Filipina tennis star Alex Eala has earned a spot in Forbes’ “30 Under 30 Asia” Class of 2026, adding another international recognition to a breakthrough run that has made her the face of Philippine tennis on the global stage.
The Filiprima, as Eala is fondly called, was named under the Entertainment and Sports category of the annual list, which honors young entrepreneurs, athletes, artists, innovators, and leaders across the Asia-Pacific region. Forbes said this year’s honorees were chosen from nearly 4,000 candidates and evaluated based on factors such as impact, inventiveness, funding and revenue, product-market fit, and potential.
Forbes cited Eala’s historic rise in women’s tennis, noting how she stirred wider Filipino interest in the sport after breaking into the Women’s Tennis Association Top 50. The WTA lists Eala’s career-high singles ranking at No. 29, making her the highest-ranked Filipino player in modern tennis history.

The recognition follows a series of milestones for the 21-year-old Quezon City-born athlete, who has steadily built her professional career after becoming the first Filipino to win a junior Grand Slam singles title at the 2022 US Open.
Her breakthrough on the professional tour accelerated after major wins against elite opponents, including a landmark victory over Iga Świątek at the Miami Open in 2025. Reuters reported that the win sent Eala to her first WTA semifinal and made her the first Filipina to enter the Top 100 rankings.
Eala’s steady climb has turned her into a symbol of possibility for Philippine tennis, a sport that has long struggled for mainstream visibility in a country dominated by basketball, boxing, and volleyball.
She was joined on the Forbes Asia list by eight other Philippine entries from different fields, reflecting a broader wave of young Filipino talent in technology, entertainment, health, social impact, and innovation.
Also recognized were singer-songwriter Zack Tabudlo; BayaniChain Tech cofounders Raphael Sevilla and Brandon Angelo Wong; Amico Innovations cofounder Kharl Christian Yeung; Fan Connection SEA cofounders Pauline Dizon and Adrian Jumangit; GoRocky cofounders Kiyanusch Braun and Martin Joaquin Palaña; ASEAN Youth Advocates Network founder Emmanuel Mirus Ponon; Empath founder Steph Naval; and Siklab founder Saje Miguel Molato.
For Eala, however, the Forbes recognition carries particular weight because of what her rise represents in Philippine sports: a Filipino athlete breaking into the elite ranks of a global individual sport and drawing a new generation of fans toward tennis.
At just 21, Eala has already moved from junior Grand Slam champion to WTA Top 30 player and now Forbes-recognized Asian trailblazer, further cementing her place as one of the country’s most important young sports figures.
