
A tennis season packs four Grand Slams, nine ATP Masters 1000 events, ten WTA 1000 events and two year-end Finals into eleven months across three surfaces. Tennis tickets sell in very different ways depending on which of those you want, and the seats for the marquee sessions move fast. This page tracks what is on, what is coming and how to secure a seat, with a 150% guarantee behind every order.
Get notified for upcoming events
Thousands trust 1BoxOffice
The 2026 season is already past its midpoint. Carlos Alcaraz won the Australian Open in Melbourne and completed the career Grand Slam, Alexander Zverev took his first major on the Paris clay at Roland Garros and the grass-court summer has run its course at Wimbledon. The demand now sits with the North American hard-court swing and the US Open in New York, then the autumn events in Asia and the season Finals.
Tennis concentrates its biggest moments into a handful of sessions. A Grand Slam runs for two weeks, but the finals weekend and the show court night sessions are what most buyers chase, and supply through direct channels is capped. Ballot allocations, member windows and hospitality holds absorb much of the prime seating before general sale, which is why the resale market matters for anyone who missed the first release. Add the pull of the leading names, from Alcaraz and Jannik Sinner to Coco Gauff and Iga Swiatek, and the best seats clear quickly.
The professional calendar spans January to November across hard, clay and grass. The four Grand Slams anchor the year, and the tour events between them fill almost every remaining week.
With the grass season over, these are the events drawing ticket demand for the rest of 2026.
The Grand Slams release much of their seating through public ballots, member schemes and package deals rather than a simple open sale. Wimbledon runs a public ballot months ahead, Roland Garros and the Australian Open sell in timed waves and the US Open mixes presales with general release. If you miss those windows, or you want a specific day once the draw is known, the resale market is the practical route. Every listing here shows the seat detail and price before you commit, so you can compare a grounds pass against a reserved show court seat on like terms.
Tennis has no single flat price. Four factors move it more than any others.
Resale prices shift as demand and availability change closer to each tournament, so early booking usually gives the widest choice of seat and price.
The Gulf is now a fixed part of the tennis year, which puts major events within a short trip for anyone in the region. The Dubai Duty Free Tennis Championships and the Qatar Open in Doha bring WTA 1000 and ATP fields to the region across February. The season then returns to the Gulf at its close, with the WTA Finals held in Riyadh and the Next Gen ATP Finals in Jeddah.
Grand Slam grounds are built around one main stadium and several show courts, with a wider spread of outer courts for the early rounds. A grounds pass lets you move between the outer courts and is the strongest value in the opening days, when many leading players feature away from the main arena. A reserved ticket ties you to a specific court and seat, which is what you want once the draw narrows and play reaches the show courts. At tour events below the majors, most venues are a single main stadium with a few side courts, so one ticket usually covers the full site for that session.
Securing your seats takes a few minutes. Follow this quick path:
Step1
Choose your tournament
Open the tennis listings or a tournament page such as Wimbledon and pick the event you want.
Step2
Pick your session
Select the day or session you want to attend, from first-week play to the finals weekend.
Step3
Compare the categories
Weigh up the options on offer, from grounds passes to show court and hospitality seats.
Step4
Check the seat detail
Confirm the seat location, quantity and price shown on each listing before you proceed.
Step5
Create your account
Register and add your chosen tickets to the basket.
Step6
Enter your details
Provide your delivery and contact information at checkout.
Step7
Pay securely
Complete payment through the encrypted SSL checkout.
Step8
Track your order
Follow progress any time through track order, with delivery and the 150% guarantee confirmed.
The US Open runs from 31 August to 13 September 2026, and seats for its day and night sessions are listed here as they become available.
A grounds pass gives access to the outer courts and general areas at a tournament but not a reserved seat on the main show court.
No, the resale market lets you buy seats for a specific day without entering a ballot or holding a membership.
The Dubai Duty Free Tennis Championships and the Qatar Open run in February, while the WTA Finals in Riyadh and the Next Gen ATP Finals in Jeddah close the season.
Yes, premium seating with dining and lounge access is offered at the major tournaments and listed as a separate category.
Booking early usually gives the widest choice of seat and price, since resale availability tightens as each tournament approaches.
Yes, the 150% guarantee covers every tennis order in the same way as any other event on 1BoxOffice.
Tournament dates and formats sourced from the published 2026 ATP and WTA tour calendars.
Our benefits
We provide our customers with top-tier resources, infrastructure and support.
Join NowWe have been online helping fans for more than 20+ years.
We use high levels of data encryption here and do not share your data with any third party vendors!
All tickets are guaranteed to be delivered on time so you don’t miss the events!
Your tickets are guaranteed no matter what.
Providing your audience with a secure and reliable experience.
Ensuring clear communication and collaboration.