
AEW All In’s return to Wembley Stadium is still a long way from matching the impact of the event’s first two editions in London.
According to an update from AEW Ticket Map, the show scheduled for August 30 has now passed 25,400 tickets sold/distributed, with the current stadium setup configured for just over 36,000 seats. Wembley Stadium’s official website confirms the event for Sunday, August 30, while AEW lists All In: London as its major show for that date, though no official start time has been set.
The comparison to previous years, however, is unavoidable. In 2023, AEW announced 81,035 paid fans for the first All In at Wembley. In 2024, the actual turnstile count was 46,476, according to figures confirmed by Wrestlenomics through Brent Council.
In other words, even with more than two months left before the event, the current pace is well below what AEW managed during its first two trips to the English stadium. The gap also stands out because, in March, WrestleTix listed an initial count of 19,883 tickets distributed for the show, indicating only moderate growth since the start of the general sale.
🚨📊 AEW All In Wembley 2026 has so far sold 25.4k tickets ahead of the event in 74 days time per @AEWTicketMap
— WRESTLING REPUBLIC (@wraslinrepublic) June 17, 2026
This is currently significantly down from the previous two All In’s at Wembley:
2023 – 81,035 (⬇️ 68.7%)
2024 – 46,476 (⬇️ 45.6%)
Despite this it has already… pic.twitter.com/R3rM6AiSK3
On the other hand, the current number has already topped the attendance recorded for last year’s All In: Texas. In Arlington, at Globe Life Field, government records listed 23,759 people at the event, including 21,973 spectators, while Tony Khan had publicly cited a figure close to 29,000.
As of now, AEW has not announced any official matches for All In: London 2026. Demand is expected to increase as the card takes shape on television, especially after Forbidden Door and once the company’s top summer rivalries are set.
The question now is whether Wembley will once again be viewed as a major commercial win for AEW, or whether this year’s event will confirm a significant drop from the 2023 peak.