
AEW’s All Out pay-per-view on September 20 reportedly drew between 135,000 and 140,000 buys worldwide. According to the Wrestling Observer Newsletter, the preliminary figures for the Toronto-based event mirror those of March’s Revolution, marking another strong showing for an afternoon card.
If the numbers hold, All Out will tie with Revolution as AEW’s second most-purchased event of 2025. The company’s top seller this year remains July’s All In, which reached an estimated 180,000 to 185,000 buys.
The event followed AEW’s recent trend of afternoon pay-per-views, with the main card beginning at 3 PM Eastern. This scheduling overlapped by one hour with WWE’s Wrestlepalooza, which started at 7 PM Eastern on the same day.
All Out also marked a distribution milestone as the first AEW pay-per-view available for purchase on HBO Max. While offered at a discounted price, access required an active subscription. The show was simultaneously available through traditional carriers including Amazon Prime, YouTube, and PPV.com.
Headlining the card, Hangman Adam Page successfully defended the AEW World Championship against Kyle Fletcher. Other major title bouts included Kris Statlander winning the AEW Women’s World Championship in a four-way match, Mercedes Moné retaining the TBS Championship against Riho, Kazuchika Okada defending the AEW Unified Championship in a Triple Threat, and Brodido capturing gold in a Tag Team Ladder Match.
The show also featured multiple surprise returns and storyline developments. Jack Perry resurfaced after the ladder match, attacking The Young Bucks and aligning with Luchasaurus. PAC returned to aid Jon Moxley in defeating Darby Allin in a Coffin Match. Beth Copeland debuted during a post-match angle involving Adam Copeland and Christian Cage, while Eddie Kingston made a triumphant in-ring return.