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Wimbledon Tennis Club Centre Court Tickets

With 2,635 tickets currently on sale, Centre Court is the heart of Wimbledon, the stage for the singles finals, the Royal Box, and the tournament’s biggest matches across the fortnight. If you are looking specifically for Wimbledon Centre Court tickets, this page explains the current resale prices and the routes buyers use to get seats for different stages of the Championships.

Our current listings start from $2,727.


All Wimbledon Tennis Club Centre Court tickets on Ticket-Compare.com are authentic, from pre-vetted sellers who provide a 100% guarantee.

Compare Wimbledon Tennis Club Centre Court Ticket Prices

  1. 2026 Wimbledon - Gentlemen's and Ladies' Singles 1st Round (Centre Court)

    WimbledonWimbledon Tennis Club Centre Court
    London, United Kingdom
    from $3,415
    239 available tickets
  2. 2026 Wimbledon - Gentlemen's and Ladies' Singles 1st Round (Centre Court)

    WimbledonWimbledon Tennis Club Centre Court
    London, United Kingdom
    from $2,877
    256 available tickets
  3. 2026 Wimbledon - Gentlemen's and Ladies' Singles 2nd Round (Centre Court)

    WimbledonWimbledon Tennis Club Centre Court
    London, United Kingdom
    from $3,721
    153 available tickets
  4. 2026 Wimbledon - Gentlemen's and Ladies' Singles 2nd Round (Centre Court)

    WimbledonWimbledon Tennis Club Centre Court
    London, United Kingdom
    from $3,257
    211 available tickets
  5. 2026 Wimbledon - Gentlemen's and Ladies' Singles 3rd Round (Centre Court)

    WimbledonWimbledon Tennis Club Centre Court
    London, United Kingdom
    from $3,985
    129 available tickets
  6. 2026 Wimbledon - Gentlemen's and Ladies' Singles 3rd Round (Centre Court)

    WimbledonWimbledon Tennis Club Centre Court
    London, United Kingdom
    from $3,671
    152 available tickets
  7. 2026 Wimbledon - Gentlemen's and Ladies' Singles 4th Round (Centre Court)

    WimbledonWimbledon Tennis Club Centre Court
    London, United Kingdom
    from $3,599
    186 available tickets
  8. 2026 Wimbledon - Gentlemen's and Ladies' Singles 4th Round (Centre Court)

    WimbledonWimbledon Tennis Club Centre Court
    London, United Kingdom
    from $4,304
    148 available tickets
  9. 2026 Wimbledon - Gentlemen’s and Ladies’ Quarter Finals (Centre Court)

    WimbledonWimbledon Tennis Club Centre Court
    London, United Kingdom
    from $5,041
    166 available tickets
  10. 2026 Wimbledon - Gentlemen’s and Ladies’ Quarter Finals (Centre Court)

    WimbledonWimbledon Tennis Club Centre Court
    London, United Kingdom
    from $3,929
    225 available tickets
  11. 2026 Wimbledon - Semi Finals (Centre Court)

    WimbledonWimbledon Tennis Club Centre Court
    London, United Kingdom
    from $2,727
    144 available tickets
  12. 2026 Wimbledon - Semi Finals (Centre Court)

    WimbledonWimbledon Tennis Club Centre Court
    London, United Kingdom
    from $10,880
    194 available tickets
  13. 2026 Wimbledon - Ladies' Singles Final / Gentlemen’s Doubles Final (Centre Court)

    WimbledonWimbledon Tennis Club Centre Court
    London, United Kingdom
    from $3,705
    234 available tickets
  14. 2026 Wimbledon - Gentlemen's Singles Final / Ladies’ Doubles Final (Centre Court)

    WimbledonWimbledon Tennis Club Centre Court
    London, United Kingdom
    from $13,698
    198 available tickets

Live Wimbledon Centre Court Ticket Prices

As Wimbledon’s primary ticket routes are limited and often unpredictable, it makes sense  to compare available listings on the secondary market for a specific Centre Court day or stage of the tournament.

Ticket-Compare.com aggregates listings from multiple resale platforms and authorised hospitality partners, allowing readers to see what is currently available for Centre Court across different days of the Championships.

