Saturday Night’s Main Event Goes Global: Full Match Card, Start Times, and How to Watch in 11 Countries
Saturday Night’s Main Event storms back to WWE after a three-month hiatus, its last outing capped by Goldberg calling time on his career after falling to then World Heavyweight Champion Gunther. With the landscape reshuffled, expect fresh shocks and high-stakes twists.
WWE is dusting off Saturday Night's Main Event for the first time in more than three months, and the timing is spicy. The last SNME ended with Goldberg calling it a career after losing to then-World Heavyweight Champion Gunther. Since then, the chessboard has been completely rearranged. Now we land on Saturday, November 1, 2025, at the Delta Center in Salt Lake City, with titles up for grabs, a brand-new World Heavyweight Champion to crown, and a card that looks designed to blow up a few storylines.
When and where (and tickets)
Saturday Night's Main Event hits the Delta Center in Salt Lake City, Utah, on November 1, 2025. Tickets are on sale at WWE.com and SeatGeek. If you want to go bigger, premium and hospitality packages are available through On Location.
The card: messy rivalries, clean stakes
Intercontinental Championship: Dominik Mysterio defends in a triple threat against Penta and Rusev. These three have been knocking lumps out of each other for weeks, and a three-way with Dom's title in play is exactly the right kind of chaos. Mysterio wants another notch on the belt; Penta and Rusev are clearly treating this like a smash-and-grab for gold.
Undisputed WWE Women's Championship: Tiffany Stratton vs Jade Cargill. Jade went full heel on the October 24 SmackDown and blindsided Stratton out of nowhere. Now Tiffany gets to swing back, except she has to do it while defending a title and dealing with a newly meaner Cargill. Excellent timing if you are not Tiffany Stratton.
Undisputed WWE Championship: Cody Rhodes vs Drew McIntyre. Cody fired off some pointed receipts lately, but Drew walking in with a game plan and no patience is a bad combination for a champion trying to keep a hold on the top prize. If Rhodes is going to survive, it will not be by accident.
Main event: CM Punk vs Jey Uso for the vacant World Heavyweight Championship. Seth Rollins' injury forced him to relinquish the title, which is how we get Punk and Jey in a winner-takes-everything situation. They have already heated it up with a tense promo back-and-forth, and this feels like the kind of match that flips a locker room pecking order overnight.
How to watch (yes, the rights are a little complicated)
Here is the quick version: after WWE's big deal with ESPN, the company's Premium Live Events moved to ESPN's streaming platforms. But Saturday Night's Main Event is the exception. In the United States, NBC remains the partner, so you can watch SNME live on Peacock.
Internationally, things are not exactly one-size-fits-all. WWE has pointed fans to the WWE Network outside the U.S., with highlights also rolling out on WWE's official YouTube channel. At the same time, promotional materials for this specific show also say it will be available on Netflix internationally. Translation: depending on your country, you may see it on WWE Network or Netflix. Check your local platform listings, because distribution is clearly in a transition phase.
Start times around the world
- United States: Doors/show start in-arena at 7:00 PM ET / 4:00 PM PT; live stream begins at 8:00 PM ET / 5:00 PM PT on Peacock (Nov 1)
- United Kingdom: 1:00 AM GMT (Nov 2)
- Canada: 8:00 PM ET (Nov 1)
- Japan: 9:00 AM JST (Nov 2)
- India: 5:30 AM IST (Nov 2)
- Brazil: 9:00 PM BRT (Nov 1)
- Germany: 2:00 AM CET (Nov 2)
- Mexico: 6:00 PM CST (Nov 1)
- Saudi Arabia: 3:00 AM AST (Nov 2)
- Australia: 11:00 AM AEST (Nov 2)
- New Zealand: 1:00 PM NZDT (Nov 2)
Why this one matters
We are getting a new World Heavyweight Champion the moment the bell rings on Punk vs Jey. Cody's title reign is under real threat from a very motivated Drew. Tiffany vs Jade is a grudge match disguised as a title defense. And the Intercontinental triple threat feels like it could steal the show if it does not implode first.
SNME has a lot to prove with this return, and the lineup looks like WWE knows it. If the matches land, you are going to see some immediate fallout across the weekly shows. If not... well, that is why you stack the card. Either way, Salt Lake City should be loud.