Wimbledon Schedule

We publish what is on Centre Court and No.1 Court each day of the Championships, with a direct way to hear from us first when tickets for the following year go on sale.

Tomorrow’s order of play: Quarter-Finals

Wimbledon 2026 is underway right now. Tickets for this year are sold out, but here is what’s coming up on Centre Court and No.1 Court.

A men's singles match in progress on Centre Court at Wimbledon, with the retractable roof open above a packed crowd

Centre Court

Sold out for 2026, starts 2:30pm

  • Ladies’ Singles QF: M.Kostyuk (12) vs J.Paolini (13)
  • Followed by Gentlemen’s Singles QF: F.Cobolli (9) vs A.Fery
A women's singles match in progress on Court No.1 at Wimbledon, with the retractable roof open above a packed crowd

No.1 Court

Sold out for 2026, starts 2:00pm

  • Ladies’ Singles QF: L.Noskova (9) vs E.Mertens (25)
  • Followed by Gentlemen’s Singles QF: T.Fritz (6) vs winner of Lehecka/Zverev

When is Wimbledon played?

Wimbledon runs for two weeks, starting in late June and finishing in the first or second week of July. It is the oldest tennis tournament in the world, first played in 1877, and the only Grand Slam still played on grass.

The All England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club (AELTC) publishes the exact dates and the full draw in the months before the Championships start.

Roofs and rain

Centre Court has had a retractable roof since 2009. It closes in about ten minutes, and once closed it must stay shut until the match finishes, even if the sun comes back out. No.1 Court got its own retractable roof in 2019. Both courts operate under an 11pm curfew set by the local council, so very late finishes are rare even with the roof in play.

Switching a court from outdoor to indoor conditions takes time. The air inside changes once the roof closes, and players often describe the ball sitting up slower than in the open air.

Order of play and the ballot

Most Wimbledon tickets for the public go through a ballot, or through the famous Queue outside the grounds. Our tickets are different: they come from Wimbledon debentures, a longstanding and fully legitimate resale route tied to a five-year holding, so there is no ballot to enter and no queue to join.

The AELTC publishes each day’s order of play the evening before, in the same way as the other Grand Slams. We update this page with the day’s Centre Court and No.1 Court schedule as soon as it’s out.

Picking the right day

The first week has more matches running across more courts, and tends to be more affordable. The second week narrows to the best players, with the semifinals and finals drawing the highest demand and the highest prices.

If you’re weighing it up, the middle Saturday and the following week tends to hit a good balance: strong matches, thinner crowds than finals weekend.

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