Current live Centre Court price ranges:

  • Lowest live Centre Court listing: $2,727
  • Average live Centre Court listing: $8,170
  • Highest live Centre Court listing: $46,774

Wimbledon Tennis Club Centre Court Seating Plan

The biggest factor affecting price is the stage of the tournament. Early rounds tend to have the widest range of availability, while semi-finals and finals become significantly harder to secure through official channels.

Centre Court Tickets By Stage Or Day

Not every Centre Court day will be the same. The court is central all fortnight, but the price changes dramatically, depending on whether you want star names in the early rounds, the full intensity of the quarter-finals, or the ceremony and prestige of finals weekend.

Early-round Centre Court tickets

The first few days of the tournament are usually when Centre Court tickets are easiest to find across resale platforms.

This part of the fortnight often features top seeds beginning their campaigns, which means big names appear on the schedule but ticket demand is still spread across the whole grounds.

Live 1st Round Centre Court pricing:

  • From: $2,877
  • Average: $5,191
  • Up to: $10,222

Second-week Centre Court tickets

By the second week the tournament field is whittled down and Centre Court becomes the main stage for the most important singles matches.

Quarter-final days often attract strong demand because the quality of matches is high while prices can still sit below finals-weekend levels.

Live Quarter-Finals Centre Court pricing:

  • From: $3,929
  • Average: $7,951
  • Up to: $13,765

Finals weekend Centre Court tickets at Wimbledon

Semi-finals and finals represent the peak of Centre Court demand. By this stage the tournament schedule focuses almost entirely on the biggest matches, and access through official channels becomes much more limited.

Live Semi-Finals Centre Court pricing:

  • From: $2,727
  • Average: $12,602
  • Up to: $33,410

Live Final Centre Court pricing:

  • From: $3,705
  • Average: $13,893
  • Up to: $46,774

A simple way to think about the appeal of each stage/day at The Championships is this:

Early rounds

Why buy: You want Centre Court itself

Typical appeal: Big names, wider availability across the grounds

Quarter-finals

Why buy: You want proper second-week stakes

Typical appeal: Stronger match quality without finals-weekend demand

Semi-finals

Why buy: You want the biggest Friday of the fortnight

Typical appeal: Prestige rises sharply and access narrows

Finals

Why buy: You want the sport-and-spectacle version of Centre Court

Typical appeal: The defining matches of the Championships

How To Get Wimbledon Centre Court Tickets

There are four realistic routes if you want Centre Court in 2026: The public ballot, The Queue, debenture resale, and official hospitality. Each works differently, and each matters more or less depending on how fixed you are on date, round and seat type.

Which buying route suits which type of buyer

Public ballot

The Wimbledon Public Ballot for the 2026 Championships is closed. The ballot is still the fairest advance route in principle, but it is not the route for someone who wants to choose a precise Centre Court day now.

The Queue

The Queue remains the classic on-the-day route, and Wimbledon says show-court tickets are sold daily with 500 tickets for Centre Court, excluding the last four days. That matters a lot for Centre Court buyers, because it means The Queue can help for the first ten days but not for the semi-finals or finals weekend.

Debenture resale

Debenture tickets are Wimbledon tickets that can be transferred or sold on. For Centre Court buyers, that makes debenture resale the main route when you want a specific late-stage day, a reserved seat, or a pair of seats without relying on ballot luck or an overnight queue.

Hospitality

This is the premium route rather than the cheap route, but it is a legitimate way to target a chosen court and day with hospitality attached.

Centre Court buying routes compared

Public ballot

Best for: Advance applicants happy with a random allocation

What you control: Very little

Best for finals? Not something you can plan precisely around once closed

The Queue

Best for: Early and mid-fortnight buyers who can attend in person

What you control: Same-day effort, not certainty

Best for finals? No, Centre Court Queue tickets exclude the last four days

Debenture resale

Best for: Buyers targeting a particular Centre Court day or late-round match

What you control: Date, court and seat location to a much greater extent

Best for finals? Yes, this is the practical route many buyers look at

Official hospitality

Best for: Buyers who want an official premium package

What you control: Day and court, subject to availability

Best for finals? Potentially, though it is a premium option

For Centre Court specifically, that usually leads to a simple rule. If you are flexible and mainly want the experience, the first week gives you more routes. If you want quarter-finals onward, the decision usually narrows quickly towards debenture resale or hospitality.

