A new name joins the most storied list in women’s sports on Saturday: the Wimbledon women’s singles champions, a roll call that runs from Billie Jean King through Navratilova’s untouchable nine titles, the Williams era, and last year’s astonishing double-bagel final. This year’s edition arrives with a story ready-made — Karolína Muchová reached the final by surviving Coco Gauff in a semifinal classic that ended 12-10 in a deciding tiebreak.
Here is every Open Era champion, the records inside the list, and what Saturday adds to it.
The chart below covers all 57 Open Era champions, the all-time title leaders, and the list’s greatest quirks. Take a look, then we’ll break it all down.
Wimbledon
Wimbledon women’s champions: every winner since 1968
9
Navratilova: the record
6
straight titles: also Navratilova
SAT
the next name is crowned
Every Open Era champion (1968-2025)
| Year |
Champion |
Note |
| 2025 |
Iga Świątek |
d. Anisimova 6-0, 6-0: the first double-bagel major final since 1988 |
| 2024 |
Barbora Krejčíková |
Channeled her late mentor Jana Novotná, the 1998 champion |
| 2023 |
Markéta Vondroušová |
The first UNSEEDED women’s champion in Wimbledon history |
| 2022 |
Elena Rybakina |
Power tennis at 23 |
| 2021 |
Ash Barty |
Retired eight months later as world No. 1 |
| 2019 |
Simona Halep |
Held Serena to 4 games in the final |
| 2018 |
Angelique Kerber |
|
| 2017 |
Garbiñe Muguruza |
|
| 2016 |
Serena Williams |
Her 7th, tying Graf’s Open Era count |
| 2015 |
Serena Williams |
The ‘Serena Slam’ completed |
| 2014 |
Petra Kvitová |
|
| 2013 |
Marion Bartoli |
Retired 40 days later |
| 2012 |
Serena Williams |
|
| 2011 |
Petra Kvitová |
|
| 2010 |
Serena Williams |
|
| 2009 |
Serena Williams |
Beat Venus in the final |
| 2008 |
Venus Williams |
Beat Serena in the final: her 5th title |
| 2007 |
Venus Williams |
|
| 2006 |
Amélie Mauresmo |
|
| 2005 |
Venus Williams |
Saved match point vs. Davenport: longest women’s final ever |
| 2004 |
Maria Sharapova |
A 17-year-old stunned Serena |
| 2003 |
Serena Williams |
|
| 2002 |
Serena Williams |
The first of the sister finals era |
| 2001 |
Venus Williams |
|
| 2000 |
Venus Williams |
The first of her five |
| 1999 |
Lindsay Davenport |
|
| 1998 |
Jana Novotná |
Redemption, five years after the famous tears |
| 1997 |
Martina Hingis |
16 years old |
| 1996 |
Steffi Graf |
Her 7th and final Wimbledon |
| 1995 |
Steffi Graf |
|
| 1994 |
Conchita Martínez |
Ended Navratilova’s last final run |
| 1993 |
Steffi Graf |
|
| 1992 |
Steffi Graf |
|
| 1991 |
Steffi Graf |
|
| 1990 |
Martina Navratilova |
THE RECORD: her 9th title, passing Helen Wills Moody |
| 1989 |
Steffi Graf |
|
| 1988 |
Steffi Graf |
Part of the Golden Slam year |
| 1987 |
Martina Navratilova |
6th straight: a record streak |
| 1986 |
Martina Navratilova |
|
| 1985 |
Martina Navratilova |
|
| 1984 |
Martina Navratilova |
|
| 1983 |
Martina Navratilova |
|
| 1982 |
Martina Navratilova |
|
| 1981 |
Chris Evert Lloyd |
|
| 1980 |
Evonne Goolagong Cawley |
The last mother to win it for 44+ years |
| 1979 |
Martina Navratilova |
|
| 1978 |
Martina Navratilova |
Her first |
| 1977 |
Virginia Wade |
Won it in the Queen’s Silver Jubilee year, at the 100th championships |
| 1976 |
Chris Evert |
|
| 1975 |
Billie Jean King |
Her 6th and final Wimbledon singles title |
| 1974 |
Chris Evert |
Her first |
| 1973 |
Billie Jean King |
The year of her Battle of the Sexes win |
| 1972 |
Billie Jean King |
|
| 1971 |
Evonne Goolagong |
19 years old |
| 1970 |
Margaret Court |
Beat King 14-12, 11-9: pre-tiebreak epic |
| 1969 |
Ann Jones |
|
| 1968 |
Billie Jean King |
The first Open Era champion |
The 2020 championships were cancelled (the only interruption since WWII). The 2026 champion is crowned Saturday and gets the top row of this table the same evening.
