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Wimbledon 2025: Total prize money, live streaming, seedings - All you need to know
Wimbledon's 148th edition, from June 30 to July 13, anticipates Carlos Alcaraz's title defense after his French Open victory. Novak Djokovic aims to equal Federer's record. The tournament boasts a record £53.5 million prize pool, with singles champions earning £3 million. Electronic line-calling debuts, aligning Wimbledon with other Grand Slams, enhancing accuracy and fairness.
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WIMBLEDON 2025 PRIZE MONEY IN SINGLES EVENTS
Champion - $4,124,760
Finalist - $2,089,878
Semifinalist - $1,065,563
Quarterfinalist - $549,968
Round of 16 - $329,980
Round of 32 - $208,987
Round of 64 - $136,117
Round of 128 - $90,744
WHERE TO WATCH WIMBLEDON 2025 ON TV
EUROPE: Digit-Alb, MOVISTAR PLUS+, Fast Sports, Eurosport, Arena Sport, SPORT KLUB, Cytavision, DR, S Sport, beIN Sports France, Setanta Sports, Novasports, Premier Sports, Sky Sport, Sport+Qazaqstan, Artmotion Telecom, Go3 Sport, TSN Malta, Ziggo, Telewizja Polsat, SportTV, RTS1, RTS2, SRF, RTS, RSI, TRT SPOR, BBC, TNT Sports and discovery+.
MIDDLE EAST/AFRICA: beIN Sports MENA, Tennis South Africa & Tennis Africa, Canal+ Sport 5 and The Sports Channel 5 SPORT.
NORTH AMERICA: ESPN, TSN/RDS and The Tennis Channel.
ASIA: Star Sports, SPOTV, Tencent Sports, CCTV, SMG Great Sports Channel, Now TV, NHK G, WOWOW, tvN SPORTS, TDM, SPOTV Macau Cable TV and SPORTCAST.
OCEANIA: Nine Network Australia, ESPN and TVWAN Sports.
NEW TECHNOLOGY IN WIMBLEDON 2025
1. Jannik Sinner
2. Carlos Alcaraz
3. Alexander Zverev
4. Jack Draper
5. Taylor Fritz
6. Novak Djokovic
7. Lorenzo Musetti
8. Holger Rune
9. Daniil Medvedev
10. Ben Shelton
1. Aryna Sabalenka
2. Coco Gauff
Pegula
4. Jasmine Paolini
5. Zheng Qinwen
6. Madison Keys
7. Mirra Andreeva
8. Iga Swiatek
9. Paula Badosa
10. Emma Navarro
The 148th edition of Wimbledon , which remains the oldest and most prestigious tennis tournament, dating back to 1877, will take place from June 30 to July 13 at the historic All England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club (AELTC) in London. As the third Grand Slam of the year, Wimbledon remains the oldest and most prestigious tennis tournament, dating back to the men's singles draw, all eyes are on two-time defending champion Carlos Alcaraz . The 22-year-old Spaniard enters The Championships on an impressive 18-match winning streak, fresh off a dramatic French Open triumph where he saved three match points to defeat World No. 1 Jannik Sinner in the longest Roland Garros final ever - lasting five hours and 29 minutes. Alcaraz also claimed his second title at the Queen's Club Championships, capping off ideal preparation for his Wimbledon, the third Grand Slam of the year, title Novak Djokovic returns to the All England Club seeking to equal Roger Federer's Open Era record of eight Wimbledon titles. The Serbian legend, who has not won a Grand Slam since the 2023 US Open, will be eager to make his mark after a challenging year and further strengthen his legacy on the sport's grandest total player compensation for 2025 has reached a record £53.5 million (approximately $72 million), marking a 7% increase from last year. The tournament's two singles champions will each take home £3 million (around $4 million), highlighting the continued growth in prize money at the prestigious Grand Slam the first time in its history, the All England Club will implement electronic line-calling at Wimbledon, replacing traditional line judges during matches. This move brings Wimbledon in step with the Australian Open and US Open, both of which already use automated systems. With this change, the French Open now stands as the only Grand Slam still relying on human line judges to make in-or-out calls.