AEW 2026 PPV list & schedule: How to watch, start time, streaming options

AEW schedule of pay-per-views and special shows are always developing throughout the year. The following is the known/announced schedule for both AEW pay-per-views throughout 2026.

Read More – How to Watch AEW Dynamite: US, UK, Canada and more

AEW & ROH Upcoming PPV Schedule For 2026

AEW Forbidden Door

AEW Forbidden Door 2026
  • Event Name: AEW Forbidden Door
  • Event Date: Sunday, June 28
  • Event Location & Venue: SAP Center in San Jose, CA
  • How to Watch: Streaming PPV on HBO Max, Amazon Prime, YouTube, PPV.com, Fubo; linear PPV on traditional cable & satellite outlets

AEW Redemption

AEW Redemption 2026
  • Event Name: AEW Redemption
  • Event Date: Sunday, July 26
  • Event Location & Venue: Bell Centre in Montreal, Quebec, Canada
  • How to Watch: Streaming PPV on HBO Max, Amazon Prime, YouTube, PPV.com, Fubo; linear PPV on traditional cable & satellite outlets

AEW All In

  • Event Name: AEW All In
  • Event Date: Sunday, August 30
  • Event Location & Venue: Wembley Stadium in London, England
  • How to Watch: Streaming PPV on HBO Max, Amazon Prime, YouTube, PPV.com, Fubo; linear PPV on traditional cable & satellite outlets

AEW PPV 2026 Results & Coverage:

What’s next for AEW after Dynasty? | Opinion

The results of Dynasty left the future murky for some of the biggest stars and champions of All Elite Wrestling. With much of the slate wiped clean, what should we expect for Double or Nothing and beyond?

Here’s a look at what might be next for wrestlers like MJF, Will Ospreay, and Darby Allin. The following is based purely on speculation and conjecture, and not on any backstage rumors or reports.

Let’s start by looking at the long-term destination: All In London will occur at Wembley Stadium on August 30. This will be AEW’s third show at the giant building, and with the novelty perhaps having worn off, they’ll need a big draw. The biggest draw they could book would be Will Ospreay challenging for the world championship in front of his hometown crowd. 

The problem there is that Ospreay just lost his challenge to Jon Moxley for the Continental Championship. So to get to Wembley, Ospreay would likely need to win the Owen Hart Cup and the title shot that comes with it. If this sounds familiar, that’s because it’s the same blueprint AEW used for Bryan Danielson in 2024: injuries, a losing streak, a last-chance tournament win, and climactic victory in London. (Hopefully Ospreay’s postscript will last longer than Danielson’s did.) 

So who will Ospreay be challenging? AEW has already booked MJF to defend his World Championship against Darby Allin at Spring BreakThru, only three days after his victory against Kenny Omega. And Omega is likely to hang around the championship scene as well, having visually pinned MJF for over a dozen seconds at Dynasty. We can probably expect the three of them to battle for the belt from now through the summer, perhaps with Andrade El Idolo and Swerve Strickland getting involved as well. 

It’s worth pointing out that AEW’s next pay per view is Double or Nothing in Queens, New York, not far from MJF’s backyard. He’s almost certain to main event that show, but will he be going in as champion or challenger?

One name not in the world title mix: Hangman Page. Page has not been seen since losing to MJF at Revolution and thus, allegedly, will never challenge for the world championship again as per the stipulation. So Page needs a new goal. Jon Moxley, meanwhile, needs a new challenger for his Continental Championship after beating Ospreay. Putting the two together would be rematch of the main event of All In: Texas, AEW’s biggest show of 2025. (They have had one singles rematch since then, with Page beating Moxley on Dynamite last July.) 

One more match seems certain for Double or Nothing: it seems like Kazuchika Okada and Konosuke Takeshita have finally, finally split, and the two will likely face off for Okada’s International Championship.

Elsewhere:

  • Surprisingly, FTR defeated Adam Copeland & Christian Cage at Dynasty to retain the World Tag Team Championships. In the days leading up to that match, Cage & Copeland had a staredown wth the Young Bucks, who would then beat Okada & Takeshita at Dynasty. Booking Cope & Cage against the Bucks for a title shot, only for FTR to interfere and set up a three-way instead, sounds like a very WWE thing to do. In this instance, it might also make the most sense.
  • Kevin Knight is your new TNT Champion and has a bevy of Death Riders, Don Callis Family members, and La Faccion Ingobernable luchadors set to challenge him. He will be defending against Claudio Castagnoli on Wednesday at Spring BreakThru. It also seems inevitable that he’ll be defending against Speedball Bailey in a teacher-vs.-student matchup somewhere down the road.
  • In the women’s division, Willow Nightingale will obviously be defending the TBS Championship against Kamille, who laid her out twice on Sunday night. As for Thekla, after defeating Jamie Hayter at Dynasty, her next challenger for the AEW Women’s World Championship might be Hayter’s tag team partner, Alex Windsor, who defeated Marina Shafir at Zero Hour. 
  • I wouldn’t spend too much time thinking about the Conglomeration and the World Trios Championships. Those titles have already changed hands five times in three and half months this year. They seem to be AEW’s answer to New Japan’s Junior Heavyweight Tag Team Championships: an excuse to put a lot of bangers on shows without a lot of dominant champions or long-term story developments. 

AEW Dynasty scrum notes: Tony Khan gives Gabe Kidd update, talks card changes

Wrestlers and Tony Khan spoke to the media following AEW Dynasty.

