The 2024 FIDE Circuit is a system comprising the top chess tournaments in 2024, which serves as a qualification path for the Candidates Tournament 2026. Players receive points based on their performance and the strength of the tournament. A player's final Circuit score is the sum of their seven best results of the year. The winner of the Circuit qualifies for the Candidates Tournament 2026.[1]

2024 FIDE Circuit
Duration28 December 2023 – 31 December 2024
Seasons

Tournament eligibility

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A FIDE-rated individual standard tournament is eligible for the Circuit if it meets the following criteria:[1]

  1. Finish in the 2024 calendar year.
  2. Has at least 8 players.
  3. Has at least 7 rounds (4 rounds for knockout events).
  4. The 8 highest-rated players have an average standard rating of at least 2550 at the start of tournament. This average is referred to as TAR (tournament average rating).
  5. Players represent at least 3 national federations.
  6. Not more than 50% of the 20 highest-rated players (or all players if fewer than 20) represent one federation.

The Circuit also includes the following tournaments:

  • The World Chess Championship 2024.
  • National Championships that meet points 1 to 4 in above criteria.
  • World Rapid Championship.
  • World Blitz Championship.
  • Continental Rapid Championships.
  • Continental Blitz Championships.
  • Other Rapid and Blitz tournaments that meet the above criteria, except that the TAR must be at least 2700.

Points system

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Event points

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Circuit points obtained by a player from a tournament are calculated as follows:

 

where:

  •   - Points obtained by player from the tournament
  •   - Basic points
  •   - Tournament strength factor, calculated as  
  •   - Tournament weighting
    • 1.0 - Standard classical tournaments
    • 0.8 - World Rapid Championships
    • 0.6 - World Blitz Championships and other Rapid tournaments
    • 0.5 - Mixed Rapid & Blitz tournaments
    • 0.4 - Blitz tournaments

Basic points

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Basic points for a tournament are awarded depending on the tournament format:

  • Swiss-system: Top 8 (within top half of ranking), ties included.
  • Round-robin: Top 3 with ties (with the exception of the Candidates Tournament 2024 where points are awarded to all players).
  • Knockout: Third round or later, up to 8 players.

Points are awarded as follows:

1st 2nd 3rd 4th 5th 6th 7th 8th
11/10 8 7 6 5 4 3 2
  • If the tournament is won outright, basic points for 1st place would be 11 points. Otherwise, 10 basic points would be used for calculation.
  • For tied positions, basic points are calculated as 50% of points for final ranking as determined by tournament's tie-break rules, plus 50% of the sum of basic points assigned for the tied places divided by the number of tied players. If no tie-break rule is applied, basic points are 100% shared equally among all tied players.
  • For round-robin tournaments (other than Candidates), 4th and below are worth zero points for tied players calculation.

FIDE World Championship points

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For the World Chess Championship 2024, the winner will get points calculated as 1st place basic points multiplied by the strength factor, but with its TAR value using winner's performance rating instead.

Player's total and ranking

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A player's point total for the ranking is the sum of their best 7 tournaments with the following criteria:

Tournaments Standard events with under 50 players allowed Rapid/Blitz allowed
1–5 4 1
6 4 2
7 5 2
  • If player has 6 or 7 tournaments to count:
    • No more than 4 or 5 respectively standard tournaments with the participation of less than 50 players can be counted.
    • No more than 2 rapid/blitz tournaments can be counted.
  • If player has 5 tournaments or less:
    • No more than 4 standard tournaments with participation of less than 50 players can be counted.
    • No more than 1 rapid/blitz tournament can be counted.

Tournaments that could be included in player's results are as follows:

  • Official FIDE tournaments.
  • National Championships.
  • Other eligible tournaments, counting all tournaments with minimum TAR of 2650 and up to two lower tournaments per host country.

Tournaments

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Eligible tournaments as of 7 December 2024.[2]

