The devil is always in the details – and no poker schedule invites more scrutiny than the WSOP.
For the most part, the 2026 WSOP schedule remains largely in line with 2025. The smallest buy-in event is still the $300 Gladiators of Poker, and the biggest remains the $250K Super High Roller.
The opening event, however, has shifted. A $550 Mystery Millions with a $1 million bounty prize guarantee replaces last year’s $1,000 version.
Rake, meanwhile, remains largely unchanged, with just a 0.5% increase on the $100K and $250K high rollers – and no change for the masses.
Check out the full 100-bracelet schedule below.
Delayed Main Event final table
But the real story may not be in the schedule at all. Two paragraphs in the official WSOP press release set off alarm bells.
“As always, the centerpiece of the summer is the $10,000 No-Limit Hold'em World Championship, better known as the ‘Main Event,’ which begins on Thursday, July 2. Play will proceed until the final table is reached on July 13, with specifics on the Main Event final table play dates and broadcast coverage to be announced at a later date.”
That stands out – not for what it says, but for what it doesn’t.
The 2026 WSOP runs from May 26 to July 15. Since 2017, the Main Event champion has been crowned on the final day of the series. But this wording suggests play will pause at nine players on July 13, with the final table dates still to be confirmed.
That strongly indicates the champion will not be crowned on July 15.
There may be a practical explanation. The FIFA World Cup semi-finals – played in the US this summer – take place on July 14 and 15. Competing with one of the biggest sporting events on the planet would be a bold move and would definitely decrease potential eyeballs.
But we don’t think that’s the whole story. And if the Main Event final table is being pushed back, the obvious question is, by how much?
The start of the August 9 era?
The WSOP has precedent here. Between 2008 and 2016, the final table was delayed until November, creating the ‘November Nine’ era.
That gave ESPN time to broadcast all of its highlight packages and try to build the nine players into characters that people would want to tune in and root for.
Looking back, it’s clear that break was way too long.
So when’s the most likely time for the 2026 final table to play out? We think it’s later in July (after the World Cup final on Sunday, July 19) or, more likely, early August.
And we think it’s going to come with a major new broadcast announcement.
Check out the second paragraph from the press release that caught our attention.
“To bring WSOP action to a wider international audience for free, a daily stream will be broadcast live on the official WSOP YouTube channel from May 26 through to the start of the Main Event.”
Again, it’s what the WSOP isn’t saying that should pique your interest. A daily free live stream is awesome. Players have been calling for the WSOP to be broadcast free for a long time.
But the Main Event is where the real interest is, and that’s where the breadcrumbs of the free streams currently end. It would be unusual for the WSOP to stream every day of the series for free, only to go silent during the most-watched poker event of the summer.
That omission opens the door to the possibility of a new broadcast arrangement – perhaps a network or streaming partner for the Main Event, culminating in a standalone final table event.
2026 WSOP Main Event live extravaganza
Now comes the speculative part.
Daily Main Event streams would sit with a network or streaming partner and could be followed by a daily highlights show that starts on July 14 and leads a big, mainstream audience up to the final table.
If daily Main Event highlights begin after the World Cup final on July 19, all 12 days of coverage could air by July 31, setting up the first weekend in August for a live final table special. (Or, a week later on August 8-9, allowing for a bigger build-up.)
Is this the start of the August 9 era?
Either way, it seems something very big is being lined up for the 2026 Main Event. And if that’s the case, the biggest headline may not be who wins it, but when.