Wimbledon’s Electronic Line Calling Explained: The End of Line Judges

For 147 years, from the first championship in 1877 through 2024, every “out” at Wimbledon was called by a human being in a Ralph Lauren uniform. In 2025, that ended: the All England Club switched to full electronic line calling, retiring around 300 line judges in one stroke, abolishing the player challenge system entirely, and replacing the sport’s most famous shouts with recorded voices, and the first year included a malfunction so perfectly timed it made global headlines.

Now in its second year, the system is the invisible official of the 2026 Championships: every line on every court, called automatically, with no challenges because there’s nothing left to challenge. If you’re hearing disembodied “OUT!” calls this finals weekend and wondering who’s talking, whether players can argue, and why the French Open still uses humans, this is the full story.

The chart below covers how the system works, what disappeared in 2025, the famous failure, where each major stands, and what it all changed about watching tennis. Take a look, then we’ll break it all down.

Wimbledon Technology
Electronic line calling: how Wimbledon ended 147 years of line judges
147
years of line judges
2025
the switch
~300
judges’ roles ended
0
challenges remaining
How the system works
The tech Hawk-Eye Live: banks of high-speed cameras tracking the ball on every line
The calls “Out” / “fault” announced automatically, in real time, by recorded voices
The voices Recordings of real AELTC behind-the-scenes staff, a deliberately human touch
Who remains The chair umpire still runs the match; match assistants support on court
Close calls Replays appear on screens for the crowd, but the call itself is final
The recorded-voice choice is very Wimbledon: rather than a synthetic beep, the club recorded its own tour guides and staff, so the “OUT!” you hear is a real employee, just not one standing on the baseline.
What disappeared in 2025
The line judges ~300 roles ended after 147 years (1877-2024); some became match assistants
The challenge system Abolished: with live automated calls, there’s nothing to challenge
The theater No more challenge-countdown crowds, slow-motion “IN” roars, or McEnroe-style rows
The uniforms The Ralph Lauren-clad crews at the baselines: one of tennis’ iconic images, retired
The challenge system’s death is the underrated change: player challenges (introduced across tennis in the 2000s) existed to check humans, and when the humans left, the sport’s best crowd ritual left with them.
The famous failure (2025)
What happened Mid-match on Centre Court, the system was accidentally switched OFF
The moment A clearly out ball went uncalled in Pavlyuchenkova’s match; the point was replayed
The fallout The club apologized, blamed human error, and removed the ability to deactivate mid-match
The irony The machine’s worst day at Wimbledon was caused by a person turning it off
Year one’s lesson wasn’t that the cameras miss, when running, the system out-calls any human, but that transition years produce exactly one kind of failure: the seam between old and new.
Where every major stands
Event Line calling in 2026
Wimbledon Full electronic (since 2025), year two
Australian Open / US Open Fully electronic, the early adopters
French Open The lone holdout: human line judges remain on the clay
ATP Tour Electronic line calling tour-wide since 2025
Roland Garros’ holdout has a clay-specific logic: the ball leaves a physical mark that umpires inspect, tennis’ oldest replay system, which the French argue makes cameras redundant.
The debate, year two
The case for Accuracy, consistency, no more wrong calls deciding championships
The case against Lost jobs, lost theater, quieter courts, and players who miss having someone to argue with
The verdict so far The calls are better; the sport is still deciding if the silence is
Player consensus after year one landed roughly here: nobody wants bad calls back, but nobody’s written a poem about a recorded voice either.
Per AELTC announcements: full electronic line calling from 2025, ending line judges after 147 years; challenge system discontinued; French Open remains the lone Grand Slam with human line judges. Finals weekend: July 11-12, 2026. Current as of July 2026.

What actually changed, and how the machine calls a line

The system Wimbledon adopted in 2025 is Hawk-Eye Live, the “live” distinguishing it from the review tool tennis used for two decades: banks of high-speed cameras track the ball against every line on every court and announce “out” or “fault” automatically, in real time, with no human confirmation step. The chair umpire remains, running the match, handling everything from code violations to rain, and match assistants (a role into which some former line judges moved) support on court, but the calls themselves are the machine’s alone, which is why the challenge system was abolished outright: challenges existed to let players appeal human eyes to the cameras, and once the cameras are the eyes, there is nothing left to appeal. Wimbledon’s signature touch is the voice: rather than a synthetic tone, the club recorded real AELTC behind-the-scenes staff, so every “OUT!” on Centre Court this weekend is a genuine employee, relocated from the baseline to a sound file.

147 years, 300 people, and one very human malfunction

The scale of what ended bears stating plainly: line judges had worked every Championships since the first in 1877, and the 2025 switch ended roughly 300 roles at a stroke, retiring one of sport’s iconic images, the Ralph Lauren-uniformed crews crouched at the baselines, along with the challenge ritual (the rhythmic clapping, the big-screen countdown, the roar at “IN”) that had become tennis’ best crowd theater. Year one then delivered an incident almost too perfect: mid-match on Centre Court, in Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova’s fourth-round match, the system was accidentally switched off, a clearly out ball went uncalled, and the point was replayed, forcing an apology from the club and a rule change removing the ability to deactivate the system mid-match. The irony wrote itself, the machine’s worst day was caused by a person turning it off, but the substantive lesson survived the jokes: when running, the system out-calls any human; the failure lived in the seam of the transition, not the technology.

Year two, the French holdout, and the quieter court

In 2026 the system is simply the water tennis swims in: the Australian and US Opens adopted electronic calling years earlier, the ATP went tour-wide in 2025, and Wimbledon’s second year has run without a Pavlyuchenkova moment, leaving the French Open as the lone Grand Slam still employing human line judges, a holdout with a genuinely clay-specific defense, since the ball’s physical mark on the surface is tennis’ original replay system and Roland Garros argues the cameras solve a problem clay never had. What remains contested is atmosphere, not accuracy. Players broadly accept the calls; what year one and two have surfaced instead is the strange new silence, no one to argue with, no challenge drama, fewer humans in the frame, and whether that’s a fair price for never again losing a championship point to a blown call is the question each viewer settles alone, probably this weekend, around the fifteenth disembodied “OUT!”

Final Word

Wimbledon’s electronic line calling, explained: full Hawk-Eye Live since 2025, ending 147 years of human line judges (~300 roles) and abolishing challenges entirely, calls announced instantly in the recorded voices of real club staff, with only the chair umpire remaining in charge; scarred once by the famous switched-off malfunction and Pavlyuchenkova’s replayed point, fixed since; now in its second, quieter year, while the French Open holds out alone with humans and clay marks. The calls are perfect. The arguments are extinct. Tennis is still deciding how it feels about both.

The rules the machine enforces at 6-6 are in Wimbledon’s final-set tiebreak explained, the traditions that did survive are in Wimbledon’s curfew and roof rules, and the champions the calls have crowned are in Wimbledon champions by year.