2024 FIDE Circuit – Eligible Tournaments
Tournament Location Date Type P# TAR Winner
Hastings   Hastings Dec 28, 2023 – Jan 5, 2024 105 2552   Abhijeet Gupta
Tata Steel Masters   Wijk aan Zee Jan 12–28 14 2752+34   Wei Yi
Tata Steel Challengers   Wijk aan Zee Jan 12–28 14 2637+34   Leon Luke Mendonca
Djerba Masters   Djerba Feb 18–25 8 2590+12   Daniel Dardha
Prague Masters   Prague Feb 27 – Mar 7 10 2727+14   Nodirbek Abdusattorov
Prague Challengers   Prague Feb 27 – Mar 7 10 2575+34   Ediz Gürel
Prague Open   Prague Feb 27 – Mar 7 267 2567+34   Stamatis Kourkoulos-Arditis
Shenzhen Masters   Shenzhen Feb 29 – Mar 7 8 2698   Bu Xiangzhi
Cappelle-la-Grande Open   Cappelle-la-Grande Mar 2–8 382 2562+58   Abhimanyu Puranik
Aeroflot Open   Moscow Mar 3–7 142 2679+78   Amin Tabatabaei
Reykjavik Open   Reykjavík Mar 15–21 363 2602+34   Bogdan-Daniel Deac
Fagernes Chess International   Fagernes Mar 24–31 100 2568   Rinat Jumabayev
Torneo International de Ajedrez de Roda   La Roda Mar 27–31 210 2603+78   Aravindh Chithambaram
Grenke Open   Karlsruhe Mar 26 – Apr 1 935 2689+14   Hans Niemann
Open Internacional de Ajedrez Semana Santa   Alicante Mar 27 – Apr 1 417 2574+12   Kirill Alekseenko
Menorca Open   Menorca Apr 2–7 284 2676+58   Arjun Erigaisi
Candidates   Toronto Apr 3–22 FIDE 8 2744+78   Gukesh Dommaraju
Sunway Formentera   Formentera Apr 9–19 51 2581+34   Alexander Donchenko
Spring Chess Classic   St. Louis Apr 11–20 10 2624+78   Leon Luke Mendonca
TePe Sigeman   Malmö Apr 27 – May 3 8 2676+78   Nodirbek Abdusattorov
Sardinia World Chess Festival   Orosei, Sardinia Apr 27 – May 4 168 2658+12   Daniel Dardha
Dubai Police Global Chess Challenge   Dubai May 3–13 135 2694+38   Pranav V
GCT Superbet Poland Rapid & Blitz   Warsaw May 6–13 Rapid & Blitz 10 2762+38   Magnus Carlsen
Chinese Chess Championship   Xinghua May 6–16 National 12 2570+14   Wang Yue
Sharjah Masters   Sharjah May 13–23 88 2720+58   Bardiya Daneshvar
Polish Chess Championship   Rzeszów May 21–31 National 10 2586+12   Radosław Wojtaszek
Budapesti Tavaszi Fesztivál   Budapest May 23–31 210 2597+58   Yahli Sokolovsky
Americas Continental Championship   Medellin May 24 – Jun 2 Continental
FIDE
387 2582+18   Roberto García Pantoja
Dubai Open   Dubai May 25 – Jun 2 71 2608+12   Mahammad Muradli
Vladimir Dvorkovich Memorial   Aktobe May 25 – Jun 2 90 2682+38   Parham Maghsoodloo
National Open   Las Vegas Jun 5–9 136 2583+12   Vasif Durarbayli
UzChess Cup Masters   Tashkent Jun 6–14 10 2726+78   Nodirbek Yakubboev
UzChess Cup Challengers   Tashkent Jun 6–14 10 2625+58   Shamsiddin Vokhidov
Stepan Avagyan Memorial   Jermuk Jun 9–18 10 2679+78   Arjun Erigaisi
Teplice Open   Teplice Jun 15–23 240 2629   Max Warmerdam
Serbian Chess Championship   Senta Jun 17–25 National 10 2556+18   Aleksandar Inđić
Arona International Chess Festival   Arona, Tenerife Jun 22–30 161 2584+78   Xue Haowen
