Gentlemen's singles •
Carlos Alcaraz defeated
Novak Djokovic, 6–2, 6–2, 7–6(7–4) The Gentlemen's singles event began on 1 July with the first of seven total rounds. Thirty-two players were seeded. Of those seeded players, eight were defeated in the first round, notably No. 6
Andrey Rublev, No. 17
Félix Auger-Aliassime, and No. 18
Sebastián Báez.
Hubert Hurkacz,
Casper Ruud and
Stefanos Tsitsipas were the highest of the eight seeded players to exit in the second round, and a further three seeded players were defeated in the third round, with them being No. 22
Alexander Bublik, No. 23
Alejandro Tabilo, and No. 29
Frances Tiafoe.
Giovanni Mpetshi Perricard became the first lucky loser to reach the fourth round at Wimbledon since
Dick Norman in
1995.
Alexander Zverev,
Grigor Dimitrov,
Ben Shelton were the highest of the five seeded players who were defeated in the Round of 16. In the quarterfinals, Fifth seed
Daniil Medvedev defeated Number 1 seed
Jannik Sinner in five sets to snap his five match losing streak against Sinner. Defending champion
Carlos Alcaraz won his match against No. 12
Tommy Paul in four sets after losing the opening set.
Alex de Minaur withdrew from his quarterfinals match due to a hip injury. As a result of this,
Novak Djokovic received a walkover into the semifinals. 25th seed
Lorenzo Musetti reached his first ever career major semifinals after winning against 13th seed
Taylor Fritz. Their match marked the 37th five-set match at the tournament, the most at any edition of a major in the
Open Era. The first semifinal was played between fifth seed Medvedev and third seed Alcaraz. Medvedev won the first set in a tie-breaker, but the Spaniard fought back and won the match in four sets and reached his second consecutive Wimbledon final. In the second semifinal, Djokovic defeated Musetti in straight sets to guarantee a rematch of the previous year's
final. In the final match, Alcaraz broke Djokovic's serve twice (in the very first game of the match and in the 5th game) to take the set, 6–2 in his favour. The Third seed again broke Second seed's serve in the 1st and 7th game of the second set to win this too with the score line of 6–2. Djokovic made some recovery and continued to hold his serve until the 9th game of the third set when the Spaniard broke his serve and had the opportunity to serve for the match. In the 10th game, Alcaraz at one point had three championship points, however Djokovic saved all of them and ending up breaking the third seed's serve for the first time in the match. Both the players held their next service games and forced the set to go to a tie-break. In the end, Carlos Alcaraz won the tie-breaker, 7–4 and won the set, match and the championship. It was his second Wimbledon title and fourth
major title overall. He also became the sixth (and youngest) man in the
Open Era to complete the
Channel Slam.
Ladies' singles •
Barbora Krejčíková defeated
Jasmine Paolini, 6–2, 2–6, 6–4 The Ladies' singles event began on 1 July with the first of seven total rounds. Thirty-two players were seeded. She lost to
Jéssica Bouzas Maneiro. This marked only the second time in the
Open Era that the reigning
Wimbledon women's singles champion lost in the first round, after
Steffi Graf lost to
Lori McNeil in
1994. Seven more seeded players fell in the second round, among them No. 5
Jessica Pegula, No. 23
Caroline Garcia and No. 25
Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova. Eight seeded players lost their third round, most notable of them being singles'
world No. 1,
Iga Świątek. She lost to
Yulia Putintseva. This also ended Świątek's 21-match winning streak since the
Mutua Madrid Open. Two-times defending finalist tenth seed
Ons Jabeur lost her third round match to previous year's semifinalist, No. 21
Elina Svitolina. 12th seed
Madison Keys was forced to retire from her fourth-round match after a hamstring injury during the match. The American was at one moment leading 5–2 in the final set and had served for match twice. Three other seeded players lost their pre-quarterfinal matches including the second seeded
Coco Gauff. Last remaining British player in either of the main singles draw, wildcard
Emma Raducanu also lost her fourth round match. She lost to qualifier
Lulu Sun. Sun became the first woman representing
New Zealand to reach the fourth round of a
major since
Belinda Cordwell at the
1989 Australian Open, and the first to reach the quarterfinals of Wimbledon in the Open Era. She is also the first qualifier to reach the Wimbledon quarterfinals since
Kaia Kanepi in
2010. Sun and
Donna Vekić were the only two unseeded players to reach the quarterfinals. They faced off in the first quarterfinal which was won by Vekić after losing the first set. Vekić is the first Croatian woman to reach the semifinals of the Wimbledon since
Mirjana Lučić-Baroni in
1999. Seventh seed
Jasmine Paolini defeated 17th seed
Emma Navarro in straight sets to become the first Italian woman to reach the semifinals in the Open Era.
