
Wimbledon tennis betting tips for 2026 start with grass-court fit, draw position and whether the outright price still works after the draw.
Grass rewards first-strike tennis. Serves bite more. Return games can disappear quickly. One loose service game can swing a set, especially in the men’s draw.
The outright markets already have one major injury twist, while the women’s draw looks more open than the top of the betting suggests.
Escape from Alcaraz
Carlos Alcaraz being out changes the men’s outright market straight away. He’s one of the few players with a proven Wimbledon title ceiling, and without him, Jannik Sinner becomes an even clearer favourite.
That doesn’t make Sinner an automatic bet at a short price. It means the draw, fitness checks and each-way places matter more, because the chasing pack now has one fewer elite grass-court problem to solve.
The women’s draw looks less settled. Aryna Sabalenka leads plenty of outright boards, but Elena Rybakina and Iga Swiatek both have stronger Wimbledon title evidence. That makes the women’s market more interesting from a price-versus-proof angle.
Wimbledon 2026 – At A Glance
| Wimbledon 2026 detail | What to know |
|---|---|
| Tournament dates | 29 June to 12 July 2026 |
| Venue | All England Lawn Tennis Club, London |
| Surface | Outdoor grass |
| Draw size | 128-player singles draws |
| Defending men’s champion | Jannik Sinner |
| Defending women’s champion | Iga Swiatek |
| Big men’s market change | Carlos Alcaraz is out injured |
| New for 2026 | Video Review technology on six show courts |
| Best betting angles | Outrights, set handicaps, tie-breaks, aces, live betting and draw-path value |
Use the widget for live men’s and women’s Wimbledon outrights if Gambling Affiliation has the market available. Static odds are useful for context, but a live widget should be better for clicks and updates.
Suggested video: use an official Wimbledon 2026 trailer if available, or the Wimbledon 2025 official film as a visual/event mood piece until a stronger 2026 preview appears.
Wimbledon 2026 Betting Odds
Odds move quickly before the draw, so treat these as a market snapshot rather than fixed prices.
| Men’s contender | Approx outright price | Early read |
|---|---|---|
| Jannik Sinner | Around 1/2 to 4/7 | Right favourite, but short enough that draw and fitness matter |
| Novak Djokovic | Around 5/1 to 13/2 | Not priced like his peak, but grass record keeps him live |
| Alexander Zverev | Around 10/1 to 12/1 | Dangerous if the draw opens, but Slam conversion is the question |
| Jakub Mensik | Around 20/1 to 22/1 | Serve gives him upside, but grass record still needs proof |
| Ben Shelton | Around 20/1 to 22/1 | Big serve, fresh Stuttgart title, interesting each-way profile |
| Taylor Fritz | Around 20/1 to 25/1 | Strong grass tools, but price depends on draw placement |
| Jack Draper | Around 25/1 | Talent is clear, fitness and match sharpness are the issue |
| Women’s contender | Approx outright price | Early read |
|---|---|---|
| Aryna Sabalenka | Around 11/4 to 10/3 | Market leader, but still chasing first Wimbledon title |
| Elena Rybakina | Around 4/1 to 5/1 | Former champion with a serve built for grass |
| Iga Swiatek | Around 3/1 to 5/1 | Defending champion, but price varies a lot by book |
| Coco Gauff | Around 6/1 to 8/1 | Big tournament player, but grass still raises questions |
| Mirra Andreeva | Around 15/2 to 9/1 | Talent is obvious, but price may already be tight |
| Amanda Anisimova | Around 10/1 to 13/1 | Last year’s finalist, dangerous if serving well |
| Emma Raducanu | Around 14/1 to 15/1 | Public price risk, but grass results are improving |
Recent Wimbledon Winners
Past winners matter at Wimbledon because grass exposes weak movement, poor returning, and rushed decision-making more quickly than slower surfaces.
| Year | Men’s winner | Women’s winner |
|---|---|---|
| 2025 | Jannik Sinner | Iga Swiatek |
| 2024 | Carlos Alcaraz | Barbora Krejcikova |
| 2023 | Carlos Alcaraz | Marketa Vondrousova |
| 2022 | Novak Djokovic | Elena Rybakina |
| 2021 | Novak Djokovic | Ashleigh Barty |
The men’s list tells the story clearly. Wimbledon has mostly gone to players with elite all-court games, strong returns, and the nerve to handle long, pressure-packed sets.
The women’s list is more open. Rybakina, Vondrousova and Krejcikova all won at prices bigger than the usual top-of-market names. That makes the women’s market more interesting than the men’s.
