Kate Middleton was in the Royal Box at Wimbledon today, and she brought Prince George and Princess Charlotte to the Wimbledon men's final on 12 July. The family return gave the final day’s guest list its clearest headline, with the royal box again serving as the tournament’s most watched enclosure on Centre Court.
The Royal Box has welcomed friends and guests of Wimbledon since 1922, which is why a single final-day appearance still pulls attention beyond the tennis itself. On Sunday, the box also drew Nicole Kidman, Anna Wintour, Sienna Miller, Raye, Prince Michael of Kent, Lord Frederick Windsor, Lady Frederick Windsor and Lady Gabriella Windsor.
Centre Court names on 12 July
Kate Middleton and Nicole Kidman were among the names visible from the Royal Box on 12 July, while Anna Wintour arrived at the All England club for the men's final show down. Sienna Miller attended with Oli Green, and Raye was on Centre Court with Paul Keen. The day gave Wimbledon another reminder that the final is not just a sporting climax but a controlled guest-list event, with access concentrated in a space that has carried that function for more than a century.
Earlier in the tournament, Benedict Cumberbatch, Celia Imrie and Roger Federer had already been invited, and Jason Isaacs, Elle Fanning and Armando Iannucci also stopped by. That sequence matters because Wimbledon does not spread its marquee visibility evenly across the event; it places the brightest names around the most visible sessions, then saves the royal box spotlight for the final day.
Day 14 and the men's final
Day 14 carried the tournament’s last major men’s title decision, with Jannik Sinner due to attempt to win his second Wimbledon title. Alexander Zverev stood in his way, and the matchup carried an extra layer of friction because Zverev’s first Wimbledon final comes with domestic abuse allegations he has always strenuously denied. That split between sporting achievement and off-court scrutiny is part of why the final-day guest list attracts more attention than a routine celebrity appearance.
Saturday also delivered a separate milestone when Linda Noskova won her first grand slam title after defeating Karolina Muchova in three sets. For Wimbledon, that leaves the weekend with a clean contrast: one title decided, one men’s final still carrying the weight of the tournament’s biggest names, and one Royal Box that remains the place where the event’s public image is most tightly staged.
Wimbledon's guest-list logic
The practical takeaway is simple: the Royal Box is not open seating, and its guest list is part of Wimbledon’s own presentation of prestige. If you were looking for who was in the Royal Box at Wimbledon today, the names on 12 July were led by Kate Middleton, with Prince George and Princess Charlotte beside her, and rounded out by Nicole Kidman, Anna Wintour, Sienna Miller, Raye and members of the Windsor family.