2022 champion and fourth seeded,
Elena Rybakina won in straight sets against Svitolina, losing just five games in the process. 31st seed
Barbora Krejčíková achieved victory against 13th seed
Jeļena Ostapenko. In the first semifinal, Vekić met Paolini. Vekić started off strong by breaking Paolini's serve twice and won four consecutive games to win the first set 6–2. Paolini won the second of two break points, having saved three on her own serve, and took the second set 6–4. In the third set, both the Italian and the Croatian broke each other's serve twice before taking it to the super tie-breaker. The 7th seed won the tie-breaker 10–8 to reach second consecutive Grand Slam final. She also become the first woman to reach back-to-back
French Open and Wimbledon finals since
Serena Williams in 2016 and the first Italian woman in the Open Era to reach the final of two different Grand Slams. In the second semifinal match, Elena Rybakina played against Barbora Krejčíková. In the first set, Rybakina surged ahead with a 4–0 lead. During her opponent's service games, she had break points in all four instances, successfully converting three of them. In the second set, the Czech player broke Kazakh player's serve in the 6th game of the set to win the set, 6–3. Neither woman had a break point in the third set until 3–3, when the 31st seed broke former champion's serve to take the lead in the deciding set. Krejčíková won the set 6–4 to reach her first Grand Slam final since winning the
French Open three years ago. Rybakina's loss also guaranteed a first-time Wimbledon champion for the seventh consecutive edition. In the final match, Barbora Krejčíková got an early lead after she broke Paolini's serve on the first game of the first set. She again broke No. 7's serve in the fifth game to win the first set, 6–2. Paolini bounced back in the second set. She won the first three games of the set. The Italian end up winning the set, 6–2 in her favour. The third set was on level until the Czech player got her first break points of the set and Paolini double-faulted to give away a 4–3 lead. Krejčíková held on to that lead and was serving for the match. Even though the Italian saved two championship points, the 31st seed was finally able to convert the third championship point to win the game, set, match and the tournament. It was Krejčíková's second
major singles title.