Khan, Thekla, The Conglomeration, and Kevin Knight all spoke to the media following Sunday’s show in Vancouver. Here are the highlights:

Tony Khan:

  • Khan started the scrum by saying he wanted MJF on here to take questions, but he refused.
  • Regarding Gabe Kidd, Tony Khan said he was “out indefinitely,” saying it was his shoulder that was injured and was being evaluated.
  • He spoke further on the Mark Hitchcock Memorial show, saying that he wanted to step up and help, and that is why he helped make their new main event happen.
  • Buys for HBO Max were “very high” and this might be the most bought Dynasty event ever.
  • Khan was asked if there was a social media policy in the company and if Ricochet violated that with his controversial post recently. He said he had a frank discussion with Ricochet. There continues to be a policy in place for these things and Ricochet violated that, but they are moving past it.
  • He compared his recent collaboration with Maple Leaf Pro to the concept of Forbidden Door. He likes what Scott D’Amore is doing and enjoys having many promotional partners, including CMLL.
  • Khan noted that this pay-per-view cycle had the most changes to a show since the original Forbidden Door event. He explained that he had plans for AEW Dynasty and many of the matches were the same, but there was a lot of changes, naming the sudden absences of Toni Storm and Kyle Fletcher as examples.
  • One person mentioned the Tokyo Joshi Pro event held in Vancouver earlier on Sunday. Khan said he would have probably collaborated with TJPW if they asked as he likes them, specifically mentioning Miyu Yamashita as someone he likes, as well as Nicole Matthews.
  • Khan said one of AEW’s strengths is working with other promotions all around the world and has built trust with other promoters, and he feels that his word goes a long way. It’s helped him build relationships with promotions that weren’t there at the start, like NJPW. 
  • The scrum ended with he and Renee Paquette talking about some of their favorite Canadian AEW memories. Khan mentioned the debut of Renee Paquette back in October 2022, as well as Sunday’s show. Renee also mentioned Bryan Danielson vs. Kazuchika Okada and Kenny Omega vs. Will Ospreay in Toronto for Forbidden Door, and the hockey fight between Adam Copeland and Christian Cage.

Other notes:

  • Thekla was asked about re-signing with the company. She said that AEW needed her, but also said that it was the perfect platform for her.
  • She also said that she is very hands on with her entrance and other aspects of her look. She is an artist as she paints, writes, and makes her own ring gear.
  • Kyle O’Reilly, with the rest of The Conglomeration, said that tonight meant the world to him. He said that while his father (who recently passed away) wasn’t here to see him win, his daughter was.
  • Kevin Knight was asked about headlining the Mark Hitchcock Memorial Show. Knight said he learned about it when he saw the announcement online. Khan apologized for that but did note that Knight has stepped up before in the past. This was where Khan announced that Claudio Castagnoli would be challenging Knight for the TNT title on Dynamite.
  • Knight was asked if there was any tension between him and Speedball after his singles title win. Knight said he would love to defend the title against Bailey.

MJF defeats Kenny Omega, retains World title at AEW Dynasty

At least for one night, a devil proved they can beat a god.

MJF’s reign as AEW World Champion continued at Sunday’s AEW Dynasty with another big win in a main event, defeating Kenny Omega and denying him his second World title run after a 4.5 year drought.

Near the end of the match, MJF pulled referee Bryce Remsburg into an V-Trigger knee, followed by a low blow on Omega. He then took his Dynamite Diamond ring from Remsburg’s pocket after he had confiscated it earlier. Omega avoided an MJF punch with the ring, hit a V-Trigger followed by a One Winged Angel which MJF kicked out of after a second referee entered the ring — a rare occurrence.

Omega then dragged MJF outside to the apron, teasing a One Winged Angel through a ringside table but MJF hit him in the stomach with the ring instead and delivered a jumping tombstone through the table. He then propped Omega on the apron, hit the Heat Seeker, and pinned him.

MJF now moves on to defend against Darby Allin which appears likely for this Wednesday’s Spring BreakThru episode of Dynamite in Everett, Washington. Allin defeated Andrade El Idolo earlier in the evening to earn the shot. It will be a rematch from November 2021’s Full Gear in their only prior AEW singles match.

The win extends MJF’s second run which has seen seven successful title defenses after he regained the belt at December 2025’s Worlds End. Sunday was a rematch from he and Omega’s October 2023 match on Collision where MJF picked up a successful title defense during his first run. The match was Omega’s first shot at the title since that night.

Omega earned the shot with his win over Swerve Strickland in their rematch last month, taking Strickland’s opportunity while retaining his EVP status.

Dynasty saw two title changes amid all the defenses as The Conglomeration are now Trios Champions while Kevin Knight became the TNT Champion.

Gabe Kidd suffers injury during AEW Dynasty

Gabe Kidd was hurt during AEW Dynasty.

During the course of the Trios title match on Sunday, Kidd was escorted to the back by medical personnel, appearing to favor his wrist or shoulder as the match continued on. Kyle O’Reilly, the surprise tag team partner of Orange Cassidy and Roderick Strong, scored the win for his team by submitting Clark Connors for the win.

According to Bryan Alvarez, Kidd appeared to suffer a dislocated shoulder during the course of the match. He also notes that the finish was always for O’Reilly and his team to score the win and the titles, and the injury didn’t cause the finish to change. The Dogs had won the titles from JetSpeed and Mistico on Collision, which was taped last week.

The Dogs have been feuding with The Conglomeration in recent weeks. After their successful title win, it was announced The Dogs would defend the titles against Strong, Cassidy, and a mystery partner. A few days before Dynasty, O’Reilly hinted in an interview that he would “really wanna be ready” for AEW’s upcoming pay-per-view.

“So wink, wink, nudge, nudge [proceeds to wink multiple times]. Maybe I’ll be back in time for that,” he said at the time.

Kevin Knight wins TNT title at AEW Dynasty

A new TNT Champion has been crowned.

Kevin Knight emerged as the surprise winner of the Casino Gauntlet match and the vacant TNT title during Sunday’s AEW Dynasty, scoring the pinfall over Daniel Garcia after hitting the UFO splash.

Knight’s win cements him as a singles champion 24 hours after he, Mistico, and Speedball Mike Bailey lost the Trios titles to The Dogs (David Finlay, Gabe Kidd, and Clark Connors) on AEW Collision.

After the match, Knight celebrated his title win while his tag team partner Mike Bailey appeared dejected at ringside, failing to win the title in his home country.