The all-time title leaders
| 9 — Martina Navratilova |
Including SIX straight (1982-87): both records may be permanent |
| 7 — Steffi Graf |
1988-1996, incl. the Golden Slam year |
| 7 — Serena Williams |
Across 14 years (2002-2016) |
| 6 — Billie Jean King |
Spanning both eras (1966-1975) |
| 5 — Venus Williams |
2000-2008, the grass-court standard of her generation |
Since Serena’s last title in 2016, no woman has repeated: nine different champions in the last nine completed editions — the most open era the event has ever had.
Saturday’s final: what’s at stake
| Karolína Muchová |
Survived Gauff 6-2, 1-6, 7-6 (12-10) in an instant-classic semifinal; 11-1 on grass this season |
| The streak on the line |
A tenth different champion in ten editions would extend the most open run in Wimbledon history |
| The Czech thread |
A Muchová win would make it three Czech champions in four years (Vondroušová, Krejčíková) |
The champion’s name is added to the honor board in the Centre Court clubhouse within the hour — and to the table above the same evening.
Champions via AELTC records. The 2026 final is Saturday, July 11 on Centre Court; the new champion’s row is added that evening. Current as of July 10, 2026.
Navratilova’s Nine, and the Records That May Never Move
Every list in tennis bends around one name here. Martina Navratilova won Wimbledon nine times, six of them consecutively from 1982 to 1987, and finished her singles chapter with the 1990 title that passed Helen Wills Moody’s pre-war record of eight, a mark that had stood for 52 years and whose successor has now stood for 36. The chasing pack tells you the size of it: Steffi Graf’s seven titles include the 1988 Golden Slam season; Serena Williams needed fourteen years of dominance to also reach seven; Venus Williams owned an era completely and got five. Modern tennis makes nine borderline unimaginable, deeper fields, physical grass-season demands, and the sport’s new parity, which is the list’s other headline: since Serena’s 2016 title, nine consecutive completed championships have produced nine different champions, from Muguruza to Świątek’s double-bagel demolition of 2025, the longest no-repeat run in the tournament’s history. Wimbledon’s women’s draw has become simultaneously the hardest title to win twice and the most winnable title once, which is exactly the combination that makes Saturday’s coronation matter.
What Saturday Adds
The 2026 final arrives via one of the great semifinals in tournament memory: Karolína Muchová, the artist whose career has been serially interrupted by injury, outlasted Coco Gauff 6-2, 1-6, 7-6 in a deciding tiebreak that stretched to 12-10, saving the match with the kind of all-court invention that has made her a players’ favorite for years. She brings an 11-1 grass season into Saturday chasing a first major, and the list’s recent patterns are all in play at once: a tenth different champion in ten editions, a possible third Czech winner in four years (following Vondroušová’s unseeded miracle in 2023 and Krejčíková’s Novotná tribute in 2024, a national grass lineage running straight back to Novotná and Kvitová), and another entry in the tournament’s most democratic era. Whoever wins, the honor board in the Centre Court clubhouse gets its new gold leaf within the hour, and this table gets its 58th Open Era row the same evening.
Final Word
The Wimbledon women’s champions: 57 Open Era winners from Billie Jean King in 1968 to Świątek’s double-bagel in 2025, ruled by Navratilova’s nine titles (six straight, both likely permanent), chased by Graf’s and Serena’s sevens and Venus’s five, and defined lately by radical parity, nine champions in nine editions since 2016. Saturday adds name 58, with Muchová one classic semifinal past Gauff and one win from a first major. The table updates the moment the champion is crowned.
The all-time cross-event context is in most Wimbledon titles ever, the champion’s payday is in Wimbledon prize money, and the surface’s story is told in why Wimbledon is played on grass.