Wimbledon Betting Trends That Matter
| Trend | Betting angle |
|---|---|
| Big servers hold more often on grass | Look at tie-breaks, overs and set handicaps in serve-heavy matches |
| Return quality still separates champions | Don’t back serve-only players deep into the draw without checking their return numbers |
| The draw matters more than reputation | A short-priced favourite can still be poor value with a brutal route |
| Women’s Wimbledon has produced surprise winners | Each-way prices can be more interesting than short favourites |
| Grass form is a smaller sample | Don’t overrate one warm-up result, but don’t ignore court fit either |
| Roof and weather can change conditions | Slower indoor-style conditions can help returners and cleaner ball-strikers |
Top Men’s Contenders
Jannik Sinner
Sinner is the obvious starting point.
He won Wimbledon in 2025, Carlos Alcaraz is out, and the current market has him as a heavy favourite. That all makes sense. His game works on grass because he takes the ball early, defends well enough on low bounce, and can turn neutral rallies into quick pressure.
The issue is price. At around odds-on, you need more than “he is the best player in the draw.” You need a clean route, no fitness doubts, and preferably a draw that keeps the biggest servers away until late.
Verdict: most likely winner, but not an automatic value bet.
Novak Djokovic
Djokovic is no longer priced like the old Djokovic, but Wimbledon is the one place where you should be careful writing him off.
His serve placement, return depth, movement economy and grass-court experience still give him a route through awkward matches. He does not need to overpower the draw. He needs to manage sets, avoid long early battles, and make opponents play the ugly points under pressure.
The risk is physical. If the draw forces too many long matches, the price can start to look less attractive.
Verdict: draw-dependent each-way or finalist angle.
Alexander Zverev
Zverev has the serve and backhand to be dangerous on grass, and Alcaraz’s absence helps the whole chasing pack.
The problem is Grand Slam trust. Zverev can look like a title contender for five rounds and still find a way to make the biggest moments complicated. That does not mean he cannot win Wimbledon. It means you need a price that pays for the risk.
Verdict: stronger as a semi-final or quarter winner bet than a confident outright.
Ben Shelton
Shelton is one of the more interesting outsiders because his serve gives him cheap holds, and his grass form has a fresh boost after winning Stuttgart.
That matters at Wimbledon. Big lefty serving can drag opponents into tie-breaks, and a player who can protect serve under pressure can make a mockery of rankings for two weeks.
The catch is return quality. Wimbledon champions usually do more than serve well. Shelton has the weapon to reach the second week, but he may need a favourable draw to go beyond that.
Verdict: good each-way or quarter angle if the draw opens.
Taylor Fritz
Fritz has a proven grass profile: big serve, flat ball-striking, and enough experience at Wimbledon to be respected.
He is rarely the most exciting outright pick, but that can be useful. If the market over-focuses on Sinner, Djokovic and the new names, Fritz can drift into a workable each-way price.
The concern is ceiling. He can beat plenty of good players on grass, but stringing together seven best-of-five wins is a different ask.
Verdict: shortlist after the draw, especially if placed away from Sinner.
Top Women’s Contenders
Aryna Sabalenka
Sabalenka is the market leader in several places, and the logic is easy to see. Power travels well on grass, and her serve plus first-strike forehand can rush almost anyone.
The question is whether the price fully respects her Wimbledon record. She is still chasing her first title at SW19, while others near the top of the betting have already won it.
Verdict: obvious contender, but not a must-bet favourite.
Elena Rybakina
Rybakina looks like the cleanest grass-court fit near the top of the women’s market.
She has already won Wimbledon, her serve is one of the biggest weapons in the draw, and grass rewards exactly the kind of short-point pressure she can create. A recent loss to Katie Boulter at Queen’s is not ideal, but it does not erase the wider case.
If Rybakina is around 4/1 or bigger, she is more interesting than Sabalenka at a shorter price.
Verdict: strongest early women’s outright lean.
Iga Swiatek
Swiatek changed the story around her grass-court game by winning Wimbledon in 2025.
Before that, she was often treated as a clay and hard-court force who was slightly more vulnerable on grass. That view now needs updating. She has already shown she can win the title, and her return game gives her a different path from the bigger servers.
The price is the key. If she is too close to Sabalenka, the value is thinner. If she drifts, she becomes very interesting.
Verdict: defendable outright pick if the price is closer to 5/1 than 3/1.
Coco Gauff
Gauff’s athleticism and defence make her dangerous in any Slam, but grass can still expose the serve and forehand under pressure.
That does not mean she is a bad bet. It means the draw matters. If she avoids the biggest first-strike hitters early, she can grow into the tournament and become a live threat by week two.
The market usually respects her name, so there may be more value in match markets than in outright markets.
Verdict: better for draw-based betting than blind outright backing.
Mirra Andreeva
Andreeva is priced like the market already expects the leap.