Former champion Tommaso Ciampa and Rush started the match Over time Bandido, Bailey, El Clon, PAC, Daniel Garcia, Anthony Bowens, Knight, and Wheeler Yuta emerged. Knight scored the win over Garcia while Bailey was on the apron.

The title was declared vacant after former champion Kyle Fletcher suffered an injury to his foot late last month on an episode of Collision. The TNT title was soon declared vacant and the Casino Gauntlet match was announced.

Darby Allin earns future World title shot at AEW Dynasty, sets cash in date

For the first time in almost three years, Darby Allin will get a shot at the AEW World title and for the first time in nearly six years, it will be in a singles match.

Allin defeated Andrade El Idolo in a physical match as part of Sunday’s AEW Dynasty to earn the shot at either current champion MJF or Dynasty challenger Kenny Omega.

Later in the show, he told Renee Paquette “It’s showtime” and that there’s no better time to cash it in than in Everett, Washington — his home state — at this Wednesday’s Spring BreakThru edition of Dynamite.

The 33-year-old will be looking for his first AEW World title run in his fourth opportunity at the gold. The first came in October 2019 in a defeat to then-champion Chris Jericho on the third-ever Dynamite, followed by a July 2020 loss to then-champion Jon Moxley on Dynamite and a four-way at 2023’s Double or Nothing against then-champion MJF, Jack Perry and Sammy Guevara.

If it’s MJF, he and Allin have squared off just once in an AEW singles match: November 2021’s Full Gear. If it’s Omega, it will be a first time ever match.

Daily Update: AEW Dynasty, Nikki Bella update, AAA notes

Daily Update

Latest News

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This Week’s Wrestling Observer Newsletter

Among the topics covered:

  • The most detailed look at  how the Pat McAfee angle developed, its goal, why so many in the company are unhappy with it, where it  is leading, addressing the biggest WrestleMania questions, what CM Punk aid, where Paul Levesque and Ari Emanuel fit in, as well as an update on WrestleMania tickets compared to last year, discount offers cutting price back and more
  • Preview to AEW Dynasty, matches and business notes as well as updates on Double or Nothing direction and business, as well as All In at Wembley Stadium.
  • Favorites for WrestleMania and Dynasty
  • Lots of business notes on WrestleMania
  • Callum Newman wins IWGP title and review of Sakura Genesis, what we learned, business, Best of the Super Juniors and Dontaku notes
  • NXT Stand & Deliver.  Match rundowns and stories as well as business notes on the show
  • Texts from Paul Levesque to Nick Khan released in discovery regarding Vince McMahon’s involvement in booking when talent was told McMahon was out and Levesques frustration at the time
  • A detailed look at TNA pulling  talent from advertised indie events that they had previously approved and a better way of handling it
  • A look at the career of 60s and 70s star Flying Fred Curry, one of the major stars of The Sheik’s heyday running Michigan and Ohio, son of Bull Curry and nine-time world tag team champion.
  • The arrest of Alberto el Patron, lots more details and his history, shows he’s been pulled from, an ironic aspect of this story n a reality show in Mexico late last year
  • The most detailed look at the ratings for all the television shows of the past week, with  comparisons with last week, last year, demos and other stats, male vs. female percentage
  • More stats regarding the audience at Arena Mexico shows as well as a look back on a major week last week.
  • Saya Kamtani has major goal for Stardom’s big show later this month
  • Japanese television in 1985 and who were the draws
  • Ric Flair upset over WWE costing him a major merchandise deal
  • How many times was Flair world champion
  • Lots of injury updates
  • Two more possible WrestleMania card changes
  • Janel Grant lawsuit thoughts

This Week’s Back Issue

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Sunday Update

La Catalina makes AAA debut
La Catalina makes AAA debut

— Garrett Gonzales and I will be doing the show tonight since Bryan Alvarez will be at AEW Dynasty in Vancouver. We’ll also talk about Smackdown which we both attended but haven’t talked about to each other yet, Collision, the WWE angles, and the rest of today’s news. Bryan and I did a show last night covering UFC, Smackdown, the TNA PPV show and other pro wrestling and MMA news.

— AEW Dynasty tonight in Vancouver, BC:

  • 4 p.m. Zero Hour
  • Marina Shafir vs. Alex Windsor
  • Megan Bayne & Lena Kross defend the women’s tag titles against Maya World & Hyan
  • Jack Perry defends the National title against Mark Davis
  • 5 p.m.
  • David Finlay & Clark Connors & Gabe Kidd defend the trios titles against Orange Cassidy & Roderick Strong & ? (rumors to be Kyle O’Reilly who is from Vancouver)
  • Young Bucks vs. Konosuke Takeshita & Kazuchika Okada
  • Casino Gauntlet for the vacant TNT title. The first two entrants are Tommaso Ciampa and Rush. Nobody else is announced
  • Darby Allin vs. Andrade El Idolo for the title shot on Double or Nothing
  • Thekla defends the AEW women’s title against Jamie Hayter
  • Jon Moxley defends the Continental title against Will Ospreay
  • FTR defends the tag team titles against Adam Copeland & Christian Cage
  • MJF defends the AEW title against Kenny Omega

On paper, it looks strong. Maybe not Revolution level strong, but the key matches have had strong builds and most matches on paper look great. They had 8,699 tickets out as of last word. So it probably won’t hit 9,500 but it is the largest for a Dynasty show to date.

— We’re looking for your thoughts on both the AEW Dynasty show tonight as well as the TNA Rebellion show last night for our weekend polls. You can leave a thumbs up, thumbs down or thumbs in the middle along with a best and worst match for each show to [email protected]

— Regarding WrestleMania ticket sales since Pat McAfee announced the ticket discount for Saturday and not Sunday, since Friday morning, the Saturday show has moved 1,265 tickets to 40,610 and the Sunday show, with no discount, has moved 1,452, to 42,769.

— Regarding Nikki Bella and participating in the match at WrestleMania, I was just told a few minutes ago, “it’s too close to call.”

