2024 FIDE Circuit
2024 FIDE Circuit | |
---|---|
Duration | 28 December 2023 – 31 December 2024 |
Winner | ![]() |
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.[1] Fabiano Caruana scored the most points, and as winner of the 2024 Circuit qualified for the Candidates Tournament 2026.[2]
Tournament eligibility
[edit]A FIDE-rated individual standard tournament is eligible for the Circuit if it meets the following criteria:[1]
- Finish between 1 January 2024 and 15 December 2024.
- Has at least 8 players.
- Has at least 7 rounds (4 rounds for knockout events).
- 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).
- Players represent at least 3 national federations.
- 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
[edit]Event points
[edit]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
[edit]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
[edit]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
[edit]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
[edit]Eligible tournaments as of 31 December 2024.[3]
Tournament | Location | Date | Type | P# | TAR | Winner |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Hastings | ![]() |
Dec 28, 2023 – Jan 5, 2024 | 105 | 2552 | ![]() | |
Tata Steel Masters | ![]() |
Jan 12–28 | 14 | 2752+3⁄4 | ![]() | |
Tata Steel Challengers | ![]() |
Jan 12–28 | 14 | 2637+3⁄4 | ![]() | |
Djerba Masters | ![]() |
Feb 18–25 | 8 | 2590+1⁄2 | ![]() | |
Prague Masters | ![]() |
Feb 27 – Mar 7 | 10 | 2727+1⁄4 | ![]() | |
Prague Challengers | ![]() |
Feb 27 – Mar 7 | 10 | 2575+3⁄4 | ![]() | |
Prague Open | ![]() |
Feb 27 – Mar 7 | 267 | 2567+3⁄4 | ![]() | |
Shenzhen Masters | ![]() |
Feb 29 – Mar 7 | 8 | 2698 | ![]() | |
Cappelle-la-Grande Open | ![]() |
Mar 2–8 | 382 | 2562+5⁄8 | ![]() | |
Aeroflot Open | ![]() |
Mar 3–7 | 142 | 2679+7⁄8 | ![]() | |
Reykjavik Open | ![]() |
Mar 15–21 | 363 | 2602+3⁄4 | ![]() | |
Fagernes Chess International | ![]() |
Mar 24–31 | 100 | 2568 | ![]() | |
Torneo International de Ajedrez de Roda | ![]() |
Mar 27–31 | 210 | 2603+7⁄8 | ![]() | |
Grenke Open | ![]() |
Mar 26 – Apr 1 | 935 | 2689+1⁄4 | ![]() | |
Open Internacional de Ajedrez Semana Santa | ![]() |
Mar 27 – Apr 1 | 417 | 2574+1⁄2 | ![]() | |
Menorca Open | ![]() |
Apr 2–7 | 284 | 2676+5⁄8 | ![]() | |
Candidates | ![]() |
Apr 3–22 | FIDE | 8 | 2744+7⁄8 | ![]() |
Sunway Formentera | ![]() |
Apr 9–19 | 51 | 2581+3⁄4 | ![]() | |
Spring Chess Classic | ![]() |
Apr 11–20 | 10 | 2624+7⁄8 | ![]() | |
TePe Sigeman | ![]() |
Apr 27 – May 3 | 8 | 2676+7⁄8 | ![]() | |
Sardinia World Chess Festival | ![]() |
Apr 27 – May 4 | 168 | 2658+1⁄2 | ![]() | |
Dubai Police Global Chess Challenge | ![]() |
May 3–13 | 135 | 2694+3⁄8 | ![]() | |
GCT Superbet Poland Rapid & Blitz | ![]() |
May 6–13 | Rapid & Blitz | 10 | 2762+3⁄8 | ![]() |