GCT Romania   Bucharest Jun 24 – Jul 6 10 2761+14   Fabiano Caruana
Baku Open   Baku Jun 29 – Jul 7 126 2625   Sina Movahed
Dutch Chess Championship   Utrecht Jul 6–13 National 16 2586+38   Max Warmerdam
GCT Croatia Rapid & Blitz   Zagreb Jul 8–15 Rapid & Blitz 10 2753   Fabiano Caruana
Biel Chess Festival   Biel/Bienne Jul 13–26 128 2593+34   Rinat Jumabayev
DOLE Open/NEXTLANE Grand Prix   Aix-en-Provence Jul 20–28 177 2627+78   Pranesh M
GCT St. Louis Rapid & Blitz   St. Louis Aug 10–17 Rapid & Blitz 10 2765+38   Alireza Firouzja
Internationale Dortmunder Schachtage   Dortmund Aug 10–18 193 2582+78   Nico Zwirs
Abu Dhabi Masters   Abu Dhabi Aug 15–24 217 2677+14   Nodirbek Yakubboev
Akiba Rubinstein Chess Festival   Polanica-Zdrój Aug 17–25 10 2696+38   Vincent Keymer
French Championship   Alpe d'Huez Aug 17–25 National 16 2577+14   Jules Moussard
Indian Chess Championship   Gurgaon Aug 17–27 National 341 2562+78   Karthik Venkataraman
Russian Championship   Barnaul Aug 17–28 National 12 2668+34   Vladislav Artemiev[a]
Sinquefield Cup   St. Louis Aug 19–29 10 2760+58   Alireza Firouzja
Iberoamerican Championship   Linares Sep 24 – Oct 2 118 2569+78   Alan Pichot
Gashimov Memorial   Shusha Sep 25–30 Rapid & Blitz 8 2704+58   Ian Nepomniachtchi[a]
US Championship   St. Louis Oct 11–23 National 12 2727+14   Fabiano Caruana
Pavlodar Open Masters   Pavlodar Oct 12–22 96 2585+78   Aram Hakobyan
WR Chess Masters Cup   London Oct 14–17 16 2754   Arjun Erigaisi
Chennai Grand Masters   Chennai Nov 5–11 8 2724+58   Aravindh Chithambaram
European Chess Championship   Petrovac Nov 7–20 Continental
FIDE
388 2675+58   Aleksandar Inđić
Tata Steel Chess India Rapid   Kolkata Nov 13–15 Rapid 10 2757   Magnus Carlsen
Tata Steel Chess India Blitz   Kolkata Nov 16–17 Blitz 10 2757   Magnus Carlsen
International President Cup   Tashkent Nov 21–29 120 2691+34   Nihal Sarin
World Chess Championship   Singapore Nov 25 – Dec 13 FIDE 2 2757   Gukesh Dommaraju
U.S. Masters   Charlotte Nov 27 – Dec 1 264 2655+12   Fabiano Caruana
Singapore International Open   Singapore Nov 29 – Dec 5 285 2626+18   Lu Shanglei
London Chess Classic   London Nov 29 – Dec 6 8 2637+58   Gawain Jones
London Chess Classic – Open   London Nov 29 – Dec 7 87 2560   Raunak Sadhwani
  Ilya Smirin
Saint Louis Masters   St. Louis Dec 3–7 59 2682+18   Fabiano Caruana
  Alexander Donchenko
Qatar Masters   Doha Dec 3–12 138 2714+12   Andrey Esipenko
European Rapid Championship   Skopje Dec 7–8 Rapid
Continental
FIDE
398 2669+18   Vladimir Fedoseev
European Blitz Championship   Skopje Dec 9 Blitz
Continental
FIDE
368 2669+18   Jorden van Foreest
World Rapid Championship   New York City Dec 26–28 Rapid
FIDE
180 2785+78
Zurcher Weihnachtsopen   Zürich Dec 26–30 42
World Blitz Championship   New York City Dec 30–31 Blitz
FIDE
183 2785+78