— The WWE Hall of Fame ceremony will air on ESPN Unlimited at midnight this coming Friday night.

— The new main event for the Mark Hitchcock Memorial show is Ricochet & Gates of Agony vs. Michael Oku, Kevin Knight and Mike Bailey on 4/16. Tony Khan had a strong P.R. week essentially adding the Gates of Agony, Bailey and Knight after TNA pulled Leon Slater out of the prior main event with Ricochet. The general rule in booking AEW talent is that they don’t like doing major AEW vs. AEW matches with the idea they want those exclusively for AEW television, but Khan allowed them to do that because of how the situation went. Other AEW talent on that show are Bandido, Lee Johnson, Blake Christian and Mark Davis.

— CMLL has added Persephone vs. Tessa Blanchard for the CMLL women’s title to its Thursday 3 p.m. show at the Palms in Las Vegas.

— For Google searches, there was actually a decent amount of traction over the weekend. UFC was the biggest. In fact last night’s UFC show was No. 3 among everything for the weekend with 1,115,000 searches. There were six UFC topics in the top 55 for the weekend, including Jiri Prochazka, Cub Swanson, Aaron Pico, Paulo Costa, Curtis Blaydes, Josh Hokit and several others. The Tyson Fury fight did 100,000. Conor Benn’s fight did 20,000. Gable Steveson did 10,000. Anthony Joshua did 20,000. WrestleMania did 10,000. The highest pro wrestling number was for La Catalina believe it or not. Others that trended with 2,000 were Rhea Ripley, Royce Keys and Danhausen. Pat McAfee did not.

— A couple of items at last night’s AAA show. Catalina did arrive and was presented as a big star, unlike in CMLL where none of the women really are and Persephone is the biggest star. She immediately was put in a feud with Flammer for the Reina de Reinas title. Penta retained the IC title over El Hijo del Vikingo. They were pushing hard the Grande Americano vs. Grande Americano feud with the last word we heard the mask vs. mask match will headline the 5/30 show at Arena Monterrey.

— There was controversy regarding the show last night. In the match with Grande Americano Chad Gable against Octagon Jr., Gable unmasked Octagon Jr. right in front of the referee. Octagon Jr. hid his face and Gable pinned him. Mexican wrestling rules dating back at least 60 years call for unmasking in front of the ref to be a DQ. This is actually one of the most foundational rules there are. WWE has decided to change that rule. The reality is that AAA fans today are mostly WWE fans and not as much AAA fans, as seen by the biggest reaction coming for WWE wrestlers. It’s not going to hurt business or anything, and we knew going in that WWE was going to change matches to American style, but this was a change a lot of people were very surprised and unhappy about. I mean, I’m sad to see the change but I also expect every Lucha Libre rule that isn’t the same as WWE to eventually change.

— Both AAA and CMLL sold out last night with 5,500 and 6,000 in Mexico City, respectively last night. This was the 15th sellout in the last 16 weeks for CMLL at Arena Coliseo (the only miss was a Saturday night where the Mexican national soccer team played in Mexico City before 83,000 fans, and even that show was almost sold out). I believe that is the best run in history for the 83-year-old arena.

— Friday night sold out Arena Mexico with 16,000 fans, as Hechicero beat Angel de Oro as the last two. Angel de Oro had pinned Mistico when they were the last three, clean, to knock him out of the tournament and the crowd was very surprised and unhappy about that. The main event was an elimination match with all the CMLL title holders except Mascara Dorada, who had already qualified last week. Besides Mistico, Hechicero and Angel de Oro, it had Templario, Neon, Niebla Roja and Stigma. On 4/24, Mascara Dorada and Hechicero will be joined by the winner of the match on 4/17 with all the Mexican national champions for a three-way Universal title tournament final.

— Last night’s UFC match with Josh Hokit vs. Curtis Blaydes is the leading candidate so far for fight of the year. It was an amazing slugfest, super exciting and the advantage went back-and-forth for three rounds with the most punches thrown in a heavyweight three-rounder in UFC history. Both were hospitalized, but Hokit was booked for a fight in nine weeks against Derrick Lewis. President Trump was at the show. According to Dana White, Trump specifically asked for Lewis to be on the White House show. So they immediately called Lewis, who agreed to it. They booked Hokit based on beating Blaydes, but with the beating he took, nine weeks is a tough turnaround. Of course getting on the White House show for many, if not most (and absolutely not all) fighters, is a big deal.

— Other bouts that have been highly recommended this weekend were the Arena Mexico main event and the Champion Carnival main event from today with Go Shiozaki vs. Yuma Anzai from All Japan. Young Bucks vs. Hechicero & El Clon from Collision was also great.

— Regarding Gable Steveson, while he clearly has the athletic talent, this is very quick to be signed by UFC. They probably had to because I think there was a really good chance he got an offer from MVP for the Rousey vs. Carano fight, and UFC, which has been interested in him, sped up the process. Rushing guys into UFC is a major risk.

— Dirty White Boy Tony Anthony turned 65 today. Cibernetico turned 51. El Terrible turned 50. Jackie Redmond, the WWE TV announcer, turned 39. Mighty Inoue was born on this day in 1949. Promoter George Culkin was born on this day in 1926. Joe Louis, the legendary boxer, who was involved in pro wrestling, died 45 years ago today at 66. Mike Von Erich died 39 years ago today at 23. Mary Jane Mull died 27 years ago today at 70. Great Goliath of Gordman & Goliath fame died 22 years today at 69. Balls Mahoney died ten years ago today at 44. Joe Pedicino died six years ago today at 70 (thanks to Tony Richards).

— Santino Marella was suspended by TNA as a cover due to undergoing sleep apnea related surgery.

— For Create-a-Pro on 5/11 in Melville, NY, the MJF vs. Nic Nemeth match that TNA cancelled is now Nemeth vs. Bear Bronson and Kris Statlander, Max Caster and Smart Mark Sterling will be on the show. MJF will headline in an open challenge for the AEW title if he’s champion.