Chinese Chess Championship | ![]() |
May 6–16 | National | 12 | 2570+1⁄4 | ![]() |
Sharjah Masters | ![]() |
May 13–23 | 88 | 2720+5⁄8 | ![]() | |
Polish Chess Championship | ![]() |
May 21–31 | National | 10 | 2586+1⁄2 | ![]() |
Budapesti Tavaszi Fesztivál | ![]() |
May 23–31 | 210 | 2597+5⁄8 | ![]() | |
Americas Continental Championship | ![]() |
May 24 – Jun 2 | Continental FIDE |
387 | 2582+1⁄8 | ![]() |
Dubai Open | ![]() |
May 25 – Jun 2 | 71 | 2608+1⁄2 | ![]() | |
Vladimir Dvorkovich Memorial | ![]() |
May 25 – Jun 2 | 90 | 2682+3⁄8 | ![]() | |
National Open | ![]() |
Jun 5–9 | 136 | 2583+1⁄2 | ![]() | |
UzChess Cup Masters | ![]() |
Jun 6–14 | 10 | 2726+7⁄8 | ![]() | |
UzChess Cup Challengers | ![]() |
Jun 6–14 | 10 | 2625+5⁄8 | ![]() | |
Stepan Avagyan Memorial | ![]() |
Jun 9–18 | 10 | 2679+7⁄8 | ![]() | |
Teplice Open | ![]() |
Jun 15–23 | 240 | 2629 | ![]() | |
Serbian Chess Championship | ![]() |
Jun 17–25 | National | 10 | 2556+1⁄8 | ![]() |
Arona International Chess Festival | ![]() |
Jun 22–30 | 161 | 2584+7⁄8 | ![]() | |
GCT Romania | ![]() |
Jun 24 – Jul 6 | 10 | 2761+1⁄4 | ![]() | |
Baku Open | ![]() |
Jun 29 – Jul 7 | 126 | 2625 | ![]() | |
Dutch Chess Championship | ![]() |
Jul 6–13 | National | 16 | 2586+3⁄8 | ![]() |
GCT Croatia Rapid & Blitz | ![]() |
Jul 8–15 | Rapid & Blitz | 10 | 2753 | ![]() |
Biel Chess Festival | ![]() |
Jul 13–26 | 128 | 2593+3⁄4 | ![]() | |
DOLE Open/NEXTLANE Grand Prix | ![]() |
Jul 20–28 | 177 | 2627+7⁄8 | ![]() | |
GCT St. Louis Rapid & Blitz | ![]() |
Aug 10–17 | Rapid & Blitz | 10 | 2765+3⁄8 | ![]() |
Internationale Dortmunder Schachtage | ![]() |
Aug 10–18 | 193 | 2582+7⁄8 | ![]() | |
Abu Dhabi Masters | ![]() |
Aug 15–24 | 217 | 2677+1⁄4 | ![]() | |
Akiba Rubinstein Chess Festival | ![]() |
Aug 17–25 | 10 | 2696+3⁄8 | ![]() | |
French Championship | ![]() |
Aug 17–25 | National | 16 | 2577+1⁄4 | ![]() |
Indian Chess Championship | ![]() |
Aug 17–27 | National | 341 | 2562+7⁄8 | ![]() |
Russian Championship | ![]() |
Aug 17–28 | National | 12 | 2668+3⁄4 | ![]() |
Sinquefield Cup | ![]() |
Aug 19–29 | 10 | 2760+5⁄8 | ![]() | |
Iberoamerican Championship | ![]() |
Sep 24 – Oct 2 | 118 | 2569+7⁄8 | ![]() | |
Gashimov Memorial | ![]() |
Sep 25–30 | Rapid & Blitz | 8 | 2704+5⁄8 | ![]() |
US Championship | ![]() |
Oct 11–23 | National | 12 | 2727+1⁄4 | ![]() |
Pavlodar Open Masters | ![]() |
Oct 12–22 | 96 | 2585+7⁄8 | ![]() | |
WR Chess Masters Cup | ![]() |
Oct 14–17 | 16 | 2754 | ![]() | |
Chennai Grand Masters | ![]() |
Nov 5–11 | 8 | 2724+5⁄8 | ![]() | |
European Chess Championship | ![]() |
Nov 7–20 | Continental FIDE |
388 | 2675+5⁄8 | ![]() |
Tata Steel Chess India Rapid | ![]() |
Nov 13–15 | Rapid | 10 | 2757 | ![]() |
Tata Steel Chess India Blitz | ![]() |
Nov 16–17 | Blitz | 10 | 2757 | ![]() |