Ranking

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At the end of 2024, the best player in the Circuit will qualify for the Candidates Tournament 2026, provided that their final score consists of at least 5 tournaments (including at least 4 in standard time controls) and they played in at least 2 standard tournaments with participations of more than 50 players (if their final score consists of 6 or 7 tournaments) or at least 1 standard tournament with participations of more than 50 players (if their final score consists of 5 tournaments). Tournament results which can't be counted for qualification for the Candidates Tournament 2026 are marked in pink. "(M)" denotes the Masters section of tournaments while "(Ch)" – Challenger section.

  •  : Current leader – set to qualify for Candidates Tournament 2026
  •  : Current World Champion – ineligible for Candidates Tournament 2026 qualification
  •  : Player ineligible for Candidates Tournament 2026 qualification
Top 20 as of 15 December 2024[2]
No. Player Points 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
1   Fabiano Caruana 130.42   Candidates
4th – 15.92
  GCT Romania
1st – 21.23
  GCT Croatia
1st – 13.92
  Sinquefield Cup
2nd – 20.85
  US Championship
1st – 25.00
  US Masters
1st – 17.11
  St. Louis Masters
T 1st-2nd – 16.39
2   Arjun Erigaisi 124.40   Shenzhen
3rd – 15.18
  Menorca
1st – 16.19
  Malmö
2nd – 14.00 (T 2nd-3rd)
  Jermuk
1st – 19.79
  WR Masters
1st – 25.40
  Chennai
3rd – 17.22
  Doha
2nd – 16.62
3   Nodirbek
Abdusattorov
108.49   Tata Steel (M)
3rd – 14.22 (T 2nd-4th)
  Prague (M)
1st – 25.00
  Malmö
1st – 16.21
  Tashkent (M)
2nd – 19.28
  Sinquefield Cup
T 3rd-4th – 9.12
  President Cup
5th – 9.11
  Doha
3rd – 15.55
4   Alireza Firouzja 88.16   Tata Steel (M)
5th – 0.00
  Candidates
7th – 7.35
  GCT Romania
T 2nd-4th – 14.70
  GCT Croatia
T 2nd-4th – 6.33
  GCT St. Louis
1st – 14.60
  Sinquefield Cup
1st – 28.67
  WR Masters
T 3rd-4th – 16.51
5   Gukesh Dommaraju 84.13   Tata Steel (M)
2nd – 14.22 (T 2nd-4th)
  Prague (M)
7th – 0.00
  Candidates
1st – 26.94
  GCT Romania
T 2nd-4th – 14.70
  GCT Croatia
7th – 0.00
  Sinquefield Cup
T 5th-7th – 0.00
  World Champion
1st – 28.27
6   R Praggnanandhaa 66.76   Prague (M)
4th – 11.36 (T 2nd-4th)
  Candidates
5th – 12.24
  GCT Poland
4th – 0.00
  GCT Romania
T 2nd-4th – 14.70
  WR Masters
T 3rd-4th – 16.51
  Kolkata Rapid
2nd – 11.95
  Kolkata Blitz
4th – 0.00
7   Nodirbek Yakubboev 57.40   Moscow
3rd – 12.14
  Dubai Police
51st – 0.00
  Aktobe
12th – 0.41 (T 7th-17th)
  Tashkent (M)
1st – 21.55
  Abu Dhabi
1st – 14.77
  President Cup
6th – 8.15
  Doha
18th – 0.38 (T 7th-20th)
8   Amin Tabatabaei 56.39   Moscow
1st – 19.79
  Dubai Police
6th – 7.64
  Sharjah
5th – 7.45
  Jermuk
3rd – 10.79
  Abu Dhabi
5th – 10.34
  President Cup
26th – 0.00
  Doha
14th – 0.38 (T 7th-20th)
9   Shamsiddin Vokhidov 53.56   Moscow
34th – 0.00
  Sharjah
4th – 15.17
  Tashkent (Ch)
1st – 13.82
  Abu Dhabi
3rd – 12.11
  President Cup
4th – 12.46
  Doha
23rd – 0.00
10   Daniel Dardha 51.73   Tata Steel (Ch)
2nd – 10.33 (T 2nd-3rd)
  Djerba
1st – 8.60
  Menorca
8th – 1.89
  Sardinia
1st – 14.07
  European Champ.
2nd – 14.05
  European Rapid
7th – 2.79
  European Blitz
16th – 0.00
11   Andrey Esipenko 50.98   Moscow
2nd – 13.04
  Sharjah
55th – 0.00
  Russian Champ.
2nd – 14.34
  Doha
1st – 23.60
12   Leon Luke Mendonca 47.88   Tata Steel (Ch)
1st – 15.15
  St. Louis (Spring)
1st – 13.74
  Sharjah
28th – 0.00
  Dubai Open
23rd – 0.00
  Biel/Bienne
2nd – 7.38
  Abu Dhabi
4th – 11.23
  Doha
16th – 0.38 (T 7th-20th)
13   Aravindh
Chithambaram
47.25   La Roda
1st – 9.52
  Menorca
16th – 0.13 (T 8th-21st)
  Dubai Police
2nd – 16.52
  Sharjah
13th – 0.00
  Abu Dhabi
12th – 0.49 (T 7th-15th)
  Shusha
6th – 0.00
  Chennai
1st – 20.59
14   Parham Maghsoodloo 46.77   Prague (M)
3rd – 11.36 (T 2nd-4th)
  Sharjah
9th – 1.93 (T 5th-12th)
  Aktobe
1st – 20.06
  Tashkent (M)
10th – 0.00
  Chennai
6th – 0.00
  President Cup
3rd – 13.42
  Doha
64th – 0.00
15   Vladimir Fedoseev 38.59   Grenke Open
3rd – 10.30
  Menorca
4th – 9.27
  Sardinia
6th – 4.18
  Sharjah
41st – 0.00
  Polanica-Zdrój
4th – 3.68 (T 2nd-5th)
  European Champ.
15th – 0.00
  European Rapid
1st – 11.16
16   Hans Niemann 38.01   Tata Steel (Ch)
7th – 0.00
  Djerba
2nd – 7.69
  Grenke Open
1st – 20.82
  Dubai Police
7th – 6.66
  Sharjah
15th – 0.00
  US Championship
4th – 2.84 (T 2nd-7th)
17   Alexander Donchenko 36.20   Formentera
1st – 8.99
  Dubai Police
12th – 0.00
  Tashkent (Ch)
7th – 0.00
  Teplice
3rd – 9.89
  European Champ.
16th – 0.00
  US Masters
7th – 0.93 (T 6th-20th)
  St. Louis Masters
T 1st-2nd – 16.39
18   Maxime
Vachier-Lagrave
35.77   GCT Romania
T 5th-7th – 0.00
  GCT Croatia
T 2nd-4th – 6.33
  GCT St. Louis
T 4th-5th – 0.00
  Sinquefield Cup
T 3rd-4th – 9.12
  WR Masters
2nd – 20.32
  Chennai
5th – 0.00
19   Aleksandar Inđić 34.94   Grenke Open
T 24th-25th – 0.00
  Dubai Police
27th – 0.00
  Dubai Open
21st – 0.00
  Tashkent (Ch)
4th – 2.20 (T 3rd-4th)
  Serbian Champ.
1st – 6.17
  European Champ.
1st – 19.32
  Singapore
4th – 7.25
20   Volodar Murzin 32.34   Menorca
17th – 0.13 (T 8th-21st)
  Sardinia
3rd – 11.69
  Dubai Police
58th – 0.00
  Sharjah
2nd – 17.37
  Jermuk
10th – 0.00
  Abu Dhabi
7th – 3.15
  Singapore
22nd – 0.00