— KC Navarro and EC3 will return to TNA for Thursday’s Impact. Impact and Collision will be going head-to-head because TNT is airing NHL playoffs on Saturday night.

— Neon & Xelhua headlined Arena Mexico tonight against Hechicero & Volador Jr. plus Star Jr. vs. Soberano Jr. Mistico & Neon vs. Hechicero & Volador Jr. headlines Puebla on Monday.

AEW Dynasty preview & predictions: What’s a devil to a god?

The following is opinion-based and reflects the views of the author and not our website.

No wrestling company in the world has a higher ceiling than All Elite Wrestling. On any given night with the right combination of intent and a bit of restraint, it’s the most exciting place this wonderfully silly medium has to offer.

The matches hit harder, the risks feel real, and for a few hours, everything clicks into something special. Even their average output is fathoms above what the monolith of the industry embarrassingly tosses out on Mondays and Fridays, and that’s been the case for a while.

But sometimes it’s a self-inflicted struggle to reach such great heights. For every moment of clarity, there’s another that feels strangely undercooked: stories that drift, characters that stall, ideas that arrive half-formed and linger longer than they should. The ingredients are almost always there. The discipline is not. I have exhaustively covered every major AEW show except one – something I am beyond grateful for and never take for granted – and I am still pleading with them not to add multiple matches within hours of bell time. I do have a family.

Dynasty is a reflection of all this: a card full of wrestlers operating near the peak of what they are capable of, just enough uncertainty to warrant a head tilt, and too many matches added the week of the show. Kyle Fletcher’s injury clearly threw a wrench into everything planned, so I magnanimously offer grace during this trying time.

Let’s run through the card as announced through Friday night.

AEW Dynasty 2026 preview & predictions

Chris Jericho vs. Ricochet

Jericho is back and he is once again doing…something. Whether that something is good remains an open question. Absence, in his case, has not necessarily made the heart fonder, but it has made my digital pen more willing. Everyone needed a break from the persistence of Jericho. The man would roll into a show, and his ten minutes would feel like humidity in the middle of July: heavy, pulpy, and begging for relief.

Working down the card with someone fun and willing is the proper use of Jericho at this point. Steering clear of the people whose best moments are still ahead of them is wise. What I worry about is Jericho looking across the locker room and spotting Mike Bailey or Kevin Knight, someone with enough motion to set off a neighborhood’s worth of Ring cameras, and licking his chops. And please, for the love of god, keep him far away from Fletcher. 

Ricochet will not be broken by his time across the ring from Jericho. His progress won’t stall. For now, this is fine.

Prediction: Jericho

Casino Royale battle royal for the vacant TNT title

Best wishes to Fletcher, who hopefully makes it back for All In this summer. He had long outgrown the TNT Championship, but having him reliably carry the midcard made an enormous difference in weekly television. His absence creates a void, but it’s also a significant opportunity to do something exciting.

Someone like Rush or the earlier-mentioned Bailey and Knight would be inspired choices to carry the gold. All three can be counted on to deliver weekly, and in entirely different ways. These matches are always impossible to predict with any real confidence, but Tony Khan, I beseech you: take this as a chance for genuine growth, not a moment to rest on your laurels and reach for the old reliables. The person who steps into this vacuum has a chance to matter.

Prediction: Someone inspired (please)

Kazuchika Okada & Konosuke Takeshita vs. The Young Bucks

The “can they coexist” trope is one of my least favorites in all of pro wrestling. It’s right up there with a random tag team calling themselves “best friends.” At least this question answers itself immediately (they cannot!) and we’re spared the indignity of being asked it seriously.

The more honest conversation this match opens up is about Takeshita, who has been adrift in AEW for long enough now that it’s hard to ignore. He floats in and out of the Okada rivalry, something that should have been definitively resolved months ago, and engages and disengages without direction, without urgency, and increasingly without consequence. The moves are still big, the bombs still land. But it feels hollow.

Elite execution is being asked to compensate for a story and a character that’s lost all urgency. Consistent, clear, and most importantly, expedited direction would do wonders. Booked with the conviction AEW showed with Fletcher, Takeshita could heat back up and step directly into the space his stablemate left behind.

Prediction: Okada & Takeshita

Darby Allin vs. Andrade El Ídolo

Allin occupies a specific and invaluable position in professional wrestling: a perverse, almost irresponsible, bumper who gives everyone their very best match. Good stories and solid creative always help, but nothing helps a career more than working with Darby. He should win the big one once before his body inevitably makes the decision for him (and make no mistake, it will eventually make that decision) but not now, and not like this.

His value isn’t in wearing gold and everything that comes with it; it’s in what he extracts from whoever stands across from him. There are still so many AEW wrestlers who would be significantly buoyed by a program with him. 

Right now, that person is El Idolo, whose ceiling remains stratospheric even without Darby’s help. The clarity and sharpness he’s carrying into every match right now suggest a man screaming toward an astonishingly high peak. Every match and every moment on screen has the texture of someone who finally knows exactly what he is. Don’t slow that down. Don’t complicate it. Point him upward and get out of the way before he decides he’s done enough and, again, starts to coast on his natural gifts.

The neon flashing sign points to a clear destination: Darby vs. MJF at Double or Nothing. Fine on paper, but not where I’d steer the ship. I’m spoiling myself here, but I think Kenny Omega is winning this main event. I don’t have much stomach for the inevitable procession of wheezy MJF promos about Darby’s fragility, his possible imminent death, and whatever other standard-issue material gets excavated from the vault, but somehow, I’ll endure.

Prediction: Darby

AEW World Tag Team Champions FTR defend against Adam Copeland & Christian Cage

If this is the ceremonial last run at the top for two genuine legends of the business, then sure, fine, whatever. AEW has always had a complicated relationship with its legend types, and Copeland is the most complicated of all. His career is a collection of great moments more than great, sustained work. It’s highlights assembled into a reel, admittedly a long one, which gets mistaken for a collective body of work. AEW asked its audience to receive him as a top-tier attraction, but some of us did the math on our own.

