Champions Chess Tour 2025–2026

Champions Chess Tour 2025–2026
Details
Duration2 September 2025 – 27 May 2026
Tournaments3
Achievements (singles)
Prize money
leader
Magnus Carlsen ($102,963.40)
Points leader Hikaru Nakamura (160)
2025

The Champions Chess Tour (CCT) 2025–2026 is a fast chess tournament circuit organized in 2025–2026 by Chess.com. The tour started on 2 September 2025 and will end on 27 May 2026. It involves three online chess tournaments, which will determine 12 qualifying players of the 2026 Esports World Cup and up to 64 of the Esports Nations Cup.[1][2]

The top three finishers in the Speed Chess Championship, top three finishers in the Chess.com Open and top six players in the leaderboard not qualified from the prior two events, will qualify for the Esports World Cup, while the top player from each nation, up to 64 players, in the leaderboard will qualify for the Esports Nations Cup.

Tour points and prize money

The total prize pool for each tournament will be US$250,000, except for the Titled Tuesday Grand Prix which has prize pool of US$3,000 for each Titled Tuesday and US$30,000 for each of the three splits, also Tour points will be awarded for each Titled Tuesday result. It is distributed as follows:[3]

Titled Tuesday Grand Prix (TTGP)

Points will be based on placement within a given Titled Tuesday. Results beyond a player's top eight placements, within a split, will not count.[3]

Titled Tuesday Split
Finish Points Prize Finish Prize
1st 10 $1,000 1st $5,000
2nd 7 $750 2nd $3,000
3rd 5 $350 3rd $2,500
4th 4 $250 4th $1,500
5th 3 $150 5th $1,000
6th 2 $100 6th $750
7th 7th $500
8th-10th 1 8th $350
Top woman $100 9th $250
Top 3 streamers $100 (×3) 10th $150

Speed Chess Championship (SCC)

Prizes will be awarded to participants of each Match based on the winner of the Match, and the win percentage of each player in the Match. For prizes split by win percentage, such win percentage is determined by a player's total points accumulated in the Match divided by the number of games played in the Match.[4]

Finish Points Prize
Total Prize Winner prize Rest Split
1st QF $50,000 $25,000 By win percentage
2nd QF
3rd QF $15,000 $7,500 By win percentage
4th 100
Semifinals $30,000 $15,000 By win percentage
Quarterfinals (×4) 50 $15,000 $7,500 By win percentage
Round of 16 (×8) 0 $8,125 $4,062.50 By win percentage

Chess.com Open (CCO)

Finish Points Prize
1st QF $50,000
2nd QF $35,000
3rd QF $25,000
4th 100 $20,000
5th (×2) 75 $15,000
7th (×2) 50 $10,000
9th (×4) 35 $7,500
13th (×4) 20 $5,000
Play-In (3rd) 15 $1,500
Play-In (4th) 10 $1,000
Play-In (5th) 5 $500
Play-In (6th - 10th) 3 $200
Play-In (11st-20th) 2 -
Play-In (21st - 30th) 1 -

Tournament schedule and results

Champions Chess Tour tournaments
Tournament Dates Prize Winner Second
(or finalist)
Third Fourth
Titled Tuesday Grand Prix
Autumn Split 2 Sep 2025 – 25 Nov 2025 $3,000 (per Titled Tuesday)

$30,000 (per Split)
Magnus Carlsen Hikaru Nakamura Alireza Firouzja Denis Lazavik
Winter Split 2 Dec 2025 – 24 Feb 2026 Magnus Carlsen Jan-Krzysztof Duda Maxime Vachier-Lagrave Denis Lazavik
Spring Split 3 Mar 2026 – 26 May 2026
Speed Chess Championship 13 Oct 2025 – 9 Feb 2026 $250,000 Magnus Carlsen Alireza Firouzja Denis Lazavik Hikaru Nakamura
Chess.com Open 14 Mar 2026 – 26 Apr 2026

Standings

Prize money is shown in US dollars. The top six finishers in leaderboard who did not qualify via Speed Chess and Chess.com Opens will qualify for the Esports World Cup. Upto 64 players will qualify for the 2026 Esports Nations Cup as well, with each nation's top player in the rankings qualifying; the Titled Tuesday Spring Split rankings will determine the remaining entrants if the leaderboard is insufficient for filling all 64 spots.[2][5]

'QF' denotes that the player has qualified from another path.

