Wimbledon 2025: Betting Odds, Predictions, Favorites, Schedule

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Lina Almans

23 May 2025

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Wimbledon 2025 Odds and Favorites

The 138th edition of Wimbledon is set to take place from June 30 to July 13, 2025, at the All England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club in Wimbledon, London.

Bookmaker that always accepts bets on Wimbledon with good odds — 1xBet.

The 2025 Wimbledon Championships begin with the first-round matches of the Ladies’ and Gentlemen’s Singles and culminate in the finals on Centre Court — the world’s most famous tennis court and the 6th largest by capacity, known for its Royal Box, retractable roof, and seating for ~15,000 fans.

All England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club, Wimbledon
All England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club, Wimbledon, London

As the 3rd Grand Slam of the year, following the Australian Open and Roland-Garros, Wimbledon stands apart as the only Grand Slam still played on grass courts, an increasingly rare surface in the modern game.

2025 Wimbledon Schedule of Play

Wimbledon follows a knockout format starting with 128 players in singles (64 men, 64 women). They play on grass courts, a rare and super fast surface requiring sharp reflexes, agility, and serve-and-volley techniques.

For the guys, it’s best-of-five sets (Bo5), while everything else — like women’s singles and doubles — is best-of-three (Bo3). Now, if the final set hits 6-6, they go into a 10-point tiebreaker to settle it. The catch? You’ve gotta win by 2 points — so scores like 11-9 or 12-10 are how it’s done.

Here’s the timeline:

Rain often factors into Wimbledon, but matches on Centre Court and No.1 Court will continue uninterrupted thanks to their roofs. Matches on outside courts may have adjusted start times.

2025 Wimbledon Men’s Betting Odds and Favorites

Reigning champion Carlos Alcaraz (world No. 3) is the favorite to retain his title after a historic win over Novak Djokovic in 2024 (6-2, 6-2, 7-6), extending his Wimbledon winning streak to 14 matches. At just 21, Alcaraz has already claimed 4 Grand Slam titles, tying Roger Federer for the fastest 4 wins in the Open Era.

Meanwhile, Sinner (current world No. 1) is widely regarded as a future champion despite his 2024 quarterfinal loss to Daniil Medvedev. Djokovic, holding a record 24 Grand Slam titles, also seeks to reclaim his dominance after last year’s loss.

Carlos Alcaraz
Carlos Alcaraz, favorite to win Wimbledon 2025

2025 Wimbledon Women’s Betting Odds and Favorites

After winning the 2024 Wimbledon title, Barbora Krejcikova added a 2nd Grand Slam to her resume, defeating Jasmine Paolini in three sets (6-2, 2-6, 6-4).

However, Aryna Sabalenka enters as the 2025 favorite, followed by Iga Świątek (world No. 1), who seeks to conquer grass after multiple successes on clay.

Aryna Sabalenka
Aryna Sabalenka, favorite to win Wimbledon 2025

Wimbledon 2025 Prediction from AI

Gambling Park asked one of the world’s most well-known AIs — ChatGPT — for its take on who’s favorite this year at Wimbledon. Here is its answer:

My call: Carlos Alcaraz will win the men’s title, and Aryna Sabalenka will lift the women’s trophy at Wimbledon 2025.

When asked “Why?”, ChatGPT gave the following reasoning behind its Wimbledon 2025 predictions.

Back-to-back titles from Carlos Alcaraz (2023 and 2024), along with a 14-match win streak on Centre Court, give him the best active record at the tournament. His grass court win rate (~89%) is now higher than any player from the “Big Three”.

Sabalenka’s serve-plus-forehand one-two is the single biggest point-winning pattern in the women’s draw, and with rivals either rusty (Rybakina) or less suited to fast lawns (Świątek), the window looks open for her first Venus Rosewater Dish.

Past Wimbledon Winners

How to Watch Wimbledon 2025?

For fans watching at home, broadcasting rights have shifted to Amazon Prime Video (until 2027), though BBC retains rights for the UK audience, while Eurosport will broadcast across Europe via Eurosport. There’ll also be streaming on Max.

Wimbledon Prize Money 2025

While the 2025 prize pool hasn’t been announced, it’s expected to surpass 2024’s £50 million (about $67.4M), continuing a trend of increasing payouts. In 2024, singles champions took home £2.7 million (~ $3.64M) each, and 2025’s winners could see an even larger payday.

Why’s It Called Wimbledon?

Oh, that’s easy – it’s named after the London suburb where the tournament happens. Officially, it’s called The Championships, Wimbledon, but nobody’s got time to say all that, so “Wimbledon” just stuck. The All England Club, where it’s been held since 1877, is right there in Wimbledon, and fun fact — it’s the oldest tennis tournament in the world.

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Lina Almans

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Lina Almans held the position of senior slot developer at the international company StarBet Casino, responsible for creating high-converting game models and innovative mechanics.

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