It takes about two minutes of honest thought to understand why Cope’s retirement tour feels so fundamentally at odds with Sting’s. Part of it is personal preference; Sting was a resonator. I can point to discrete moments where he made me feel genuinely alive as a wrestling fan. With Copeland, I can point to cool moments: mostly highspots, but calorically empty.

The second part is less subjective: Sting belongs in a rare and specific pantheon of performers by any reasonable objective measure. Copeland does not and not by a small margin. Always better as part of something rather than singular, Cope’s legacy will surely endure, though it won’t be what he sees in his head when he closes his eyes at night.

The funniest part is that when it’s all over, FTR will likely be remembered more fondly and have done more for tag team wrestling than their opponents. But we all know where this is going. Whether Dynasty takes us there is the question.

Prediction: Copeland and Christian win the titles

AEW Continental Champion Jon Moxley defends against Will Ospreay

Ospreay came back from a surgery serious enough to make people quietly question his future. The big return has already happened and his direction is clear. This is a simple revenge story with all its emotional infrastructure already in place; it just needs the right villain standing across the ring.

That villain needs to be Moxley, unambiguously and completely, not the tweener the audience has been cheering for the past few months, and certainly not the antihero. We need the version of Mox who tried to kill someone with a plastic bag, a real piece of garbage without qualification. The tweener run served its purpose and reminded everyone why they loved him in the first place, but this program only reaches top gear if Moxley is genuinely dangerous and Ospreay is a serious, aggressive hero with a neck to protect and a score to settle.

When the bell rings, Ospreay needs to initiate the action. He needs to wrestle with purpose and belief. If there is a superhero counter sequence at any point during this match, the groan I’ll let out will get me evicted.

The ballsy booking decision, one that would show genuine conviction, would be to structurally run back Moxley’s match with CM Punk with Ospreay coming out on top. What will likely happen instead is Moxley mercilessly working the neck until Ospreay comes roaring back like nothing happened (derogatory), before a hold-your-breath finishing stretch (mostly derogatory, slightly complimentary).

Ospreay shouldn’t win this. It’s too early, and taking a title isn’t the point. He needs to beat Moxley in something more violent, more permanent, down the line.

Prediction: Moxley retains

AEW Women’s World Champion Thekla defends against Jamie Hayter

Hayter is still finding her way back. Her injury cost her more than time, halting her momentum at the precise moment she seemed ready to cement herself as a permanent fixture at the top of the card. She’s just now beginning to be what she once was, and her partnership with Windsor is a big part of that. It gave her a credible partner to play off, a vehicle for consistency, and, most importantly, a reason to show up every week with something specific to do.

Knowing that you’ll be on the show and performing every week goes a long way toward staying sharp and staying engaged. You can see her finding herself again inside that dynamic. Behold the power of friendship. 

Thekla arrives here with all the momentum Hayter once had. She has been a transformative force the moment she arrived in AEW, and nothing about her current trajectory suggests that will change. Right now, she’s the best thing going in AEW’s women’s division. I understand if her brand of promo and mic work isn’t for everyone, but in a world where so many people do so many things the same, something different – and something remarkable – speaks to me. I remain, unequivocally, a fan of the spider.

This is a match that could significantly overdeliver if these two really lay into each other, but there will be no title change.

Prediction: Thekla

AEW World Champion MJF defends against Kenny Omega

If there is any justice left in professional wrestling, let Omega have one last run before he can’t anymore. He has earned it in ways that are somehow both difficult to fully articulate and impossible to overstate; a modern legend whose fingerprints, for better and for worse, are all over the current state of pro wrestling.  Every match now carries the particular weight of potentially being one of the last true Kenny Omega matches — something I write in every column and will continue until I can’t.

Here is one possibility worth sitting with: MJF drops the title to Omega here, giving Omega the last reign he deserves heading into AEW’s biggest date on the calendar. The road to Wembley becomes a drive toward Ospreay vs. Omega, a rematch the wrestling world has been circling for two years, finally given the venue and stakes it warrants. Two maximalists, in London, in front of eighty thousand people, for the AEW World Championship.

That makes a whole lot of sense and will sell a whole lot of seats. And wouldn’t it be nice to see MJF struggle with having a short title reign and the fallout that comes with it? Joys abound for us all. 

Omega was a catalyst; someone instrumental in building something from nothing. He proved that another kind of wrestling company wasn’t just possible, but that it could achieve tremendous success. It should be Omega until the wheels fall off.

Prediction: Kenny Omega

AEW Dynasty 2026 Start Times: US, UK, Australia and more

AEW Dynasty 2026 takes place on Sunday, April 12, 2026, live from Rogers Arena in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, with the main card bell time set for 8pm ET / 5pm PT. Whether you’re watching from the East Coast of the US, the UK in the early hours of Monday morning, or catching it over breakfast in Australia, here is everything you need to know about when Dynasty goes live in your time zone.

Event at a Glance

DetailInfo
EventAEW Dynasty 2026
DateSunday, April 12, 2026
VenueRogers Arena, Vancouver, BC, Canada
Zero Hour Preshow7:00 PM ET / 4:00 PM PT
Main Card Start8:00 PM ET / 5:00 PM PT
Edition3rd annual Dynasty PPV 
Tickets Sold~10,000+ 

Full Global Start Time Breakdown

Region / Time ZoneZero Hour (Preshow)Main Card Start
US Eastern (ET)7:00 PM Sunday, Apr 128:00 PM Sunday, Apr 12
US Central (CT)6:00 PM Sunday, Apr 127:00 PM Sunday, Apr 12
US Mountain (MT)5:00 PM Sunday, Apr 126:00 PM Sunday, Apr 12
US Pacific (PT)4:00 PM Sunday, Apr 125:00 PM Sunday, Apr 12
United Kingdom (BST)Midnight Sunday/Mon, Apr 12/131:00 AM Monday, Apr 13
Central Europe (CEST)1:00 AM Monday, Apr 132:00 AM Monday, Apr 13
Arabia (AST)3:00 AM Monday, Apr 134:00 AM Monday, Apr 13
India (IST)5:30 AM Monday, Apr 136:30 AM Monday, Apr 13
Australia (AEDT)10:00 AM Monday, Apr 1311:00 AM Monday, Apr 13
New Zealand (NZST)12:00 PM Monday, Apr 131:00 PM Monday, Apr 13

Based on confirmed 8pm ET main card start and 7pm ET Zero Hour.

