly to protect the surface.

Outdoor Tournament The Libéma Open has been held in ‘s-Hertogenbosch since 1990 for the ATP and since 1996 for the WTA, making it one of the few venues in the world to host both tours simultaneously in the same week. Played outdoors at the Autotron Rosmalen facility, it serves as one of the first major grass-court tune-ups before Wimbledon and carries a uniquely festive atmosphere with both men’s and women’s singles running in parallel.

Surface The grass courts at Rosmalen play fast and low, with the ball skidding through quickly after the bounce — a stark contrast to the heavy clay of the preceding weeks on tour. Serves become far more dominant, volleys are rewarded, and flat ball-strikers thrive. Players who rely on high topspin and clay-court grinding must adapt quickly, as the grass neutralizes their usual weapons and rewards aggressive, forward-moving tennis.