
Want to See Tennis Stars Like Carlos Alcaraz at Wimbledon's Centre Court for $20? Here's How
The secret to saving so much cash? The official resale service. It allows anyone already on-site with a ticket to sign up via the Wimbledon app for a daily lottery to get into one of the top three courts at a cut rate, including about 13 each for No. 1 Court or No. 2 Court. Those spots are offered up to the All England Club by spectators who leave before play ends.
Wimbledon offers cheap tickets to its biggest courts when fans leave early. 'It's an elite tournament in terms of the players, but it's not elite to get in, which is part of the appeal,' said Ed Hogan, a retired 69-year-old from Reading, which is a little more than an hour west of Wimbledon. 'The concept of resales is great. It's recycling at its best–sharing the joy.'
The All England Club wouldn't say how many tickets get resold. 'We're selling the same ticket twice,' said the club's operations manager Michelle Dite, 'and the primary reason is to make tennis as accessible to as many people as possible.'
All England Club ticket resales raised about 300,000 for charity in 2024. Money from resales goes to charities via the Wimbledon Foundation. Nearly 80,000 was raised through the first three days of this year's tournament; last year's total was about 300,000.
Wimbledon has done resales since 1954, but until last year, folks hoping to take advantage of the deal needed to stand in a line once they were on-site, hope they were there soon enough–and hope enough tickets were returned. Now, though, that line is virtual.
Here's how it works: After opting in on the app and getting their phone scanned by 2:30 p.m. at kiosks on-site or near the Wimbledon Queue, where thousands of people camp out at a local park for up to 24 hours in hopes of getting full-price tickets for main courts or grounds passes for smaller ones, fans then wait for a text message giving the good news that they were one of the lucky ones chosen for the resale, which runs from 3 p.m. to 9 p.m. They have 10 minutes to confirm they still want a used ticket for the rest of the day and another 20 minutes to get themselves to the green-and-brown ticket resale booth behind No. 1 Court to show the QR code that lets them pay for the cheap tickets.
'Spending 13 instead of 115 to see Ben Shelton at Wimbledon? You're not stuck in one place forever,' said Henry Thompson, 38, a high school math teacher from Missouri. 'This is much more efficient. Took 30 seconds. Much better.' Thompson, who was wearing a blue hat with the Wimbledon logo, really wanted to see 10th-seeded American Ben Shelton, so he entered the resale lottery and was able to get a seat for No. 2 Court for 13 instead of 115.
'It's beneficial to the sport to give people access to those courts for a reasonable price,' said Marcos Giron, a 45th-ranked American who won first-round matches in singles and doubles this week. 'It's a wonderful thing.'
Chen Pinjung, who just finished medical school in Taiwan, waited in the queue for six hours, paid 30 pounds (40) there for a grounds pass, then also got herself into No. 1 Court via a resale for an additional 13–instead of the 150 it could have cost to see 2022 Wimbledon champion Elena Rybakina win there Thursday.
'If everybody knew how that works, I'm sure everybody would apply,' said Rafael Garcia, who was with his girlfriend Diana Meneses and her brother Gustavo Meneses. 'We saw that (resale) office last year, but we didn't know how to do it. Now we will.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Al Arabiya
2 hours ago
- Al Arabiya
Portugal's Top Player Wears Black Ribbon for Jota at Wimbledon After Jersey Request Is Denied
Nuno Borges had hoped to wear a Diogo Jota soccer jersey onto the court for his match at Wimbledon on Friday, but he settled for a black ribbon on his hat instead. The All England Club has a strict all-white dress code for players while on court, but permission to wear the ribbon was granted after Jota and his brother were killed in a car crash in Spain. Family and friends of the Liverpool forward and his brother gathered at a chapel where their bodies were brought for a wake on Friday, a day after the fatal crash. Borges, who at No. 37 is Portugal's highest-ranked tennis player, told the PA news agency that his agent contacted Wimbledon about the idea of wearing Jota's national team jersey as a tribute, but it wasn't approved. Tournament officials did not immediately comment late Friday. Borges lost his third-round match to Karen Khachanov in five sets. Francisco Cabral wore a black ribbon on his left sleeve during a doubles match.