Why Dynasty 2026 Is a Must-Watch

This is the first AEW pay-per-view ever held in Vancouver, making it a historic occasion for the promotion. The city’s crowd will be overwhelmingly behind Canadian legends Adam Copeland and Christian Cage as they challenge FTR for the tag titles on home soil.. Meanwhile, the main event between MJF and Kenny Omega is arguably one of the most anticipated AEW World Championship matches in recent years.

Where to Watch by Region

RegionPlatformPPV Price
United StatesHBO Max, Amazon Prime, PPV.com, Sling, YouTube$39.99 (Max) / $49.99 (others)
United KingdomMyAEW, Amazon Prime, TrillerTV£19.99 PPV / £14.99/mo MyAEW 
Australia / NZTrillerTV, MyAEW~$35 AUD 
Rest of WorldPPV.com, TrillerTV, MyAEWVaries by region

Zero Hour preshow is free on YouTube, X (Twitter), and Facebook for all regions.

April 13, 2026 Observer Newsletter: AEW Dynasty preview, much discussed Pat McAfee WrestleMania 42 angle, TNA talent controversy

It was another huge news week and Dave Meltzer’s new Wrestling Observer Newsletter recounts it all and then some.

He previews this Sunday’s AEW Dynasty card, headlined by AEW World Champion MJF vs. former champion Kenny Omega.

Dave looks back at last Friday’s much discussed angle that introduced Pat McAfee into the Randy Orton vs. Cody Rhodes mix, whose idea is what, and what could mean creatively for the future. He also gives a look at the final week before WrestleMania 42 next weekend.

Dave also delves into the controversial moves by TNA pulling talent from indie shows where they were set to face AEW talent.

He also recaps NJPW Sakura Genesis and the new IWGP Heavyweight Champion being crowned, NXT Stand & Deliver, CMLL, and the rest of the news in another wild pro wrestling and MMA week.

Click here to read (sub needed)

How to watch the AEW Dynasty 2026 Preshow Live

The AEW Dynasty 2026 Zero Hour preshow goes live on Sunday, April 12, 2026, at 7pm ET / 4pm PT, one hour before the main card bell time, and the good news is that it is available across multiple platforms, several of which are completely free.

What Is the Zero Hour Preshow?

The Zero Hour is AEW’s official pre-show format, running for approximately 60 minutes ahead of every major PPV event. It traditionally features at least one competitive in-ring match, analyst segments, backstage promos, and hype packages designed to build the atmosphere before the main card.

Official Platforms to Watch the Zero Hour

The Dynasty 2026 Zero Hour will stream across a wide range of platforms, giving fans in every region a way to tune in:

PlatformRegionCost
YouTube (AEW Official Channel)US, Canada, UK, Select InternationalFree
HBO MaxUnited StatesFree with Max subscription (from $10.99/mo)
Amazon Prime VideoUS, Canada, France, Germany, UKFree preshow; PPV at $49.99
MyAEW.comCanada, UK, InternationalIncluded with $19.99/mo or $119.99/yr subscription
PPV.comUS + 180 countriesFree preshow; main card purchase required
X (Twitter)GlobalFree
FacebookGlobalFree
TrillerTVInternational / Rest of WorldFree preshow with AEW Plus pass ($7.99)

Best Way to Watch by Region

United States

For US-based fans, YouTube is the simplest option. AEW’s official channel has a perfect track record of streaming Zero Hour content live without any paywall.

Fans already subscribed to HBO Max can watch there too, though it is worth noting that the Zero Hour sits outside the PPV paywall but still requires an active Max subscription. Those planning to purchase the full Dynasty 2026 PPV at $39.99 on HBO Max (versus $49.99 on other platforms) should start there.

United Kingdom

UK fans have arguably the best value option in 2026: MyAEW, which now includes all PPV events with a monthly subscription of £14.99 or an annual pass at £90. For the Zero Hour specifically, YouTube and Facebook remain the easiest free-access options. HBO Max is also now active in the UK, providing another route in for subscribers.

Australia & New Zealand

Fans Down Under should head to TrillerTV or MyAEW, both of which cover the Zero Hour preshow. The TrillerTV price for the full Dynasty PPV sits at $35 AUD, significantly cheaper than the US rate. Zero Hour access is available with a TrillerTV AEW Plus pass at $7.99.

Do You Need to Pay for the Preshow?

No, the Zero Hour preshow is explicitly free on YouTube, X, and Facebook, regardless of whether you have purchased the Dynasty 2026 PPV. The same policy applied to AEW Revolution 2026 in March, where AEW confirmed that Zero Hour would stream free across social platforms. The only cost consideration is that HBO Max users still need an active subscription to access the preshow on that platform, even though it is outside the PPV paywall.

AEW Dynasty 2026 Preshow Start Times: US, UK, Australia and more

AEW Dynasty 2026 is almost here. With the Zero Hour preshow kicking off proceedings at Rogers Arena in Vancouver, British Columbia, you’ll want to know exactly when to tune in, no matter where in the world you are watching from. We’ve got you covered on that front.

What Is the AEW Dynasty 2026 Zero Hour?

The AEW Zero Hour is the official one-hour preshow that precedes every major AEW pay-per-view, traditionally featuring a competitive match, in-ring promos, backstage segments, and panel analysis to set the tone for the main card.

