
Wimbledon Hospitality Packages Explained: Which One Is Actually Worth It?
Wimbledon Hospitality Packages Explained: Which One Is Actually Worth It?
A plain-language guide to every Keith Prowse experience at The Championships — so you can spend your money on the right one.
Wimbledon · Hospitality · Packages · 6 min read
Wimbledon hospitality packages sell out in record time almost every year. Keith Prowse, the official partner since 1982, is already reporting that 2026 packages are 90% sold. So if you're reading this, the most important thing to know upfront is: act quickly. The window to get in is narrow.
But fast decisions are bad decisions when you're spending £1,000 to £5,000+ per person. So here is a plain-language breakdown of every option, what each one actually gives you, and who each one is genuinely right for.
What All Packages Have in Common
Before getting into the individual options, it's worth knowing what every Keith Prowse hospitality package includes regardless of tier: a guaranteed reserved seat on either Centre Court or No. 1 Court on the date of your choosing, access to your chosen hospitality facility throughout the day, and digital tickets via the official Wimbledon 2026 app. You are not getting a grounds pass with a nice lunch; you are getting a courtside seat at the most prestigious tennis tournament in the world, on a specific day you select. That is the core value proposition across all tiers.
Prices shown are per person and exclude transport and accommodation. All bookings are final and non-refundable.
The Lawn
The Lawn is the entry point into Keith Prowse hospitality and, for many attendees, the sweet spot. It is a modern, award-winning facility outside the grounds of the All England Club, a short walk from the gates. The format is relaxed and social rather than formally structured — it has an English-style garden with live music and a giant outdoor screen, plus a whisky and cigar bar that is particularly popular in the evenings.
The Lawn works well for groups who want to enjoy the day sociably as much as they want to watch tennis, and for anyone attending on a day when the weather is good enough to make the outdoor terrace worthwhile. It is the most energetic and informal of the Keith Prowse venues.
Best for: Corporate entertaining, groups who enjoy a social atmosphere, first-time hospitality attendees who want a relaxed introduction to the experience.
Le Gavroche at The Lawn
This is The Lawn with a significant upgrade to the food. Le Gavroche, one of the most storied names in British fine dining, curates the menu here, bringing a Michelin-standard culinary experience into the Wimbledon hospitality context. You get the same access to The Lawn's garden and outdoor facilities, plus a dining experience of a genuinely different calibre.
If food matters to you as much as tennis, this is the one to consider. The combination of The Lawn's social atmosphere with a serious restaurant-quality menu is genuinely compelling.
Best for: Food-focused guests, celebrations where dining quality matters, clients who will notice the difference between good food and great food.
The Treehouse
The Treehouse sits within The Lawn building and gives you access to an exclusive outdoor balcony — reached via a slide, which is either delightfully playful or alarming depending on your perspective. The food here is a roaming menu from two Michelin Star chef Tom Sellers, with interactive food displays and what the venue describes as an "olde-style sweet shoppe." The format is deliberately informal and slightly theatrical.
This is the most distinctive and personality-driven of the Keith Prowse options. It is not for everyone but for the right group — people who will appreciate the quirky presentation and find the slide genuinely fun rather than undignified — it delivers a memorable day that differs from anything else in the hospitality market.
Best for: Younger groups, clients with a sense of humour, anyone who wants a talking point beyond "we had a nice lunch at Wimbledon."
HerStory
HerStory was introduced in 2025 and represents something new in the Wimbledon hospitality landscape. It is specifically designed to celebrate women in sport, with programming, storytelling, and an experience built around the history of women's tennis at the All England Club. The specifics of the 2026 edition have not been fully published yet, but the format from 2025 centred on a premium dining experience combined with content and guest appearances that connected the day's tennis to the broader history of the women's game.
This is a genuinely interesting addition to the lineup and appeals to anyone who cares about tennis history and women's sport rather than just wanting a premium day out.
Best for: Anyone with a genuine connection to women's tennis, groups looking for a hospitality experience with a distinctive point of view, corporate events with a clear values alignment.
Rosewater Pavilion
The Rosewater Pavilion is inside the grounds, a few minutes' walk from Centre Court via Gate 9. That location distinction matters more than it might sound — you can leave the hospitality space, walk to your court seat, and return between matches without leaving the All England Club. The format is formal fine dining: a four-course a la carte menu celebrating British ingredients, white tablecloths, and the most premium of Keith Prowse's standard Centre Court seat allocation with adjacent seats guaranteed.
This is the closest equivalent to what people imagine when they picture "Wimbledon hospitality." It is the traditional, elegant version of the experience. If you are bringing guests for whom the formal setting and the proximity to Centre Court matter more than anything else, this is the correct choice.
Best for: High-end corporate entertaining, celebrating significant occasions, guests for whom the prestige of the Wimbledon setting is the primary draw.
Centre Court Skyview Suites
The Skyview Suites are private suites within the Centre Court stadium itself, offering a Wimbledon afternoon tea with hand-crafted cakes, pastries, scones and savouries. These are the most exclusive and most expensive option in the Keith Prowse lineup, and they sell out first. The suite format means privacy — you are not sharing a dining room with other hospitality guests, you are in your own space overlooking the court.
For the right group, this is the pinnacle. The combination of private space, premium catering, and the best seat in the house is hard to improve upon. The price reflects that.
Best for: The most senior client entertainment, very small groups who value privacy and exclusivity above all else, genuinely landmark occasions.
The One Question Worth Asking Before You Book
The decision between these packages usually comes down to one thing: what is the purpose of the day? If you are entertaining clients for whom the quality of food and the formality of the setting signals respect, Rosewater Pavilion or Le Gavroche. If you want a memorable social experience that generates conversation, The Treehouse or The Lawn. If you want the ultimate prestige and complete privacy, the Skyview Suites.
What you should not do is default to the most expensive option on the assumption that more expensive equals better. The Treehouse at a mid-tier price point might deliver a more genuinely memorable day for the right group than a Skyview Suite at three times the price. Know who you're bringing and match the experience to them.
We've curated a selection of Keith Prowse Wimbledon packages across all tiers and available dates. Browse what's still available for 2026 — but move quickly. [View Wimbledon hospitality packages →]
About the Author
Akshay Navaladi
Contributing writer to The Journal at Experience Tennis.
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