Wimbledon Ticket Prices

Wimbledon debenture tickets cover a wide price range, roughly from €2,000 for an early-round seat on No.1 Court up to €10,000 to €12,000 for the men’s final on Centre Court. This is a secondary market, not face value, and prices move with demand, so treat the figures below as a guide rather than a quote.

Why the range is so wide

Debenture tickets are not sold at a fixed price set by the All England Club. They come from debenture holders reselling their own seats, and the price reflects what buyers are willing to pay for a given match, court and day. A first-round afternoon on No.1 Court and a men’s final on Centre Court are, in practical terms, two different products, even though both start from the same debenture system.

Demand also shifts year to year. A big home favourite going deep in the draw, a marquee rivalry landing on a particular day, or simply a hot summer pushing more people to want a seat under a roof, all move prices in ways that a fixed table can’t capture.

Price by stage of the tournament

Stage Typical range
Early rounds (1st to 2nd round), No.1 Court From around €2,000
Middle rounds (3rd round onward) and quarterfinals Rising progressively from the early-round range
Semifinals A further step up from the quarterfinals
Finals, Centre Court €10,000 to €12,000, sometimes more

Indicative ranges based on last season’s debenture resale market. They move with demand and should not be read as a live quote.

What’s included

Every Wimbledon debenture ticket through Tennis Ticket Service comes with seats guaranteed together, access to the Debenture Holders’ Lounge, and free entry to the outside courts on the day. If we can’t match the exact category you booked, you’re upgraded rather than downgraded. Food and drink are not included.

Centre Court vs No.1 Court, which is better value

Centre Court carries the highest prices on site, particularly from the quarterfinals onward, because it hosts the finals and the marquee matches the whole tournament builds toward. No.1 Court sits at a lower price point for a similar quality of tennis, especially in the first week, when the draw still has plenty of top players spread across both courts. If budget matters more to you than being in the main stadium specifically, No.1 Court is usually the better value seat.

When tickets are cheapest

The first week is more affordable than the second, and No.1 Court is more affordable than Centre Court at the same stage. Early rounds on No.1 Court are the entry point into Wimbledon at the lowest end of the range.

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