Gentlemen's doubles •
Harri Heliövaara /
Henry Patten defeated
Max Purcell /
Jordan Thompson, 6–7(7–9), 7–6(10–8), 7–6(11–9) The Gentlemen's doubles event began on 3 July with the first of six total rounds. Sixteen teams were seeded. Former singles
ATP world No. 1 player,
Andy Murray played alongside his brother
Jamie Murray as the wildcards. They lost their first round match against the Australian duo of
Rinky Hijikata and
John Peers in the straight sets. This was Andy Murray's last match at the Wimbledon. Five seeded teams lost in the second round, including 2 of the top 3 teams, them being No. 2
Rohan Bopanna and
Matthew Ebden and No. 3
Rajeev Ram and
Joe Salisbury. In third round, only two seeded teams lost, them being No. 12
Nathaniel Lammons/
Jackson Withrow and No.16
Sadio Doumbia/
Fabien Reboul. In the quarterfinals, the top-seeded pair of
Marcel Granollers and
Horacio Zeballos defeated 8th seeds
Kevin Krawietz and
Tim Pütz in straight sets. 15th seeds
Max Purcell and
Jordan Thompson won against No. 11 pair of
Máximo González and
Andrés Molteni. Unseeded pair of
Harri Heliövaara and
Henry Patten upset fourth seeds
Marcelo Arévalo and
Mate Pavić. 9th seeded pair of
Neal Skupski (also the defending champion) and
Michael Venus defeated unseeded pair of
Constantin Frantzen and
Hendrik Jebens. In the Semifinals,
2022 champion Purcell and Thompson defeated Granollers and Zeballos. while Heliövaara and Patten ousted the defending champion Skupski and his partner Venus. Heliövaara and Patten defeated Purcell and Thompson in the final. They saved three championship points en route to both players' first
major title in men's doubles. Heliövaara became the first Finnish man to lift the doubles trophy at the All England Club. Heliövaara and Patten became the first unseeded team to win the title since
Vasek Pospisil and
Jack Sock in
2014. Patten becomes only the third British man of the
Open era – alongside
Jonathan Marray in
2012 and Neal Skupski in
2023 – to lift the Wimbledon doubles trophy.
Ladies' doubles •
Kateřina Siniaková /
Taylor Townsend defeated
Gabriela Dabrowski /
Erin Routliffe, 7–6(7–5), 7–6(7–1) The Ladies' doubles event began on 3 July with the first of six total rounds. Sixteen teams were seeded. The second round saw the loss of three seeded pairs including third seeds
Nicole Melichar-Martinez/
Ellen Perez. A further four pairs fell in the third round; the highest of them being No. 5
Sara Errani and
Jasmine Paolini.
Bethanie Mattek-Sands, who was vying for a
career Grand Slam also lost in the third round. Seven seeded pairs qualified for the quarterfinals alongside one unseeded pair of
Tímea Babos and
Nadiia Kichenok. In the quarterfinals, First seeded par of
Hsieh Su-wei (also the defending champion) and
Elise Mertens defeated 11th seeds
Coco Gauff and
Jessica Pegula in straight sets, losing just three games. The pair of Babos and Kichenok lost to seventh seeds
Caroline Dolehide and
Desirae Krawczyk. Former two-time Wimbledon champion,
Kateřina Siniaková and her partner
Taylor Townsend won against 9th seeded pair of
Lyudmyla Kichenok and
Jeļena Ostapenko. Meanwhile, Siniaková's former partners
Barbora Krejčíková and
Laura Siegemund lost to the second seeds
Gabriela Dabrowski and
Erin Routliffe. In the first semifinal, Siniaková and Townsend defeated the number one seeds Hsieh Su-wei and Elise Mertens after losing the first set. This marked the end to the Hsieh's 22 match winning streak at Wimbledon, dating back to the
2019 edition. Dolehide and Krawczyk lost their semifinal match in straight sets to Dabrowski and Routliffe. By reaching the final, Erin Routliffe will attain the
WTA No. 1 doubles ranking at the end of the tournament. Mertens, Siniaková, and
Laura Siegemund were also in contention for the No. 1 ranking at the beginning of the tournament. Siniaková and Townsend defeated Dabrowski and Routliffe in the final. It was the first
major women's doubles title for Townsend and ninth (and third Wimbledon title) for Siniaková, the latter of whom completed the
Channel Slam (having won the
French Open partnering
Coco Gauff).
