WTAK. Muchova vs N. Osaka · 11:00 · Bad HomburgWTAT. Maria vs M. Keys · 13:00 · EastbourneATPE. Quinn vs A. Davidovich Fokina · 15:00 · MallorcaATPZ. Bergs vs U. Humbert · 15:30 · EastbourneCHF. Balshaw vs S. Nagal · 15:00 · Targu MuresCHM. Pucinelli de Almeida vs G. Villanueva · 15:30 · PiracicabaCHI. Montes-De La Torre vs S. Kopp · 16:00 · Plovdiv (Bulgaria) - QualificationCHT. Seyboth Wild vs J. M. La Serna · 17:00 · PiracicabaITF WJ. Wang vs M. Guo · 04:00 · W15 Maanshan 3ITF WM. Kuramochi vs A. Miyamoto · 04:00 · W15 Sapporo 2ITF WS. Hosogi vs P. M. Nugroho · 04:00 · W35 Taipei 2ITF MM. Dellavedova vs K. Lee · 05:00 · M15 Wuning 3ITF MM. Purcell vs X. Han · 05:00 · M15 Wuning 3ITF WE. Laskevich vs E. M. Desvignes · 05:30 · W15 Maanshan 3WTAK. Muchova vs N. Osaka · 11:00 · Bad HomburgWTAT. Maria vs M. Keys · 13:00 · EastbourneATPE. Quinn vs A. Davidovich Fokina · 15:00 · MallorcaATPZ. Bergs vs U. Humbert · 15:30 · EastbourneCHF. Balshaw vs S. Nagal · 15:00 · Targu MuresCHM. Pucinelli de Almeida vs G. Villanueva · 15:30 · PiracicabaCHI. Montes-De La Torre vs S. Kopp · 16:00 · Plovdiv (Bulgaria) - QualificationCHT. Seyboth Wild vs J. M. La Serna · 17:00 · PiracicabaITF WJ. Wang vs M. Guo · 04:00 · W15 Maanshan 3ITF WM. Kuramochi vs A. Miyamoto · 04:00 · W15 Sapporo 2ITF WS. Hosogi vs P. M. Nugroho · 04:00 · W35 Taipei 2ITF MM. Dellavedova vs K. Lee · 05:00 · M15 Wuning 3ITF MM. Purcell vs X. Han · 05:00 · M15 Wuning 3ITF WE. Laskevich vs E. M. Desvignes · 05:30 · W15 Maanshan 3
Home/Tournaments/Wimbledon
A Wimbledon outside court at dusk, perfectly striped green grass with crisp white lines, dark green stadium walls and royal-purple-and-green livery in shadow under a deep navy English summer sky
Wimbledon 2026 logo
Grand Slam · 29 Jun – 12 Jul · Upcoming

Wimbledon 2026, where to watch and live stream

The Wimbledon starts in 2 days. Here's the preview, the draw when it lands, and how to stream it.

UpcomingGrand SlamGrassATP & WTA
Surface
Grass
Category
Grand Slam
Dates
29 Jun – 12 Jul
Location
GB London
Prize money
GBP 53M
Where to watch

How to watch Wimbledon 2026

Watch Wimbledon live in your country. The broadcaster panel below shows the rightsholder for your market. Switch markets with the country picker in the header.

The story of Wimbledon

Why Wimbledon matters in 2026

Wimbledon runs in London, Great Britain from 29 Jun – 12 Jul, played on fast natural grass. Bounce sits lower than on any other tour surface and points run shorter, which puts a premium on the serve and the forecourt. It is a Grand Slam, one of the four biggest events on the tennis calendar. The singles champion takes 2,000 ranking points, plus the largest prize pool of any event on tour.

First held in 1877, played at All England Club, London. Play starts in 2 days, on Monday 29 June, with the main draw running through to Sunday 12 July.

Jannik Sinner defends the men's title · Iga Świątek defends the women's title.

Read the full Wimbledon preview

Key dates

Wimbledon 2026 schedule and key sessions

The shape of the week, day by day. Start times for individual matches are published the night before each session in the order of play and convert to your local timezone on the daily schedule.

Mon 22 Jun to Sun 12 Jul
Qualifying. Final qualifying rounds run 22 Jun to 28 Jun, with the last 16 spots in the main draw on the line.
Mon 29 Jun
Main draw begins. First round of the 128-player singles draws across both tours. Best-of-five for the men, best-of-three for the women, with seeds 1 to 32 protected from each other in the first two rounds.
Thu 2 Jul
Round of 64. Second round. By close of play the 64 winners are in, and most of the top eight seeds will have come through their opener.
Sat 4 Jul
Round of 32. Third round. The seeds start meeting each other from this point, and the first weekend can already thin the draw of half the seeded names.
Mon 6 Jul
Round of 16. Fourth round, played across the middle weekend. The bracket narrows to eight in each draw, and the survivors get a day off before the quarter-finals.
Wed 8 Jul
Quarter-finals. Eight players in each draw fight for a semi-final spot. Best-of-five for the men, best-of-three for the women. Both halves are typically split across the day.
Thu 9 Jul
Women's semi-finals. The four women remaining play for a place in the final. Both matches usually share the main show court the same afternoon.
Fri 10 Jul
Men's semi-finals. The four men remaining play for a place in the final. Best-of-five, both matches on the main show court.
Sat 11 Jul
Women's final. The champion is crowned in London. Best-of-three on the main show court, with the trophy ceremony on court straight after match point.
Sun 12 Jul
Men's final. The champion is crowned in London. Best-of-five on the main show court, with the trophy ceremony on court straight after match point.
Surface and conditions

How grass plays at the Wimbledon

Centre Court is rolled, watered and re-cut between sessions, so the surface plays slightly differently in the first week than in the second. The freshly grown ryegrass is sturdy through the opening rounds, the bounce sits low, and a body-line first serve at 195 km/h is more or less a free point on demand. By the quarter-finals the baselines have been worn into bare dirt patches that produce irregular bounces, and players who time their footwork off the ball-toss start picking up surprises on returns they would have eaten earlier in the fortnight. The second-week roof, closed for evening matches and rain, slows the surface a touch and adds a bit of humidity, which is why Centre Court at 9pm is a different proposition from Centre Court at 2pm.

