Tony Khan non-committal on AEW All In returning to London in 2027

While AEW’s biggest show of the year will return to London’s Wembley Stadium in August, the future of All In at the famous venue is unclear beyond that.

During a media call this past Thursday, AEW head Tony Khan was asked if All In will return to Wembley for a fourth iteration in 2027 given that WWE WrestleMania 43 is heading to Saudi Arabia for the first time.

“I haven’t decided what to do in 2027 yet. I am very excited for the event in 2026. I think it’s going to be a very great showing. We’ll plan from there with a year to look ahead. I do know 2027 will be another very big year for AEW and I plan to take big swings,” he said. “I don’t have the whole 2027 calendar planned, but we will definitely have some huge events. I’m very focused on All in 2026 and the whole summer should be tremendous.”

After two straight years at Wembley Stadium, last year’s All In was the first to be held stateside, emanating from Globe Life Field in Arlington, Texas.

The first All In at Wembley had an actual attendance of 72,265 in 2023 while the sequel in 2024 had 46,476 (turnstile counts, not distributed). Last year’s Texas show had 21,973 in the stadium.

AEW announces on sale dates for All In London

Even though it’s still the winter months, AEW is already looking ahead to the summer and this August’s All In from London’s Wembley Stadium.

During Wednesday’s Dynamite, the promotion announced their on-sale dates for their biggest show of the year, set for Sunday, August 30 — their third-ever event at the famed soccer stadium.

The pre-sale begins on Monday, March 16 at 10 am GMT while the general on-sale begins on Friday, March 20 at 10 am GMT.

AEW debuted at Wembley Stadium in 2023 with an announced attendance of 81,035 paid tickets with 72,265 in the building. They returned the year after with a turnstile count of 46,476 as the promotion did not announce attendance.

Announced AEW PPVs in 2026

  • Revolution | Sunday, March 15 | Los Angeles
  • Dynasty | Sunday, April 12 | Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
  • Double or Nothing | Sunday, May 24 | Queens, NY*
  • All In | Sunday, August 30 | London, England

*Not yet confirmed

Wrestling Observer Live: AEW All In post show

Image: AEW

The Sunday edition of Wrestling Observer Live is now online and features a complete wrap-up of AEW All In. I’m filling in for Andrew Zarian this week due to technical issues.

Spoiler alert: this show is nothing but spoilers:

  • We talk about AEW All In results
  • The surprises, debuts & returns
  • What was good, what was great, and what was that?
  • Fan reviews from social media, namely X
  • How I think fans will react to the creative direction coming out of the show

Click here to listen (Sub required)

AEW All In confirmed to return to London’s Wembley Stadium in 2026

AEW All In is now confirmed to be returning to London’s Wembley Stadium in 2026.

A lower-third graphic during Sunday’s broadcast showed as much, later followed up on by a post by the venue’s X account nearly 30 minutes after the show ended:

It will be the third-such All In from the famed London stadium after last year’s debut and this year’s return. Next year’s All In will emanate from Globe Life Field in Arlington, Texas, for the first time ever.

When AEW head Tony Khan first made the announcement about the annual pay-per-view heading to Texas, he said that All In would return to London but didn’t specifically say Wembley Stadium.

AEW will also return to the city for Forbidden Door which will be held in August for the first time ever and overseas for the first time ever. The venue has not been announced, but it assumed to be for one of the city’s indoor arenas instead.

As of this writing, attendance has not been publicly announced for this year’s All In but based on data from WrestleTix, distributed tickets were over 53,000. No live gate has been announced or teased by Khan either.

New Trios champions crowned at AEW All In

In one of many memorable moments from AEW’s return to Wembley Stadium, hometown favorite PAC, Claudio Castagnoli & Wheeler Yuta became the new AEW Trios Champions at All In in London.

The makeshift threesome defeated reigning champions The Patriarchy, the House of Black and the Bang Bang Gang in a four-way London ladder match to take the titles.

The end came when Christian Cage was moving up the ladder on the shoulders of Killswitch and was about to grab the belt when PAC ran up the ladder to engage Cage in a exchange of fists. Cage eventually got shoved off the ladder which left PAC alone to grab one of the belts to win the match.

The 38-year-old PAC is from England’s Newcastle upon Tyne.

It’s PAC’s second run with the gold as he, Penta El Zero Miedo & Rey Fenix won the titles in September 2022, holding them for 126 days before losing them to The Elite (Young Bucks & Kenny Omega) in the final match in a best-of-seven series in January 2023.

It’s the first AEW title of any kind for either Castagnoli or Yuta who have both held Ring of Honor titles before.

The win ends the short run for Cage, Killswitch & Nick Wayne which began just over a month ago on Collision. Sunday was the first defense of their titles.

Darby Allin on renewed Mount Everest plans & scouting where ‘to fall off of’ at AEW All In: Texas

Image: AEW

It’s not even the end of summer 2024 yet and AEW’s Darby Allin is already planning both a big climb and a big fall in 2025.

As part of the media surrounding last week’s announcement of All In coming to Arlington, Texas’ Globe Life Field next July, Allin caught up with the Dallas Morning News where the topics of both climbing Mount Everest and next summer’s big pay-per-view came up.

The oft-injured Allin had to withdraw from his plans to climb Mount Everest in March after suffering a broken foot during a match with Jay White at Dynamite: Big Business. He was set to depart roughly two weeks after the match, but those plans had to change.

Allin told the media outlet that he is still planning on attempting the climb next April.

“You can only climb it two months out of the year. If you could climb it any month, I would have been there right now. But, you know, you gotta wait a year,” he said, adding that he did training for nine months that others said would take years to accomplish.

“Everybody’s saying, like, ‘Maybe (the foot break) is a sign that you shouldn’t do it.’ And I said, ‘Hell no, that’s a sign I should do it next year.’ It’s been such a roller coaster of emotions going into it. But like, I wanted to do it before, but now I really want to do it. It’s just, like, the moment was taken away. I’m super excited for it,” he said.

Allin, who challenges TBS Champion Jack Perry in a coffin match at this Sunday’s All In: London, confirmed a Renee Paquette tweet that he was already scouting out Globe Life Field for next year’s All In in an effort to pull something off that would leave a “lasting impression” on those watching and perhaps inspire other future wrestlers to do the same.

“…I was just walking around, looking around like, ‘What can I fall off of?’ To me, going to all these buildings, there’s such an aura and vibe to these stadiums. And every time I’m walking in, I’m like, ‘What can I do that will leave a lasting impression?’ And I put myself in the shoes of being like a fourth grade kid, you know what I mean? Like, if I saw something, what will I remember for my entire life? Because, with this wrestling stuff, it’s pretty wild how much of an impact you can have on people’s lives. I don’t take it for granted. It’s pretty crazy, you know, just how you can inspire somebody and change the whole trajectory of their life,” he said.

Allin later equated his effort to creating memorable moments like ones he watched with Mick Foley and Jeff Hardy where if that moment changes one life like it did for him, it was worth it.

“So if I need to sacrifice myself at Globe Life Field, ok,” he said.