Al Arabiya
3 hours ago
- Al Arabiya
Wimbledon: No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka holds off home favorite Emma Raducanu at Centre Court
Top-ranked Aryna Sabalenka staved off an upset bid by resurgent Emma Raducanu at Wimbledon, beating the home favorite 7–6 (6), 6–4 in the third round at a raucous Center Court on Friday night. Sabalenka, a two-time semifinalist at the All England Club, fought back in both sets against the 2021 US Open champion, who had been playing some of her best tennis since her title run at Flushing Meadows as a qualifier at age 18. In a 74-minute first set, Sabalenka converted her eighth set point, which came 30 minutes after the first. Raducanu went up 4–2, only to see Sabalenka reel off 11 of 12 points during one stretch while moving out front by a 5–4 score. Then arrived an epic game lasting 13 minutes and containing 22 points, eight deuces, and seven set points for Sabalenka–all ending with Raducanu holding serve. Then Raducanu had a set point while leading 6–5 in the tiebreaker, but Sabalenka saved it with a drop-shot winner and took the last three points of the set–ending it with a volley winner. The fans provided extra energy for the British player, cheering wildly when Raducanu fired winners and exhaling 'aww!' when she missed. Sabalenka, a three-time Grand Slam champion, said she pretended the cheers were for her. 'Guys, wow–what an atmosphere. My ears are still hurting. It was super loud,' she said in an on-court interview. In the second set, Raducanu broke to 3–1 and led 4–1 at the 1-hour 35-minute mark, but Sabalenka reeled off the last five games. Raducanu, ranked No. 40, had defeated 2023 Wimbledon champion Marketa Vondrousova in the previous round. 'She pushed me really hard to get this win. I'm happy to see her healthy and back on track,' Sabalenka said. 'I'm pretty sure that soon she's going to be back in the top 10.' Sabalenka reached the final at each of the past three Grand Slam tournaments, winning the US Open last September and finishing as the runner-up to Madison Keys at the Australian Open in January and to Coco Gauff at the French Open in June.


Al Arabiya
5 hours ago
- Al Arabiya
A Tip of the Cap to the Wimbledon Player Who Caught His Hat When It Fell Off But Still Won a Point
Perhaps Jordan Thompson deserved a tip of the cap for winning a set-ending point at Wimbledon while clutching his hat after it fell off his head during a serve. His opponent Friday, Luciano Darderi, thought that point shouldn't have been awarded to Thompson, but the chair umpire disagreed. 'I mean, my hat's fallen off before and I know what the rules are. It didn't hinder him; it hindered me,' said Thompson, an Australian ranked 44th who will face US Open runner-up Taylor Fritz next. 'So I don't know what he was complaining about.' At 5–4, 40–15 against Darderi, Thompson used a hat trick to put a lid on the opening set en route to a 6–4, 6–4, 3–6, 6–3 victory that sent him to the fourth round at the All England Club for the first time. On a second serve, the backward baseball cap Thompson was wearing slid off as he landed on his follow-through. Thompson immediately grabbed it with his left hand and continued to wield his racket with his right hand for a point that wound up lasting seven strokes. It was capped by Thompson's backhand volley winner as he ran to the net with hat in hand. Has he ever carried that bit of his outfit around during a point before? 'That's the first time I can remember,' Thompson said. In the moment, Darderi thought chair umpire Mohamed Lahyani would stop the point and order them to replay it because of what happened with Thompson's chapeau. The 59th-ranked Darderi, who was born in Argentina and represents Italy, walked to the sideline pointing in Thompson's direction and pleading his case with Lahyani. At one point, Darderi yanked off his own white hat and yelled, 'It's the rule!' But Lahyani wouldn't budge, and Darderi chucked his racket toward the sideline seat, drawing some boos from spectators at Court 18. As the conversation between Darderi and Lahyani continued during the changeover between sets, Thompson pointed out that the rules address when a player's hat hits the court – 'Happened to me a few times,' he said – rather than if it's caught out of the air. 'It didn't seem normal to me to play a point with a hat in your hand. It was strange,' Darderi said at his news conference later. 'But it was just one point. It didn't change the match.' On that, both players certainly agreed.