Mixed doubles •
Jan Zieliński /
Hsieh Su-wei defeated
Santiago González /
Giuliana Olmos, 6–4, 6–2 The Mixed doubles event began on 8 July with the first of five total rounds. Eight teams were seeded. Four out of eight seeded teams lost in the first round including the top seeded pair of
Matthew Ebden and
Ellen Perez. Of the remaining four only one didn't advance into the quarterfinals, viz. the third seeds and defending champions,
Mate Pavić and
Lyudmyla Kichenok. They withdrew from their second-round match due to Kichenok's illness. Two times former champions,
Desirae Krawczyk and
Neal Skupski were the only pair to lose their quarterfinals match. In the semifinals,
Santiago González and
Giuliana Olmos defeated the pair of
Ulrikke Eikeri and
Máximo González in straight sets. By doing so, they became the first Mexican duo to reach the mixed doubles final at Wimbledon. Olmos also became the first Mexican woman finalist in the
Open Era at the All England Club at the same event. In the other semifinal, 7th seeded pair of
Jan Zieliński and
Hsieh Su-wei defeated second seeds
Michael Venus and
Erin Routliffe to reach their second major final of the season. Zieliński and Hsieh defeated González and Olmos in the final to win the title. It was their second major mixed-doubles title of the year and their career as well.
Wheelchair gentlemen's singles •
Alfie Hewett defeated
Martín de la Puente 6–2, 6–3 The Wheelchair gentlemen's singles event began on 9 July with the Round of 16. The field was composed of 16 player with 4 seeded players. In the semifinals, the first seeded and defending champion
Tokito Oda lost to
Martín de la Puente. Meanwhile,
Alfie Hewett defeated third seeded
Gustavo Fernández in three sets. Hewett defeated the Spaniard in straight sets to win his ninth
major title and complete his
career Grand Slam.
Wheelchair ladies' singles •
Diede de Groot defeated
Aniek van Koot, 6–4, 6–4 The Wheelchair ladies' singles event began on 9 July with the Round of 16. The field was composed of 16 player with 4 seeded players. All seeded players won their first round matches. Third seed and previous year's finalist
Jiske Griffioen lost in the quarterfinals, while second seed
Yui Kamiji lost in the semifinals. Three-time defending champion
Diede de Groot defeated
Aniek van Koot in the final to win her 15th consecutive
major title and record-extending 23rd overall.
Wheelchair quad singles •
Niels Vink defeated
Sam Schröder, 7–6(7–4), 6–4 The wheelchair quad singles tournament began on 10 July with the quarterfinal round. The field was composed of eight players;
Sam Schröder and defending champion
Niels Vink received the top two seeds and the other six players were unseeded. Niels Vink successfully defended his title by winning the final match against Sam Schröder.
Wheelchair gentlemen's doubles •
Alfie Hewett /
Gordon Reid defeated
Takuya Miki /
Tokito Oda, 6–4, 7–6(7–2) The wheelchair gentlemen's doubles competition featured the same 16 players that contested the singles event. Two of the eight pairs were seeded: defending champions
Alfie Hewett and
Gordon Reid received the top seed, and the second seed went to
Takuya Miki and
Tokito Oda. Both the seeded teams won their both the quarterfinals, and semifinals. Defending champions Hewett and Reid won the title by defeating the all Japanese duo in the final.
Wheelchair ladies' doubles •
Yui Kamiji /
Kgothatso Montjane defeated
Diede de Groot /
Jiske Griffioen, 6–4, 6–4 As with the gentlemen's competition, the wheelchair ladies' doubles event featured the same 16 players as in the singles event. Two of the eight pairs were seeded:
Yui Kamiji and
Kgothatso Montjane received the top seed, and the second seed went to the defending champions
Diede de Groot and
Jiske Griffioen. Both these seeds won their quarterfinal and semifinal matches. Kamiji and Montjane won the championship by defeating the defending champions in the final.
Wheelchair quad doubles •
Sam Schröder /
Niels Vink defeated
Andy Lapthorne /
Guy Sasson, 3–6, 7–6(7–3), 6–3 The wheelchair quad doubles tournament began on 12 July with the semifinal round. The field was composed of four pairs, consisting of eight players that played the singles event.