Face Value Wimbledon Centre Court Ticket Prices For 2026

While resale listings dominate the practical buying market, Wimbledon also publishes face-value ticket prices for Centre Court each year.

That price depends on both the day of the tournament and the seating band. For 2026, Centre Court public tickets are sold in three bands: Rows A–T, Rows U–Z, and Rows ZA–ZF.

Face-value prices by seating band

Wimbledon Centre Court face-value ticket prices for 2026

DayRows A-TRows U-ZRows ZA-ZF
Day 1$140$134$100
Day 2$140$134$100
Day 3$160$154$127
Day 4$160$154$127
Day 5$214$207$160
Day 6$214$207$160
Day 7$267$254$200
Day 8$267$254$200
Day 9$307$294$234
Day 10$307$294$234
Day 11$361$341$281
Day 12$361$341$281
Day 13$421$394$321
Day 14$421$394$321

The useful thing about that table is not just the headline.

It shows how Centre Court remains relatively attainable at face value in the first week, then becomes much more expensive once the tournament moves into quarter-finals, semi-finals and the two singles finals.

That rise is one reason buyers often split into two groups: people chasing a specific late-stage date, and people who mainly want the experience of being on Centre Court at all.

What You Get With Centre Court Debenture Tickets

For Centre Court, a debenture is not just another premium ticket. It means a specific class of ticket that Wimbledon itself recognises as transferable, unlike standard public tickets. That is why debenture seats are a key part of the Centre Court resale market.

What debenture means in practice

Wimbledon states that Centre Court has 2,520 debenture seats, and its debenture-ticket information says those seats are located between Rows A-N.

Each debenture provides a premium Centre Court seat for the Championships and access to exclusive restaurants and bars.

For a buyer, the practical meaning is straightforward. A Centre Court debenture ticket usually gives you:

  • A reserved premium show-court seat
  • A ticket type that can be transferred or resold
  • Access to debenture facilities attached to that ticket type

That does not mean every listing is the same, or that pricing will be gentle.

It means the product is clearer. If you are comparing Centre Court options on Ticket-Compare.com, what you are usually looking at is the debenture market rather than ordinary public tickets being resold.

There is also a current Centre Court 2026-2030 debenture issue. Wimbledon states the issue price was $155,022 per debenture, which goes to show the fact that these seats are in a very different part of the market from standard public tickets.

That detail matters mostly because it helps explain why late-round Centre Court debenture listings can be expensive.

Why Centre Court Is Different

Centre Court is the main event court in the plainest sense and is one of the things that makes Wimbledon so special.

It is where much of Wimbledon’s ceremonial weight comes into play, from opening traditions under the Royal Box to the latter-stage singles matches that define the fortnight. It also has the retractable roof, which changes the practical value of the ticket as well as the symbolism of it.

That is why Centre Court demand tends to separate more sharply by stage than demand elsewhere.

A first-round Centre Court seat is one thing: a chance to be in the main arena. A final-weekend Centre Court seat is something else entirely because by then the court is carrying the singles finals, the biggest media attention and the tightest access routes.

It is also simply a very large but very recognisable venue.

Centre Court holds 14,979 spectators, with the Royal Box at the south end and a layout that matters much more once you are comparing debenture listings or trying to understand where your seat actually sits in the bowl.

For that side of the decision, the Centre Court seating plan is the better place to go deeper on levels, gangways and viewing angles.

Ten Biggest Centre Court Moments Of The Open Era

This is the optional bit, but Centre Court is one of the few ticket pages where a short history section genuinely helps, because part of what buyers are paying for is the sense of stage.

