It is finally time for Wimbledon 2025, the crown jewel of the grass court tennis season. Players and fans will descend on SW19 to watch some of the world’s best players duke it out to be crowned Wimbledon champion this year.
Carlos Alcaraz will be back to defend his title, and so should defending women’s champion Barbora Krejcikova, who had to withdraw from Eastbourne with a thigh injury just days before her title defence started.
Across the men's and women's singles draw, there will be 23 Britons, which is the most Wimbledon has seen for 41 years. Below, we look at the British players playing and tell you how you can watch them and all the upcoming action.
British Players
On the men’s singles side of the draw, Jack Draper is the British number one and world number four, so he qualified for the tournament automatically. Also automatically qualifying were Jacob Fearnley, Cameron Norrie and Billy Harris based on their rankings.
Wildcard entries have gone to eight British men: Dan Evans, Henry Searle, Jay Clarke, Jack Pinnington Jones, Johannus Monday, George Loffhagen, Arthur Fery and Oliver Crawford.
The final British men’s entrant is world number 719, Ollie Tarvet, who came through qualifying to secure his place in the tournament. The 21-year-old competes on the US collegiate circuit and is still studying at the University of San Diego for another year. That completes the 13-strong British men’s lineup competing at Wimbledon.
On the women’s singles side, we have Emma Raducanu, Katie Boulter and Sonay Kartal all gaining entry from their seeding. Seven wildcards are in too: Hannah Klugman, Mimi Xu, Mika Stojsavljevic, Francesca Jones, Harriet Dart, Jodie Burrage and Heather Watson.
Three of those wildcards, Stojsavljevic, Klugman and Xu, are all making history as it is the first time three British players aged 17 and under are in the women’s singles draw. Stojsavljevic is 16 and won the US Open girls' title last year; Klugman is also 16 and reached the girls’ final at the French Open. Xu is 17 and ranked just outside the world's top 300.
For those keen on the Brit-watch, there is an all-British tie immediately in the draw as Xu takes on Raducanu in round one.
Where to watch
In the UK, you can watch coverage of Wimbledon on the BBC TV channels and online. Coverage will be on BBC One and BBC Two, or you can stream matches online through BBC iPlayer. Coverage starts from 11 am BST across all platforms.
You can also watch coverage from every single court on BBC iPlayer or on the BBC Sport website and app. If you can’t keep up with all the action, then you can watch the highlights show on BBC Two every evening, and also on the iPlayer.