Boys' singles •
Nicolai Budkov Kjær defeated
Mees Röttgering, 6–3, 6–3 Of the sixteen seeded players, only four made it through the first three rounds and into the quarterfinals: No. 1
Kaylan Bigun, No. 2
Nicolai Budkov Kjær, No. 10
Maxim Mrva and No. 16
Théo Papamalamis. Mrva won the third round against Mark Ceban, who was the previous year's 14&Under champion at Wimbledon. Bigun and Mrva lost in the quarterfinals. In the semifinals, unseeded Mees Röttgering won against 16th seed Papamalamis in straight sets, while second seed Budkov Kjær won his match against unseeded Naoya Honda in straight sets, losing just five games in he process. Nicolai Budkov Kjær won the championship by emerging victorious against his Dutch opponent in straight sets, becoming the first Norwegian to win a junior major singles title.
Girls' singles •
Renáta Jamrichová defeated
Emerson Jones, 6–3, 6–4 Of the sixteen seeded players, only five made it through the first three rounds and into the quarterfinals. Two seeded players lost in the quarterfinals: No. 10 Jeline Vandromme and No. 15 Teodora Kostović. In the semifinals, top seed
Renáta Jamrichová ousted unseeded
Vendula Valdmannová in straight sets, losing just two games. Third seed
Emerson Jones defeated sixth seed
Iva Jovic to reach the final. The final between Jamrichová and Jones will be a rematch of their
Australian Open final earlier in the year. Renáta Jamrichová won her second junior grand slam title of the year by defeating Jones in the final.
Boys' doubles •
Alexander Razeghi /
Max Schönhaus defeated Jan Klimas /
Jan Kumstát, 7–6(7–1), 6–4 Of the eight pairs that were seeded at the start of the tournament, only two made it into the semifinals. However, both pairs lost their semifinal matches to two unseeded pairs.
Alexander Razeghi and
Max Schönhaus won the title by winning the final match in straight sets.
Girls' doubles •
Tyra Caterina Grant /
Iva Jovic defeated
Mika Stojsavljevic /
Mingge Xu, 7–5, 4–6, [10–8] Of the eight pairs that were seeded at the start of the tournament, three qualified for the semifinal round. In the semifinals, seventh seeds
Mika Stojsavljevic and
Mingge Xu won by ousting the unseeded pair of Julie Paštiková and
Julia Stusek, while the sixth seeded pair of
Emerson Jones and
Vittoria Paganetti were knocked out by the second seeds,
Tyra Caterina Grant and
Iva Jovic. Grant and Jovic emerged as the winners in the final.
Boys' 14&U singles •
Takahiro Kawaguchi defeated Jordan Lee, 6–2, 6–2 Boys 14&Under events was played in the
Round-robin format, under which 16 players were divided into four groups with group leaders advancing into the semifinals. Takahiro Kawaguchi and Jordan Lee reached the final by defeating Stan Put and Dongjae Kim in the semifinals, respectively.
Girls' 14&U singles •
Jana Kovačková defeated Keisija Bērziņa, 5–7, 6–3, [10–2] Girls 14&Under events was played in the
Round-robin format, under which 16 players were divided into four groups with group leaders advancing into the semifinals.
Gentlemen's invitation doubles •
Bob Bryan /
Mike Bryan defeated
Kevin Anderson /
Lleyton Hewitt, 6–1, 6–4 Sixteen former professional tennis players competed in a round-robin stage in pairs of two distributed over two groups. The winners of each group faced each other in the final. Two-time defending champions, Clijsters and Hingis won the title by defeating the all Australian duo in straight sets.
Mixed invitation doubles •
Mark Woodforde /
Dominika Cibulková defeated
Nenad Zimonjić /
Barbara Schett 6–3, 6–2 Sixteen former professional tennis players competed in a round-robin stage in pairs of two distributed over two groups. The winners of each group faced each other in the final. At the conclusion of the group stage,
Mark Woodforde and
Dominika Cibulková from Group A,
Nenad Zimonjić and
Barbara Schett from group B, advanced into the final, respectively. Woodforde and Cibulková claimed the title by winning the final. == Champions ==