Wimbledon
This page lists debenture tickets for Wimbledon, covering every day of the tournament across Centre Court and No.1 Court. If you want to be certain of your seat before the draw is made and before the ballot results come in, these are the tickets for you.
How Wimbledon tickets work
There are four main ways to get Wimbledon tickets, and they are not equal.
The public ballot opens in the autumn before the tournament. Entry is free and anyone can apply, but places are allocated by random draw. Most applicants do not receive tickets. The ballot is worth trying, but you cannot count on it.
The queue lets you turn up on the day and buy a ticket if any remain. Some people camp overnight to improve their chances. You may get in, you may not, and you will not know in advance which court you will be sitting at. For certain days late in the tournament, the queue is not an option at all.
The official resale platform releases a small number of returned tickets in the weeks before and during the event. Supply is limited and moves quickly.
Debenture tickets are the route for anyone who wants a confirmed seat. Debentures are long-term rights attached to specific seats, issued by the All England Club. The holders of those rights are permitted to sell their tickets, and that is what makes debenture resale the only fully sanctioned secondary market for Wimbledon. When you buy wimbledon tickets through this page, you are buying from that authorised market.
What a debenture ticket includes
A debenture ticket at Wimbledon gives you a fixed seat on Centre Court or No.1 Court for the day you purchase. Beyond the seat itself, the ticket includes access to the Debenture Holders’ Lounge and free movement across all the outside courts throughout the day. You are not paying just to watch one match on one court — you have full access to the grounds.
The seat is assigned, not a general admission. If you buy two tickets, you will sit together.
Centre Court vs No.1 Court
Centre Court is where the singles finals are played, along with most of the high-profile matches across the fortnight. It has a retractable roof, which means play continues in rain. Capacity is around 15,000. It is the court that most people picture when they think of Wimbledon.
No.1 Court seats just under 12,500 and has its own retractable roof, installed in 2019. It hosts significant matches throughout the tournament, including quarterfinals and some doubles finals. The sightlines are close and the atmosphere on a big match day is its own thing.
Which one is right for you depends on what you want to watch and what day you are attending. The product listings below show what is scheduled for each court on each day.
What debenture tickets cost
Pricing reflects the round and the court. Early-round tickets are lower, and prices increase as the tournament progresses, with the semifinals and finals at the top of the range. The price covers your seat, lounge access, and grounds access — there are no additional entry fees on the day.
All prices are shown in euros in the listings below. We can assist with questions on pricing and availability before you book.
Why customers book through Tennis Ticket Service
We specialise in debenture tickets for tennis. A few things that matter to our customers:
If you order two tickets for the same day and court, they will be adjacent. That is not a standard industry promise — we back it with a seats-together guarantee.
If for any reason the exact tickets you ordered are not available, you will receive the category you booked or better. You will not be downgraded.
We hear from customers that the personal contact with our team before and during the tournament makes the difference. You can reach us directly — not a call centre — with questions about the day, the grounds, or your order.
Select a day below to see what is available for Centre Court and No.1 Court.