Luckily for you tennis buffs, there is no shortage of Wimbledon broadcasters. 

In the UK

BBC is traditionally your go-to place for Wimbledon live broadcasting, with BBC1 and BBC2 splitting the coverage. Consequently, you can catch the Wimbledon live streams on BBC iPlayer.

This year, the All England Club sets up Wimbledon Broadcasting Services to control what is shown on screen instead of occasionally arguing with BBC about airing some controversial moments. BBC preserves the broadcasting rights but saves on production, so it’s a win-win for both companies.

In the U.S.

ESPN holds the right to the entire Wimbledon coverage – telecasts and live streaming. Taped highlights can be found on ABC during weekend afternoons.

ESPN is also available in SlingTV and DirecTV Now packages in all U.S. locations, as well as in select U.S. areas covered by YouTube TV, Hulu Live TV, and PlayStation Vue. All these services are subscription-based and stream the same ESPN coverage of Wimbledon.

Worldwide

In Canada, you can watch Wimbledon on CTV and TSN, while Fox Sports and Channel 7 cover the tournament in Australia.

Eurosport broadcasts Wimbledon in Sweden, Iceland, Eastern Europe, and select Asian countries. BeIN Sports caters to French and Middle Eastern audiences.

If that’s your thing, betting services will live stream most Wimbledon matches, too.

Free live streams of Wimbledon

BBC iPlayer is your best shot at getting live coverage with the English commentary for free. The same is true if you are in Australia since Channel 7 airs Wimbledon for free.

If you are in the UK, sit back, tune in on BBC iPlayer and enjoy the spectacle. No stress.

If you have to travel, however, you’re in for a disappointment – BBC iPlayer is only available from the UK.

Each broadcaster and streaming service can only offer domestic coverage of Wimbledon because that’s how copyright restrictions work in big sports.

For many American tennis fans, it means you lose out on a large part of your premium ESPN or SlingTV content when you go on a vacation outside the U.S. Let alone if you are a digital nomad traveling the world – geo-restricted content is unavailable outside the US.

Enter VPN. A Virtual Private Network is a security tool. It encrypts your traffic and routes your connection through its servers in other countries. If we skip the jargon-heavy explanation of how VPNs work, here is the gist of it – a VPN allows you to emulate your location in other countries (virtually).

A VPN provider is a company running VPN servers across the world. Pick a VPN server in the UK if you need to emulate your location in England. Once connected, you browse the Internet with an IP address of that VPN server, not yours. That is called spoofing.

See where I’m heading? When you connect to a UK VPN server, you can live stream Wimbledon on BBC iPlayer – from anywhere in the world. Likewise, if you connect to a US VPN server, you can stream Wimbledon on ESPN.

You can be working in China, skiing in Iceland, or getting a tan somewhere in the Caribbean – connect to a VPN and stream Wimbledon like you would from your home country.

Additional benefits of VPNs

  • Bypass throttling – many people route all their traffic through a VPN even when they don’t need to change their IP address, but want to bypass the ISP-imposed throttling. Chances are your Internet Service Provider, too, caps your bandwidth when you stream movies, torrent, or play online games. With a VPN, your ISP throttling doesn’t work.
  • Bypass regional blackouts – some local sports tournaments are blacked out for select regions where local TV channels air the events. Even though this is not the case with Wimbledon in the US, except for some YouTube TV users, other sports events can be impossible to stream if you are in a blackout area. With a VPN, you can spoof into your neighbor state and bypass your blackout restriction.
  • Avoid monitoring and surveillance – your ISP monitors your online activities. When you browse through a VPN, your ISP can not see what you’re up to online because your traffic is encrypted.
  • Strengthen your security – VPN encryption makes your data undecipherable to hackers setting up honeypots and Man-in-the-Middle attacks.
  • Bypass firewalls and censorship – schools, offices, and entire countries restrict access to some areas of the Internet. You may find yourself unable to access sports streaming sites from your college campus or work. With a VPN, you can bypass any firewall and enjoy uncensored access to your Wimbledon live streams.
  1. Pick a VPN provider that meets your requirements. Check my suggestions for reputable VPN companies below.
  2. Buy a VPN subscription. Consider buying a short-term plan and testing your VPN while a money-back guarantee covers it.
  3. Install your VPN client and log in.
  4. Find the list of servers and connect to a server hosted in the country in which you need to spoof.
  5. To live stream Wimbledon via BBC iPlayer – connect to a UK server, via ESPN – to a US server. You get the point.
  6. Clean your browser’s cache, and go to your streaming provider’s website. You should be able to live stream Wimbledon 2022 now.

As you can see, I do not recommend any free VPNs. That’s because they don’t offer the speeds you need for HD streaming. Also, they either deploy weak or no encryption at all. It means your location – and possibly identity – are exposed. Finally, free VPNs tend to log your browsing activity and have vague privacy policies. So your best shot at live streaming Wimbledon in HD would be with a quality VPN.

ExpressVPN

Our top pick!
  • Always evades internet control in the PRC
  • Keeps ahead of the Netflix VPN detection algorithm
  • Benchmark tests show excellent speed

NordVPN

  • More US city locations than its rivals
  • Includes malware protection
  • No-logs policy

CyberGhost VPN

  • Precise locations
  • Very large VPN server network
  • Offers a 45-day money-back guarantee