Strategically grass favours the player who can hit a heavy slice on the backhand and then move forward behind it. One-handed backhands and the chip-and-charge return, both regarded as anachronisms elsewhere on tour, remain perfectly viable here. The honour roll under the new generation has turned: Carlos Alcaraz and Jannik Sinner have shared the last four men’s titles, while Iga Swiatek’s 2025 women’s breakthrough on grass changed the conversation about who can win on the surface. Expect short sets, tie-breaks decided by a handful of points, and at least one big-name seed to look human against a 6’6 left-handed grass specialist in the third round.

Names to follow

Players to watch at the Wimbledon

Past champions

Recent Wimbledon champions

The tournament was first held in 1877, played at All England Club, London.

Men's singles

YearChampionRunner-upScore
2025Carlos Alcaraz4-6 6-4 6-4 6-4
2024Novak Djokovic6-2 6-2 7-6
2023Novak Djokovic1-6 7-6 6-1 3-6 6-4
2022Nick Kyrgios4-6 6-3 6-4 7-6
2021Matteo Berrettini6-7 6-4 6-4 6-3
2019Roger Federer7-6 1-6 7-6 4-6 13-12

Women's singles

YearChampionRunner-upScore
2025Amanda Anisimova6-0 6-0
2024
BKCZEBarbora Krejčíková
Jasmine Paolini6-2 2-6 6-4
2023
MVCZEMarkéta Vondroušová
Ons Jabeur6-4 6-4
2022Ons Jabeur3-6 6-2 6-2
2021
ABAUSAshleigh Barty
Karolína Plíšková6-3 6-7 6-3
2019
SHROUSimona Halep
Serena Williams6-2 6-2
By the numbers

Wimbledon records and recent winners

Most men's titles (recent)
Novak Djokovic · 3 titles in the last six editions
Defending men's champion
Jannik Sinner (def. Carlos Alcaraz 4-6 6-4 6-4 6-4)
Defending women's champion
Iga Świątek (def. Amanda Anisimova 6-0 6-0)
First held
1877
Venue
All England Club, London
What is on the line

Ranking points by round

Singles ranking points awarded for reaching each round of the Grand Slam draw. Doubles points are typically half of the singles tally per round.

Round reachedSingles points
Winner2,000
Runner-up1,300
Semi-final780
Quarter-final430
Round of 16240
Round of 32130
Round of 6470
Round of 12810
Where it's played

Venue and travel notes

Match start times convert to your local timezone everywhere on the site, but the published schedule and ticket information runs on the venue's local clock below.

CityGB London, Great Britain
VenueAll England Club, London
Time zoneEurope/London
Tournament age149 editions (first held 1877)
FormatATP and WTA combined
Quick facts

Wimbledon 2026 at a glance

Edition2026
TourATP & WTA combined
CategoryGrand Slam
SurfaceGrass
Dates29 Jun – 12 Jul
VenueAll England Club, London
Time zoneEurope/London
Prize moneyGBP 53M
Points to winner2000 ranking points
First held1877
Official sitehttps://wimbledon.com
FAQ

Wimbledon 2026, your questions, answered

When is Wimbledon 2026 played?

Wimbledon 2026 runs from 29 Jun – 12 Jul. The order of play for each session is published the night before, and start times on this page convert to your local timezone.

What surface is Wimbledon played on?

Wimbledon is played on grass. Grass produces the lowest bounce on tour. Points are short and the serve does most of the work.

Where is Wimbledon held?

Wimbledon is held in London, Great Britain, at All England Club, London.

How can I watch Wimbledon 2026?

The broadcaster panel above shows where to watch Wimbledon in your country. Use the country picker in the header to switch markets. Tennis TV carries most ATP non-Slam events worldwide, and WTA TV carries most WTA non-Slam events.

Who won Wimbledon in 2025?

Jannik Sinner took the men's title and Iga Świątek took the women's title in 2025. The full list of past champions sits in the table above.

How many ranking points does the Wimbledon winner earn?

The singles champion takes 2,000 ranking points, the maximum on tour.

How much prize money does Wimbledon pay?

Grand Slams pay the largest prize pools on tour, with multi-million-dollar cheques for both singles champions plus deep payouts down to first-round losers. The exact breakdown is published by the tour the week before the main draw begins, and is mirrored on the official tournament site.

How does qualifying work at Wimbledon?

A 128-player main draw runs across two weeks, preceded by a 128-player qualifying draw the week before. Top seeds enter the main draw directly. The qualifying draw is published a week ahead of main-draw entry lists.

What betting markets work best at Wimbledon?

Grass favours big servers and shotmakers. Total games totals run lower on average, and tiebreak markets are well-priced because holds dominate. Player-to-win-a-set props are sharper than full-match handicaps. Always cross-check the latest odds on the live odds panel above before staking.