Rankings as of 10 March 2026
Pos Name Speed Chess Championship Chess.com Open Titled Tuesday Grand Prix Total Prize money
Autumn Split Winter Split Spring Split
1 Magnus Carlsen QF 61 41 7 Qualified $103,713.40
2 Alireza Firouzja QF 32 0 0 Qualified $59,106.94
3 Denis Lazavik QF 24 30 5 Qualified $43,654.70
4 Hikaru Nakamura 100 41 17 2 160 $37,354.88
5 Fabiano Caruana 50 3 19 0 72 $10,597.29
6 Ian Nepomniachtchi 50 13 7 0 70 $10,662.28
7 Hans Moke Niemann 50 10 1 0 61 $10,959.38
8 Jan-Krzysztof Duda 20 37 0 57 $8,800
9 Wesley So 50 0 5 0 55 $10,158.93
10 Maxime Vachier-Lagrave 14 34 5 53 $7,200
11 Alexey Sarana 21 19 2 42 $3,950
12 Dmitry Andreikin 16 12 7 35 $2,950
13 Javokhir Sindarov 1 22 10 33 $3,850
14 Samuel Sevian 0 29 1 30 $3,450
15 Jeffery Xiong 12 15 0 27 $1,850
16 Arjun Erigaisi 0 1 21 4 26 $4,341.07
17 Vincent Keymer 0 6 19 0 25 $4,137.50
18 Sina Movahed 0 10 10 20 $3,350
19 Olexandr Bortnyk 18 1 0 19 $2,950
20 Bogdan-Daniel Deac 7 11 1 19 $750
21 Parham Maghsoodloo 11 7 0 18 $1,400
22 Nikolas Theodorou 1 9 7 17 $400
23 Pranesh M 16 0 0 16 $1,500
24 Haik Martirosyan 0 15 0 15 $1,150
25 Renato Terry 7 5 2 14 $1,350
Pos Name Speed Chess Championship Chess.com Open Titled Tuesday Grand Prix Total Prize money
Autumn Split Winter Split Spring Split
26 Andrey Esipenko 9 4 0 13 $850
27 Lê Tuấn Minh 0 9 0 3 12 $1,854.17
28 Alexander Grischuk 5 7 0 12 $500
29 Vladislav Artemiev 3 8 0 11 $600
30 Andrew Tang 6 4 0 10 $600
31 David Paravyan 9 0 0 9 $750
32 Amin Tabatabaei 4 4 1 9 $250
33 Aleksandr Shimanov 5 3 0 8 $600
34 José Martínez Alcántara 7 0 0 7 $1,951.36
35 Matthias Blübaum 1 6 0 7 $1,050
36 Volodar Murzin 3 4 0 7 $300
37 Rasmus Svane 6 0 0 6 $950
38 Vidit Gujrathi 6 0 0 6 $350
39 Nodirbek Abdusattorov 3 3 0 6 $300
40 Pranav V 5 1 0 6 $200
41 Lê Quang Liêm 0 5 0 0 5 $2,118.75
42 Dau Khuong Duy 5 0 0 5 $2,850
43 Nihal Sarin 1 4 0 5 $250
44 Faustino Oro 0 5 0 5 $750
45 Kacper Drozdowski 4 0 0 4 $250
46 Xiao Tong 4 0 0 4 $250
47 Cristobal Henriquez Villagra 0 4 0 4 $150
48 Jules Moussard 4 0 0 4 $250
49 Bharath Subramaniyam 1 3 0 4 $150
50 Mahammad Muradli 2 2 0 4 $100
51 Zbigniew Pakleza 0 3 0 3 $250
52 Daniel Naroditsky 3 0 0 3 $150
53 Rudik Makarian 1 2 0 3 $0
54 Sergey Drygalov 3 0 0 3 $100
55 Rinat Jumabayev 1 2 0 3 $0
56 Anish Giri 0 0 2 0 2 $1,523.44
57 José Carlos Ibarra Jeréz 0 0 2 2 $100
58 Murad Ibrahimli 2 0 0 2 $100
59 Salem Saleh 2 0 0 2 $100
60 Khagan Ahmad 2 0 0 2 $600
61 Aravindh Chithambaram 2 0 0 2 $0
62 Vasif Durarbayli 0 2 0 2 $100
63 Martyn Kravtsiv 1 1 0 2 $0
64 Marco Materia 0 1 1 2 $0
65 Aleksandar Inđić 0 1 0 1 $0
66 Anton Korobov 0 1 0 1 $0
67 Zhamsaran Tsydypov 0 1 0 1 $0
68 Semen Puzyrevsky 0 1 0 1 $0
69 Xue Haowen 1 0 0 1 $0
70 Sergei Zhigalko 1 0 0 1 $100
71 Felix-Antonio Ilinca 1 0 0 1 $0
72 Maksim Tsaruk 1 0 0 1 $0
73 Vahap Şanal 0 1 0 1 $0
74 Robert Piliposyan 0 0 1 1 $0
75 Benjamin Bok 1 0 0 1 $400
76 Artin Ashraf 0 1 0 1 $0
77 Allahverdi Hamidov 1 0 0 1 $0
78 Pablo Salinas Herrera 1 0 0 1 $0
79 Alexander Rustemov 0 1 0 1 $1,500
80 Mukhiddin Madaminov 0 0 1 1 $0