That is the problem. Her talent is immense, but Wimbledon can be brutal for young players because one bad service game or a nervy tiebreak can end a run quickly.
She is a proper contender, but the outright price may be ahead of the evidence.
Verdict: dangerous, but do not chase a short hype price.
5 Wimbledon Betting Angles for 2026
Grass rewards serving, but serving alone rarely wins Wimbledon.
Big servers can cover handicaps, force tie-breaks and upset better-ranked opponents. The problem comes later in the draw, where they still need to break elite players. If a player has poor return numbers, their outright ceiling is lower than their serve highlights suggest.
Useful markets: tie-break played, total games over, set handicap, player to win a set.
The women’s market has more room for price hunting.
Recent Wimbledon women’s winners include players who were not always the obvious top-of-market choice. That does not mean throwing darts at outsiders, but it does make each-way betting more useful.
Look for players with a strong first serve, clean front-foot ball-striking, and a draw that avoids awkward early grass specialists.
Useful markets: each-way outright, quarter winner, player to reach semi-final.
This matters more than usual in 2026 because Sinner is so short.
An odds-on favourite can still be a fair price if the path is clean. But if the draw puts big servers, dangerous floaters or Djokovic in the wrong section, the edge can vanish quickly.
For Sinner, especially, the question is not whether he can win. It is whether the price still works after the draw.
Useful markets: outright after draw, quarter winner, finalist market.
Tie-breaks are part of Wimbledon betting, especially in men’s matches between strong servers and average returners.
The best spots are not always the most famous names. Look for matches where both players hold serve often, return games are thin, and neither player has a strong break-point conversion edge.
Useful markets: tie-break in match, first set tie-break, over games, correct set score.
Wimbledon conditions can change fast.
A closed roof can make the match feel different: less wind, cleaner ball-striking, and sometimes a slower court feel. Outdoor wind and heat can help big servers and players who keep points short.
This matters most live. If conditions shift, prices can lag for a game or two.
Useful markets: live match winner, next set winner, total games, and break of serve markets.
Early Betfinder Picks for Wimbledon
These are early leans before the draw. Recheck prices, fitness and section placement before betting.
| Market | Early pick | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Men’s winner | Jannik Sinner | Defending champion, Alcaraz out, best overall profile |
| Men’s value angle | Ben Shelton each-way | Fresh grass title, huge serve, better price than the elite names |
| Men’s draw bet | Djokovic finalist or section winner | Still dangerous at Wimbledon if his route is not brutal |
| Women’s winner | Elena Rybakina | Former champion, serve built for grass, better price than Sabalenka |
| Women’s saver | Iga Swiatek if 5/1 or bigger | Defending champion with elite return game |
| Market angle | Tie-breaks in big-server matches | Grass and serving pressure make this more useful than guessing every match winner |
The cleanest outright pick is Sinner, but the price is short. The better betting question is whether there is enough value in the chasing pack.
For the women, Rybakina looks like the better price-versus-surface fit. Sabalenka may be the market leader, but Rybakina and Swiatek have already shown they can win Wimbledon.
Wimbledon 2026 Verdict
Sinner is the right men’s favourite, especially with Alcaraz missing the tournament. That does not make him a great bet at any price. If he stays odds-on after the draw, the better route may be a smaller stake on a bigger-priced server like Shelton, or a draw-based Djokovic bet.
The women’s market is more open. Rybakina is the first name to check at 4/1 or bigger because her serve and past Wimbledon title make the case easy. Swiatek is the one to watch if the market drifts too far from the defending champion.
The best Wimbledon bets may not be outright winners at all. Tie-breaks, set handicaps, quarter winners and live markets can offer cleaner angles once the draw and early court conditions are known.
FAQs
Wimbledon 2026 starts on Monday, 29 June and runs until Sunday, 12 July.
Jannik Sinner is the clear men’s favourite in early outright markets. Aryna Sabalenka, Elena Rybakina and Iga Swiatek are among the leading women’s contenders.
No. Carlos Alcaraz has withdrawn from Wimbledon 2026 because of a wrist injury.
Jannik Sinner won the men’s singles title in 2025. Iga Swiatek won the women’s singles title.
Outrights, each-way bets, set handicaps, tie-break markets, over games and live betting are all useful at Wimbledon. Grass often creates tight service sets, so match winner is not always the best value market.
Yes, but it needs context. Grass seasons are short, so one warm-up result can mislead. Look for repeatable traits instead: serve hold rate, return quality, movement on low bounce and performance in tie-breaks.
Tie-break bets can be useful in matches between strong servers and weaker returners. They are especially worth checking in men’s matches where both players hold serve regularly.
For short-priced outright favourites, it is usually better to wait for the draw. A tough section can make a short price look much worse. Bigger each-way prices can be taken earlier if you expect the market to shorten.