  1. 1968: Wimbledon’s first Open Era Championships began on Centre Court, resetting the tournament for modern professional tennis.
  2. 1980: Bjorn Borg beat John McEnroe in a final that still sits among the court’s defining championships.
  3. 2001: Goran Ivanisevic completed his wild-card title run, one of Centre Court’s great outsider stories.
  4. 2008: Rafael Nadal beat Roger Federer in a final regularly treated as one of the greatest men’s finals the tournament has staged.
  5. 2009: Roger Federer beat Andy Roddick and moved to 15 Grand Slam singles titles, a record at the time.
  6. 2009 also brought the Centre Court roof into use, changing what a show-court ticket could mean in bad weather.
  7. 2010: Isner v Mahut delivered the longest match in tennis history, a match that started on Court 18 but became part of Wimbledon folklore across the grounds and archives.
    Photo of a plaque with an inscription about the longest tennis match
  8. 2013: Andy Murray became the first British man in 77 years to win the singles title at Wimbledon.
  9. 2019: the Federer-Djokovic final became the first Wimbledon singles final decided by a final-set tie-break under the then-new format.
  10. Centre Court is still the focal point for the singles champions and the most closely watched matches of the fortnight, which is why it still sits at the centre of the buying conversation every summer.

Wimbledon Centre Court Tickets | Frequently Asked Questions

How hard is it to get Wimbledon Centre Court tickets?

That depends on the day. Early in the fortnight you still have multiple routes in play, including the ballot before it closes and The Queue on the day. For the last four days, Centre Court Queue tickets are not available, so access becomes more restrictive.

Can I buy Wimbledon Centre Court tickets at the gate?

Only in the sense of buying through The Queue on the day, not by simply turning up at a conventional box office and choosing whatever is left. Wimbledon says 500 Centre Court show-court tickets are sold daily through The Queue, excluding the last four days.

What is the cheapest way to see Centre Court at Wimbledon?

At face value, the cheapest public Centre Court tickets in 2026 are Rows ZA-ZF on Days 1 and 2 at $100. In practice, those are also among the hardest face-value Centre Court seats to plan around unless you succeed through primary routes.

Do you have to pay to sit on Centre Court at Wimbledon?

Yes. Centre Court is a ticketed show court, with 2026 face values running from $100 up to $421 depending on the day and seating band.

Are Centre Court tickets available in The Queue for the semi-finals or finals?

No. Wimbledon’s current Queue information says Centre Court show-court tickets are sold daily excluding the last four days. That removes the men’s and women’s singles semi-finals and both finals from the Centre Court Queue route.

What do Centre Court debenture tickets actually mean?

They mean a premium Centre Court ticket type that Wimbledon recognises as transferable. Centre Court debenture seats are in Rows A-N, and debenture tickets are Wimbledon tickets that can be transferred or sold on.

Can regular people go to Wimbledon Centre Court?

Yes, but not casually and not always on the day you want. Regular buyers can still reach Centre Court through direct methods such as the ballot and The Queue, and through debenture resale or official hospitality if they are looking beyond those routes.

Why are Centre Court tickets so much dearer later in the fortnight?

Because face value prices rise by day, and because Centre Court increasingly hosts the tournament’s defining singles matches as the fortnight goes on. The oprice table itself shows that climb clearly.

Can I choose my exact Centre Court seat in the ballot?

Not in the way you can when browsing resale or hospitality inventory. The ballot is an primary allocation route, but it is not built around precise seat-shopping.

Is there a dress code for Centre Court spectators?

There is no formal spectator dress code in Wimbledon’s general guidance for ordinary ticket buyers, but Centre Court tends to feel smarter than the outer courts, so most people lean smart-casual rather than scruffy. The stricter all-white rule is for players, not spectators.

Choosing Wimbledon Centre Court Tickets Without Overcomplicating It

If you strip away the noise, Centre Court buying usually comes down to one question: are you choosing the court, or are you choosing the stage of the tournament?

If you mainly want the experience of Centre Court itself, the first week is where face-value prices are lower and more routes still exist.

If you want quarter-finals onward, especially semi-finals or finals, it helps to be realistic early: the practical routes narrow, the prices rise, and debenture resale or official hospitality often become the routes people actually compare.

With Ticket-Compare.com you can simply pick the stage you care about most, scan the debenture resale market, and then compare prices to find the best deal.

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