Tournaments details

Titled Tuesday Grand Prix

Each player’s best eight results are counted toward the Grand Prix standings, which are organized into three Splits.[6] Tiebreaks are decided by comparing players’ highest individual weekly finish among their counted results or the second-highest finish is compared, followed by the third, and so on until the tie is broken. If still tied then most number of Titled Tuesday events played would be considered. The top eight finishers in the Winter Split will qualify for Chess.com Open.[7]

Finish  1st   2nd   3rd   4th   5th   6th-7th   8th-10th   < 10th 
Points 10 7 5 4 3 2 1 0

Autumn Split (2 Sep 2025 – 25 Nov 2025)

Final standings[8]
Pos Name Top finishes Total
1 Magnus Carlsen 1 1 1 1 2 2 4 5 61
2 Hikaru Nakamura 1 1 2 2 4 6 8 13 41
3 Alireza Firouzja 1 2 2 3 5 12 13 253 32
4 Denis Lazavik 1 3 4 6 8 9 10 11 24
5 Alexey Sarana 1 4 4 5 23 24 27 30 21
6 Jan-Krzysztof Duda 2 3 4 6 7 13 13 21 20
7 Olexandr Bortnyk 1 2 9 12 17 17 17 21 18
8 Pranesh M 1 5 7 8 45 155 157 213 16
9 Dmitry Andreikin 3 3 5 7 8 14 17 20 16
10 Maxime Vachier-Lagrave 2 3 7 4 5 14

Winter Split (3 Dec 2025 – 24 Feb 2026)

Final Standings[9]
Pos Name Top finishes Total
1 Magnus Carlsen 1 1 1 1 8 12 28 29 41
2 Jan-Krzysztof Duda 1 2 2 2 3 10 12 13 37
3 Maxime Vachier-Lagrave 1 1 2 3 7 79 134 137 34
4 Denis Lazavik 2 2 2 3 4 15 20 25 30
5 Samuel Sevian 1 2 3 4 6 8 11 14 29
6 Javokhir Sindarov 1 1 6 227 22
7 Arjun Erigaisi 2 2 3 8 9 11 34 67 21
8 Vincent Keymer 1 2 10 10 19 23 310 19
9 Fabiano Caruana 1 3 5 10 32 225 19
10 Alexey Sarana 3 3 4 6 7 8 18 19 19

Spring Split (3 Mar 2026 – 26 May 2026)

