The Brasil Open was a men's tennis tournament also known as the ATP Brasil Open. It was held annually in São Paulo, Brazil from 2001 until 2019 and was the successor event to the earlier Brazilian International Championships (1932–1969). 
It was part of the ATP Tour 250 series, and was one of the main events in the Brazilian tennis calendar alongside ATP Tour 500 Rio Open. Since 2004, it was a part of the South American clay court circuit but was held on hard courts prior to 2004. Nicolás Almagro and Pablo Cuevas hold the record for most singles titles with three each, while in doubles the record is held by Bruno Soares with three consecutive titles from 2011 to 2013. On 15 October 2019, tournament organisers announced that the tournament was being scrapped in favour of a return to the Chile Open.[1] 
  Past finals
 Singles
    | Location  |  Year  |  Champions  |  Runners-up  |  Score  | 
  | Costa do Sauípe  |  2001 |    Jan Vacek |    Fernando Meligeni |  2–6, 7–6(7–2), 6–3  | 
  | 2002 |    Gustavo Kuerten |    Guillermo Coria |  6–7(4–7), 7–5, 7–6(7–2)  | 
  | 2003 |    Sjeng Schalken |    Rainer Schüttler |  6–2, 6–4  | 
  | 2004 |    Gustavo Kuerten (2) |    Agustín Calleri |  3–6, 6–2, 6–3  | 
  | 2005 |    Rafael Nadal |    Alberto Martín |  6–0, 6–7(2–7), 6–1  | 
  | 2006 |    Nicolás Massú |    Alberto Martín |  6–3, 6–4  | 
  | 2007 |    Guillermo Cañas |    Juan Carlos Ferrero |  7–6(7–4), 6–2  | 
  | 2008 |    Nicolás Almagro |    Carlos Moyá |  7–6(7–4), 3–6, 7–5  | 
  | 2009 |    Tommy Robredo |    Thomaz Bellucci |  6–3, 3–6, 6–4  | 
  | 2010 |    Juan Carlos Ferrero |    Łukasz Kubot |  6–1, 6–0  | 
  | 2011 |    Nicolás Almagro (2) |    Alexandr Dolgopolov |  6–3, 7–6(7–3)  | 
  | São Paulo  |  2012 |    Nicolás Almagro (3) |    Filippo Volandri |  6–3, 4–6, 6–4  | 
  | 2013 |    Rafael Nadal (2) |    David Nalbandian |  6–2, 6–3  | 
  | 2014 |    Federico Delbonis |    Paolo Lorenzi |  4–6, 6–3, 6–4  | 
  | 2015 |    Pablo Cuevas |    Luca Vanni |  6–4, 3–6, 7–6(7–4)  | 
  | 2016 |    Pablo Cuevas (2) |    Pablo Carreño Busta |  7–6(7–4), 6–3  | 
  | 2017 |    Pablo Cuevas (3) |    Albert Ramos Viñolas |  6–7(3–7), 6–4, 6–4  | 
  | 2018 |    Fabio Fognini |    Nicolás Jarry |  1–6, 6–1, 6–4  | 
  | 2019 |    Guido Pella |    Cristian Garín |  7–5, 6–3  | 
  | 2020 |  replaced by  Chile Open  | 
 Doubles
    | Location  |  Year  |  Champions  |  Runners-up  |  Score  | 
  | Costa do Sauípe  |  2001 |    Enzo Artoni    Daniel Melo |    Gastón Etlis     Brent Haygarth |  6–3, 1–6, 7–6(7–5)  | 
  | 2002 |    Scott Humphries    Mark Merklein |    Gustavo Kuerten     André Sá |  6–3, 7–6(7–1)  | 
  | 2003 |    Todd Perry    Thomas Shimada |    Scott Humphries     Mark Merklein |  6–2, 6–4  | 
  | 2004 |    Mariusz Fyrstenberg
   Marcin Matkowski |    Tomas Behrend
   Leoš Friedl |  6–2, 6–2  | 
  | 2005 |    František Čermák
   Leoš Friedl |    José Acasuso
   Ignacio González King |  6–4, 6–4  | 
  | 2006 |    Lukáš Dlouhý
   Pavel Vízner |    Mariusz Fyrstenberg
   Marcin Matkowski |  6–1, 4–6, [10–3]  | 
  | 2007 |    Lukáš Dlouhý (2)
   Pavel Vízner (2) |    Rubén Ramírez Hidalgo    Albert Montañés |  6–2, 7–6(7–4)  | 
  | 2008 |    Marcelo Melo
   André Sá |    Albert Montañés    Santiago Ventura |  4–6, 6–2, [10–7]  | 
  | 2009 |    Marcel Granollers
   Tommy Robredo |    Lucas Arnold Ker    Juan Mónaco |  6–4, 7–5  | 
  | 2010 |    Pablo Cuevas 
   Marcel Granollers (2) |    Łukasz Kubot 
   Oliver Marach |  7–5, 6–4  | 
  | 2011 |    Marcelo Melo (2) 
   Bruno Soares |    Pablo Andújar 
   Daniel Gimeno-Traver |  7–6(7–4), 6–3  | 
  | São Paulo  |  2012 |    Eric Butorac     Bruno Soares (2) |    Michal Mertiňák     André Sá |  3–6, 6–4, [10–8]  | 
  | 2013 |    Alexander Peya     Bruno Soares (3) |    František Čermák     Michal Mertiňák |  6–7(5–7), 6–2, [10–7]  | 
  | 2014 |    Guillermo García-López     Philipp Oswald |    Juan Sebastián Cabal     Robert Farah |  5–7, 6–4, [15–13]  | 
  | 2015 |    Juan Sebastián Cabal     Robert Farah |    Paolo Lorenzi     Diego Schwartzman |  6–4, 6–2  | 
  | 2016 |    Julio Peralta     Horacio Zeballos |    Pablo Carreño Busta     David Marrero |  4–6, 6–1, [10–5]  | 
  | 2017 |    Rogério Dutra Silva     André Sá |    Marcus Daniell     Marcelo Demoliner |  7–6(7–5), 5–7, [10–7]  | 
  | 2018 |    Federico Delbonis
   Máximo González |    Wesley Koolhof
   Artem Sitak |  6–4, 6–2  | 
  | 2019 |    Federico Delbonis (2)
   Máximo González (2) |    Luke Bambridge
   Jonny O'Mara |  6–4, 6–3  | 
 See also
  References
  External links
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| Present |  - Buenos Aires
  - Marseille
  - Delray Beach
  - New Haven / Winston-Salem
  - 2009, 2011–present: Kitzbühel
  - 2009–2010, 2012–present: Lyon / Montpellier
  - 2009–2014, 2017–2019, 2021–present: Eastbourne
  - 2009–2014, 2020–present: Viña del Mar / Santiago
  - 2009–2019, 2024–present: Brisbane
  - 2009–2016, 2024–present: Bucharest
  - Stuttgart
  - Båstad
  - Gstaad
  - Umag
  - Stockholm
  - Metz
  - 2009–2019, 2022–present: Houston
  - Casablanca / Marrakech
  - 's-Hertogenbosch
  - 2009–2020, 2023–present: Auckland
  - 2015–2019, 2021–present: Geneva
  - 2015–2019, 2023–present: Chengdu
  - 2016–present: Antwerp
  - 2016–2019, 2021–present: Los Cabos
  - 2020, 2022–present: Adelaide
  - 2020–2021, 2023–present: Astana/Almaty
  - 2021–present: Mallorca
  - 2024–present: Hong Kong
  - Hangzhou
  - 2025–present: Athens
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