AEW doesn't have its own version of WrestleMania yet. However, if there's one show that's on its card every year that has the best shot of becoming that for AEW one day, it's All In. Not only because the first All In was effectively a proof of concept for AEW the year before the company launched, but because the first two All In events took place inside a stadium that can hold 90,000 fans.
All In returns for 2025, and AEW is mixing up the formula this time around. While it's still shaping up to be the biggest AEW show of the year, it's going to look and feel a lot different from any All In that has come before it. From every match announced for the card, to how you can watch along live, everything you need to know about AEW All In 2025 is right here.
The first big difference between this year's All In compared to the last two is when it will take place. Since the last two All In PPVs took place at the end of August, that weekend was starting to become synonymous with the event. This year, All In takes place on July 12, 2025. Not only is that a lot earlier than usual, but it's also a Saturday. That's good news for those who have to be up for work on Monday mornings, as it bucks the AEW PPV Sunday night trend. It's also currently slated to have an earlier than usual start time, with the main card kicking off at 3 pm EST.
There have been a lot of moving parts when it comes to watching both AEW and WWE in 2025. However, things got particularly confusing for AEW PPVs for Double or Nothing as issues with Triller TV, the go-to for most fans when it comes to AEW's biggest shows, meant you had to go elsewhere to watch it. AEW's PPVs haven't found their way to HBO Max like its weekly shows, but like Double or Nothing, you will be able to buy and watch AEW All In through Amazon Prime. It isn't included in your Prime subscription, though, and needs to be bought separately. It can also be purchased on YouTube.
The biggest difference between this year's All In and the two events of the same name that came before it is where it will take place. All In has emanated from London's Wembley Stadium for the past two years but on July 12, it heads to Arlington, Texas. It will be at Globe Life Field, the home of MLB's Texas Rangers, which has a capacity of roughly 40,000. If you want to be there to see it live, there are still a lot of tickets available via Ticketmaster, some of which cost less than $40.
Everything Mercedes Mone has done during her first year and a bit in AEW has led to this. The woman formerly known as Sasha Banks has beaten everyone who has been put in her way. Quite literally, as even after all this time, she still hasn't lost a singles match in AEW. Even better for Mone, her TBS Title won't be on the line at All In, just Toni Storm's Women's Championship.
Someone has to beat Mone eventually, and if anyone's going to do it, it's Storm. Not only that, but the stage doesn't get bigger than this in AEW. As much as I enjoy a streak lasting as long as possible, if Storm doesn't end Mone's streak at All In, then AEW runs the risk of it wearing thin and having to end it on a smaller stage, making it feel smaller than it deserves to be.
Hangman Page has been on a road to becoming AEW's World Champion again, and thanks to his Owen Hart tournament win at Double or Nothing, he has the opportunity to make that happen. Jon Moxley has been holding AEW's top prize hostage for months, and on the biggest stage possible, Page has the chance to save AEW from Mox and become the people's champion.
That's exactly what will happen. Similar to the Mone vs. Storm match, there is something that needs to happen in this match that's been built to for months, and if not here, then where? Page slaying Moxley and becoming champion needs to become a reality, and since you're having the match on a show in a stadium with 40,000 fans in attendance, this is the best place for it to go down.
Kenny Omega vs. Kazuchika Okada In A Winner Takes All Match For The AEW International Championship And AEW Continental Championship
This is a big one. Kazuchika Okada and Kenny Omega have had singles matches that are considered by some to be some of the greatest of all time. Not only will this be the first time they have ever squared off one-on-one in AEW, but it's their first single match in over seven years. As if all of that wasn't enough, there will be not one, but two titles up for grabs.
Despite this being a winner-takes-all match for two top singles titles, the gold on the line is almost secondary here. All eyes will be on this match because it's Omega vs. Okada. The wrestling world will be expecting a match that lives up to the hype of the matches they had together in New Japan. Just like their last match in 2018, it will be Omega getting his hand raised at All In.
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