Standings, as of 10 March 2026[10]
Pos Name Top finishes Total
1 Javokhir Sindarov 1 398 10
2 Sina Movahed 1 10
3 Magnus Carlsen 2 7
4 Dmitry Andreikin 2 7
5 Nikolas Theodorou 4 5 7
6 Denis Lazavik 3 11 5
7 Maxime Vachier-Lagrave 3 294 5
8 Arjun Erigaisi 4 23 4
9 Lê Tuấn Minh 5 51 2
10 Alexey Sarana 6 33 2

Speed Chess Championship

Round 1 Quarterfinals Semifinals Final
            
1 Magnus Carlsen 14.5
16 José Martínez Alcántara 8.5
Magnus Carlsen 14.5
Fabiano Caruana 7.5
8 Fabiano Caruana 11
9 R Praggnanandhaa 10
Magnus Carlsen 17
Denis Lazavik 9
5 Arjun Erigaisi 9
12 Denis Lazavik 12
Denis Lazavik 15.5
Hans Niemann 9.5
4 Hans Niemann 18
13 Ding Liren 6
Magnus Carlsen 15
Alireza Firouzja 12
6 Alireza Firouzja 16
11 Lê Tuấn Minh 8
Alireza Firouzja 19
Ian Nepomniachtchi 9
3 Ian Nepomniachtchi 17.5
14 Anish Giri 10.5
Alireza Firouzja 15
Hikaru Nakamura 13
7 Hikaru Nakamura 13.5 Consolation
10 Lê Quang Liêm 11.5
Hikaru Nakamura 11 Denis Lazavik 13.5
Wesley So 10 Hikaru Nakamura 12.5
2 Wesley So 14
15 Vincent Keymer 11

Chess.com Open

The Chess.com Open Playoffs are a double-elimination knockout bracket with eight qualified players from the Titled Tuesday Grand Prix (TTGP) Winter Split, and the eight qualified players from the Play-Ins. Players will be seeded by TTGP rank, then Play-In winners draft their bracket position in the order they qualify in.[11][12]

Esports World Cup

The reigning Esports World Cup champion, Magnus Carlsen, will automatically qualify for the next edition. The top three finishers in the Speed Chess Championship, top three finishers in the Chess.com Open and top six players in the leaderboard not qualified from the prior two events, will qualify for the Esports World Cup.[1]

Esports Nations Cup

The Esports Nations Cup is a nation-focused tournament. Sixty-four players will automatically qualify for the event. The top player from each nation in the leaderboard will qualify for the event. Should the leaderboard qualify less than sixty-four players, the results of the Titled Tuesday Grand Prix (TTGP) Spring Split will be used to fill all remaining spots.[2]

Notes

References

  1. ^ a b Chess.com staff (2025-08-21). "Esports World Cup Returns With Bigger, Year-Round Qualifying Cycle". Chess.com. Retrieved 2026-01-08.
  2. ^ a b c Morris, Joey (9 February 2026). "Chess announced for the Esports Nations Cup 2026". Esports Insider. Retrieved 10 February 2026.
  3. ^ a b "Chess.com Official 2026 Event Rulebook - Champions Chess Tour". Chess.com. Retrieved 2026-01-08.
  4. ^ "Chess.com Official 2026 Event Rulebook - Speed Chess Championship". Chess.com. Retrieved 2026-02-06.
  5. ^ "Chess Joins Esports Nations Cup 2026 With 128-Player Field". Chess.com. Retrieved 2026-02-12.
  6. ^ "Titled Tuesday Grand Prix 2025-2026". Chess.com. Retrieved 2026-02-12.
  7. ^ "Chess.com Official 2026 Event Rulebook - Titled Tuesday Grand Prix 2025-2026". Chess.com. Retrieved 2026-01-29.
  8. ^ Titled Tuesday Grand Prix 2025-2026: Autumn Split
  9. ^ Titled Tuesday Grand Prix 2025-2026: Winter Split
  10. ^ Titled Tuesday Grand Prix 2025-2026: Spring Split
  11. ^ Chess.com staff (2025-11-25). "Chess.com Open Returns As Part Of Esports World Cup Qualification Cycle". Chess.com. Retrieved 2026-01-08.
  12. ^ Chess.com, staff (2026-02-25). "Chess.com Global Championship Now Called Chess.com Open". Chess.com. Retrieved 2026-02-26.