Have you had your fill of the very best streaming services and their scripted (and unscripted) content? Is live sports action calling out to you as we head into the summer?

If you're a tennis fan, then you might like to check out Sky's dedicated tennis channel. In the same vein as Sky Sports F1 and Sky Sports Cricket, you can catch major tournaments and sporting drama to rival Challengers (albeit without the relentless, synth-heavy soundtrack) on Sky Sports Tennis.

The US Open is the showpiece of Sky's Grand Slam coverage, along with the season-ending ATP and WTA finals.

But throughout the year, you can keep up to date with both the ATP and WTA tours and watch top players including Carlos Alcaraz, Jannik Sinner, Coco Gauff, Iga Świątek and Jack Draper in action.

Here's a bit more about what's coming up on the channel, plus details about how to subscribe.

jessica pegula smiles and raises her arms upwards, with her tennis racket in her right hand, as she celebrates winning a match
Anadolu//Getty Images

Sky Sports Tennis schedule: What's coming up in May and June 2025?

This week, Sky continues to air the ATP and WTA 1000 from Rome, with Jannik Sinner, Casper Ruud, Coco Gauff and Zheng Qinwen among those due to play on Thursday (15 May).

What to Read Next

Carlos Alcaraz has already made the semi-finals and will return to the court on Friday.

From May 19, a series of pre-French Open tournaments will air, with the ATP calling at Hamburg and Geneva and the WTA visiting Strasbourg and Rabat. (To watch the French Open live, you'll need to sign up for TNT Sports through discovery+.)

carlos alcaraz holds his tennis racket behind his head with both hands as he prepares to return the ball during a tennis game
MANAURE QUINTERO//Getty Images

Related: Sky Cinema's new movie premieres in May 2025

Moving into June and grass court season, Sky's coverage highlights include the ATP 500 from Halle (from 16 June).

It will also air the WTA 500 Berlin from 16 June, just after the first WTA singles tournament in over 50 years at Queen's Club in west London. (Queen's Club and Wimbledon will, of course, air on the BBC.)

And to cover that gap between Queen's Club and Wimbledon, Sky's got coverage of another WTA 500 tournament from Bad Homburg in Germany. That starts on 23 June.

emma raducanu
Frey/TPN//Getty Images

Sky Sports Tennis subscription: How to sign up

There are several ways to watch Sky Sports Tennis. The most common is by signing up for the full Sky Sports package via Sky Q, Sky Glass or Sky Stream.

You'll need to have the entry-level Sky TV package – so that's Sky TV for Sky Q, or Sky Essential TV for Sky Glass and Sky Stream – before you can sign up for any additional packages such as Sky Sports. Our last price check took place on Thursday 15 May.

View the latest Sky Glass deals

New Sky Q, Sky Glass and Sky Stream customers can add Sky Sports to their packages for £20/month (instead of £31/month). That's assuming a 24-month contract.

The total price for Sky Stream with Sky Essential TV and Sky Sports over 24 months is, therefore, £35/month instead of the usual £46/month.

Sky Stream with Sky Sports (24-month contract)

Sky Stream with Sky Sports (24-month contract)

Sky Stream with Sky Sports (24-month contract)

Now 18% Off
Credit: Sky

Pros

  • No satellite dish required
  • Choice of 24-month or 31-day contracts
  • Quick setup

Cons

  • Internet connection required to watch content
  • No Sky Q-style series record
  • Prices are not fixed for a contract term

View the latest Sky Stream deals

Sky Glass or Sky Stream customers can instead choose a 31-day rolling contract, but that costs slightly more. At the moment, there's an offer price of £27/month instead of the usual £33/month for the Sky Sports add-on.

That means a total price of £42/month (instead of £48/month) for Sky Stream with Sky Essential TV and Sky Sports on a 31-day rolling agreement.

For existing customers looking to upgrade to Sky Sports, sign in to your Sky account or check out customer deals here.

NOW also has the option of a daily Sky Sports membership for £14.99/day, or a monthly 6-Month Saver Sky Sports membership for £26/month for a minimum six-month period. (From month seven, this goes up to the full price of £34.99/month.)

jack draper stretches his arms out and smiles as he celebrates winning a tennis match
Jamie Squire//Getty Images

Additionally, the usual Flexible Month membership is discounted to £29.99/month for the first six months instead of £34.99/month.

Note that the membership fee goes up to the full price from month seven, but you can cancel at any time instead of having to wait out a minimum six-month term.

The full Sky Sports package includes nine dedicated sports channels, plus Sky Sports Mix, Sky Sports Arena, Sky Sports News and temporary pop-up channels and streams from Sky Sports +.

You'll be able to watch men's Premier League and EFL Championship football, Formula 1 and IndyCar, top-level cricket, selected Women's Super League football matches, the German Bundesliga (featuring Harry Kane), big rugby games, Premier League Darts, plus rugby, basketball and netball.

coco gauff smiles and raises her left arm in celebration as she wins a tennis match at the us open
Al Bello//Getty Images

Sky Sports Tennis commentators and presenters

Sky Sports Tennis' presenting team is led by Gigi Salmon, with commentary from Jonathan Overend, plus pundits Tim Henman and Laura Robson.

Before leading the Sky Sports Tennis team, Gigi worked for talkSPORT, Chelsea TV and Radio Wimbledon. She also spent several years on BBC Radio 5 Live's tennis team, working across major tournaments including Wimbledon.

Jonathan moved from BBC local radio to national prominence in 1997, when he joined the team at BBC Radio 5 Live to work on its sports coverage.

In addition to tennis, he worked on the station's coverage of the Ashes cricket tournament, the Paralympic Games and the men's football World Cup, and he spent five years anchoring its Sunday afternoon coverage of the Premier League.

In 2020, Jonathan went freelance. While his voice can still be heard on the BBC, he has also since worked for broadcasters including ITV and Times Radio.

Laura won an Olympic silver medal in the mixed doubles with Andy Murray at London 2012, and she achieved her career-high WTA ranking the following summer when she ranked among the world's top 30 women's singles tennis players.

She retired from competitive tennis in 2022 and now provides analysis for broadcasters including Sky and Eurosport (now TNT Sports).

tim henman holds a microphone as he stands in a courtyard at the roland garros tennis complex
Jean Catuffe//Getty Images

During his playing career, Tim achieved 15 ATP titles and made the semi-finals of the French Open, US Open and Wimbledon. He also won an Olympic silver medal at Atlanta 1996 in the men's doubles.

Since retiring at the end of 2007, Tim has been a regular on the BBC's coverage of Wimbledon, and, like Laura, he has also offered his insight on Eurosport's French Open coverage.

Guest pundits who've featured on Sky Sports Tennis' coverage have included Annabel Croft, Martina Navratilova, Anne Keothavong, Marion Bartoli and Feliciano Lopez.

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Kate (they/she) is a freelance writer, editor, digital editorial trainer and data technician who first joined Digital Spy as an overnight freelance sub-editor in January 2011, after studying a postgraduate diploma in journalism at Salford University while working part-time as a social researcher.
In July 2013, Kate joined the DS staff team as chief sub-editor and following six years as the site's managing editor, their role expanded to incorporate Hearst UK's entertainment portfolio (including Digital Spy and its sibling titles Best and Inside Soap) between late 2024 and early 2026.
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