Criticism

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The FIDE Circuit system has drawn criticism from top players, including Levon Aronian, Anish Giri, and Fabiano Caruana, for various reasons. Critics have highlighted issues such as flawed scoring and financial burdens, raising questions about the system's fairness and practicality.[4]

Flawed point allocations

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Critics argue the points system is poorly designed, rewarding players inconsistently and only rewarding the first three players in closed tournaments. Gukesh, Abdusattorov, and Giri tied for first in the Tata Steel Masters, but earned only 14.22 points each, while Leon Luke Mendonca gained 15.15 points for winning the significantly weaker Challengers section. This was a result of Wei Yi being awarded full points for first place in the Masters despite winning on tiebreaks, and Gukesh, Abdusattorov and Giri sharing the points for second and third. Firouzja, Vidit and Praggnanandhaa didn't win any points for tying for fifth among the fourteen players.

Financial burden on players

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The shift from the FIDE Grand Prix (with significant prize funds) to the Circuit system forces players to compete in numerous open tournaments, which often have lower prize money and higher financial risks. Giri noted the economic strain, pointing out that players must accept these risks to stay competitive in the Circuit standings.

Democratization vs. quality

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FIDE defends the Circuit as a way to give more players access to the Candidates by prioritizing open tournaments over exclusive invitations. Sutovsky argued that the system levels the playing field for those without consistent access to elite events.

Caruana, however, countered that this philosophy is flawed, as chess ratings already provide a democratic system. He emphasized that rating gains in open tournaments are achievable through consistent good performance, making the Circuit system redundant and unnecessarily complicated.

Notes

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  1. ^ a b Russian players' flags are displayed as the FIDE flag, as Russian and Belarusian flags have been banned from FIDE-rated events in response to the Russian invasion of Ukraine.[3]

References

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  1. ^ a b "FIDE CIRCUIT 2024 REGULATIONS" (PDF). FIDE. 25 January 2024. Retrieved 28 January 2024.
  2. ^ a b "FIDE Circuit". fide.com. Retrieved 2024-05-04.
  3. ^ Doggers (PeterDoggers), Peter (2022-02-28). "FIDE Condemns Military Action; Takes Measures Against Russia, Belarus". Chess.com. Retrieved 2023-10-15.
  4. ^ McGourty (Colin_McGourty), Colin (2024-05-03). "Giri, Caruana, Aronian Criticize "Completely Broken" FIDE Circuit". Chess.com. Retrieved 2024-12-16.

See also

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  NODES
INTERN 7
Note 5