All eyes of the tennis world will be fixated on Wimbledon for the third Grand Slam of the tennis calendar in 2025.
To say Wimbledon has been unpredictable in the women's singles would be an understatement with the previous seven editions of the prestigious tournament being won by seven different first-time winners.
Czechia's Barbora Krejčíková was the latest to add her name to the illustrious roll of honour after she defeated Jasmine Paolini in the 2024 final.
We've taken a look at the odds for the 2025 Wimbledon women's singles tournament.
(Odds will display when market is available).
Aryna Sabalenka heads into Wimbledon as the favourite despite the anguish of her loss to Coco Gauff in the French Open final.
The world number one has demonstrated impressive resilience throughout the years and her consistency amongst the current crop of elite women's players is unparalleled; in the Belarusian's last 10 Grand Slams she has reached the semi-finals nine times, going on to win twice in Australia and once at the US Open.
Enduring successive Grand Slam final heartaches after being beaten by Madison Keys in Melbourne before becoming the architect of her own downfall against Gauff in Paris, Sabalenka has certainly been knocking on the door of her fourth Grand Slam title.
Sabelenka's powerful style is imposing on any surface, but she will need to eradicate the overload of unforced errors which ultimately undermined her in the French Open showpiece.
The 2022 Wimbledon champion, Elena Rybakina is at her strongest during the grass-court season.
Across the previous six years the Kazakhstani boasts a 75% win record on Tour-level grass events and following a year which was disrupted by injury and illness, Rybakina appears to have rediscovered her groove as she claimed her first WTA title in 13 months in April.
Her progress at the French Open was halted by clay-court specialist Iga Swiatek but successive fourth round appearances in Grand Slams suggest Rybakina can emerge as a serious contender at her favoured major.
Gauff heads into Wimbledon as a two-time defending champion after a French Open success which reaffirmed her status as one of the best - if not the best - defensive players in the world.
Possessing a potent serve, clinical two-handed backhand and supreme positioning and intelligence, Gauff continues to develop and at 21, it feels she is still quite a distance from maximising her potential.
Wimbledon hasn't been kind to the American in the past - she has not advanced beyond the fourth round in five attempts - but on current form, she appears primed to deliver her best performance yet.
The clay-court queen was dethroned in the 2025 French Open as Iga Swiatek was outclassed by Aryna Sabalenka in the semi-finals in Paris.
Despite successes in Rome and Madrid earlier in the season, Swiatek's elimination in the French Open final four has resulted in the former world number one dropping to seventh in the world rankings and the Pole's previous struggles on grass are well-documented.
Swiatek has notoriously struggled to replicate her form on the dirt into the grass-court season and her best showing at Wimbledon is a quarter-final appearance, which she achieved in 2023.
Mirra Andreeva is a player with a big future and yet this prodigious talent has proved she is capable of defeating some of the world's best in the present.
The Russian star announced herself to the tennis world at the French Open last year when, as an unseeded outsider, she beat a pair of Belarusian icons in Victoria Azarenka and Sabalenka to reach the semi-finals.
Proving she was no one-hit wonder, Andreeva has bagged a pair of WTA 1000 titles in 2025 - in Dubai and Indian Wells - and has now cemented a place in the world top 10, the youngest to do so since 2007.
Andreeva endured a disappointing Wimbledon outing last year, losing in the first round to Brenda Fruhvirtová in three sets, and she will be eager to ensure her stay in SW19 isn't so brief on this occasion.
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All odds displayed on this page were correct at the time of writing and are subject to withdrawal or change at any time.