For Dynasty 2026, the Zero Hour preshow begins one full hour before the main card bell time, following the same structure AEW has used for all its major 2026 PPV events, including Revolution in March. It streams free on AEW’s digital platforms and HBO Max, meaning even fans who haven’t purchased the PPV can catch the stream live.

AEW Dynasty 2026 Preshow Start Times by Region

The main card kicks off at 8pm ET / 5pm PT on Sunday, April 12, 2026, meaning the Zero Hour preshow starts at 7pm ET / 4pm PT. Here is every major region broken down:

Region / Time ZoneZero Hour (Preshow)Main Card Start
US Eastern Time (ET)7:00 PM Sunday, Apr 128:00 PM Sunday, Apr 12
US Central Time (CT)6:00 PM Sunday, Apr 127:00 PM Sunday, Apr 12
US Mountain Time (MT)5:00 PM Sunday, Apr 126:00 PM Sunday, Apr 12
US Pacific Time (PT)4:00 PM Sunday, Apr 125:00 PM Sunday, Apr 12
United Kingdom (BST)Midnight Sunday/Mon, Apr 12/131:00 AM Monday, Apr 13
Central Europe (CEST)1:00 AM Monday, Apr 132:00 AM Monday, Apr 13
India (IST)4:30 AM Monday, Apr 135:30 AM Monday, Apr 13
Australia (AEDT)10:00 AM Monday, Apr 1311:00 AM Monday, Apr 13
New Zealand (NZST)12:00 PM Monday, Apr 131:00 PM Monday, Apr 13

Times based on confirmed 8pm ET main card bell time with Zero Hour running one hour prior.

AEW Dynasty 2026 Match Card

MatchStipulation
MJF (c) vs. Kenny OmegaAEW World Championship
FTR (c) vs. Cope & Christian CageAEW World Tag Team Championship
Jon Moxley (c) vs. Will OspreayAEW Continental Championship
Thekla (c) vs. Jamie HayterAEW Women’s World Championship
Tommaso Ciampa vs. TBACasino Gauntlet — Vacant AEW TNT Championship
Andrade El Ídolo vs. Darby AllinSingles match (Allin earns title shot if he wins)
Young Bucks vs. Okada & TakeshitaTag team match
Chris Jericho vs. RicochetSingles match

Card subject to change.

Event Details at a Glance

DetailInfo
EventAEW Dynasty 2026
DateSunday, April 12, 2026
VenueRogers Arena, Vancouver, BC, Canada
Zero Hour Preshow (ET)7:00 PM ET
Main Card (ET)8:00 PM ET
Historic NoteFirst AEW PPV held in Vancouver 
Edition3rd annual Dynasty event 

AEW Dynasty 2026 marks a genuinely historic moment for the promotion, it is the first AEW pay-per-view ever held in Vancouver, and only the third AEW PPV staged on Canadian soil following the 2023 Forbidden Door and the 2025 All Out.

Women’s title defense, first Zero Hour bout announced for AEW Dynasty card

The AEW Women’s World title will be on the line at next Sunday’s AEW Dynasty as Thekla will defend against former champion Jamie Hayter.

Hayter laid out the challenge on Thursday’s Collision in a backstage segment with Mina Shirakawa and Alex Windsor at her side. The three defeated Thekla and the Sisters of Sin on Wednesday’s Dynamite in the last chapter of their feud.

Thekla’s AEW debut came at Hayter’s expense but the match took a while to be made as Hayter missed time with an injury. The two had their first singles match at last October’s WrestleDream where Hayter came out on top.

Hayter’s only title run ended at May 2023’s Double or Nothing in a quick loss to Toni Storm after which she was out for a lengthy period due to injuries. Thekla will be looking for her fourth successful title defense.

In another new addition, Hayter’s Brawling Birds teammate Alex Windsor will take on Marina Shafir on the Zero Hour pre-show.

Current AEW Dynasty lineup | Vancouver, Canada | Sunday, April 12

  • AEW World Champion MJF defend against Kenny Omega
  • AEW Continental Champion Jon Moxley defends against Will Ospreay
  • AEW World Tag Team Champions FTR (Dax Harwood & Cash Wheeler) defend against Christian Cage & Adam Copeland
  • Darby Allin vs. Andrade El Idolo with a World title shot for Allin with a win
  • AEW Women’s World Champion Thekla defends against Jamie Hayter
  • Zero Hour: Alex Windsor vs. Marina Shafir

Continental title now up for grabs in Jon Moxley vs. Will Ospreay AEW Dynasty match

The stakes have been raised for the Jon Moxley vs. Will Ospreay grudge match at this month’s AEW Dynasty as Moxley’s Continental title will now be on the line.

The development came about during Thursday’s Collision after Moxley successfully defeated Anthony Bowens in an eliminator match. Ospreay ran out after the match and laid out Moxley with the Hidden Blade before he was pulled out by the Death Riders.

Ospreay grabbed the title belt left behind and told Moxley he wanted their Dynasty match to have everyone banned from ringside which is a Continental title match rule. Its addition to the bout was later confirmed on the show.

Ospreay, who returned last month from serious neck surgery, was taken out in storyline by Moxley and the Death Riders at last August’s Forbidden Door. Ospreay made his surprise return at March’s Revolution to confront Moxley and defeated PAC on Wednesday’s Dynamite.

The two have only squared off once in a straight up singles match, that coming at April 2022’s NJPW Windy City Riot where Moxley picked up the victory. They shared the ring in two NJPW multi-man matches afterward but their AEW encounters have always been in tag team bouts.

Current AEW Dynasty lineup | Vancouver, Canada | Sunday, April 12

  • AEW World Champion MJF defend against Kenny Omega
  • AEW Continental Champion Jon Moxley defends against Will Ospreay
  • AEW World Tag Team Champions FTR (Dax Harwood & Cash Wheeler) defend against Christian Cage & Adam Copeland
  • Darby Allin vs. Andrade El Idolo with a World title shot for Allin with a win
  • AEW Women’s World Champion Thekla defends against Jamie Hayter*

*Not confirmed