International President Cup | ![]() |
Nov 21–29 | 120 | 2691+3⁄4 | ![]() | |
World Chess Championship | ![]() |
Nov 25 – Dec 13 | FIDE | 2 | 2757 | ![]() |
U.S. Masters | ![]() |
Nov 27 – Dec 1 | 264 | 2655+1⁄2 | ![]() | |
Singapore International Open | ![]() |
Nov 29 – Dec 5 | 285 | 2626+1⁄8 | ![]() | |
London Chess Classic | ![]() |
Nov 29 – Dec 6 | 8 | 2637+5⁄8 | ![]() | |
London Chess Classic – Open | ![]() |
Nov 29 – Dec 7 | 87 | 2560 | ![]() ![]() | |
Saint Louis Masters | ![]() |
Dec 3–7 | 59 | 2682+1⁄8 | ![]() ![]() | |
Qatar Masters | ![]() |
Dec 3–12 | 138 | 2714+1⁄2 | ![]() | |
European Rapid Championship | ![]() |
Dec 7–8 | Rapid Continental FIDE |
398 | 2669+1⁄8 | ![]() |
European Blitz Championship | ![]() |
Dec 9 | Blitz Continental FIDE |
368 | 2669+1⁄8 | ![]() |
World Rapid Championship | ![]() |
Dec 26–28 | Rapid FIDE |
180 | 2785+7⁄8 | ![]() |
World Blitz Championship | ![]() |
Dec 30–31 | Blitz FIDE |
188 | 2785+7⁄8 | ![]() ![]() |
Ranking
[edit]At the end of 2024, the best player in the Circuit qualified for the Candidates Tournament 2026, provided that his final score consists of at least 5 tournaments (including at least 4 in standard time controls) and he played in at least 2 standard tournaments with participations of more than 50 players (if his final score consists of 6 or 7 tournaments) or at least 1 standard tournament with participations of more than 50 players (if his 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.
- : Player qualified for Candidates Tournament 2026 via this path.
- : Current World Champion – ineligible for Candidates Tournament 2026 qualification
- : Player ineligible for Candidates Tournament 2026 qualification
No. | Player | Points | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | ![]() |
130.42 | ![]() 4th – 15.92 |
![]() 1st – 21.23 |
![]() 1st – 13.92 |
![]() 2nd – 20.85 |
![]() 1st – 25.00 |
![]() 1st – 17.11 |
![]() T 1st-2nd – 16.39 |
2 | ![]() |
124.40 | ![]() 3rd – 15.18 |
![]() 1st – 16.19 |
![]() 2nd – 14.00 (T 2nd-3rd) |
![]() 1st – 19.79 |
![]() 1st – 25.40 |
![]() 3rd – 17.22 |
![]() 2nd – 16.62 |
3 | ![]() Abdusattorov |
108.49 | ![]() 3rd – 14.22 (T 2nd-4th) |
![]() 1st – 25.00 |
![]() 1st – 16.21 |
![]() 2nd – 19.28 |
![]() T 3rd-4th – 9.12 |
![]() 5th – 9.11 |
![]() 3rd – 15.55 |
4 | ![]() |
89.07 | ![]() 7th – 7.35 |
![]() T 2nd-4th – 14.70 |
![]() T 2nd-4th – 6.33 |
![]() 1st – 14.60 |
![]() 1st – 28.67 |
![]() T 3rd-4th – 16.51 |
![]() 7th – 7.24 |
5 | ![]() |
84.13 | ![]() 2nd – 14.22 (T 2nd-4th) |
![]() 7th – 0.00 |
![]() 1st – 26.94 |
![]() T 2nd-4th – 14.70 |
![]() 7th – 0.00 |
![]() T 5th-7th – 0.00 |
![]() 1st – 28.27 |
6 | ![]() |
66.76 | ![]() 4th – 11.36 (T 2nd-4th) |
![]() 5th – 12.24 |
![]() 4th – 0.00 |
![]() T 2nd-4th – 14.70 |
![]() T 3rd-4th – 16.51 |
![]() 2nd – 11.95 |
![]() 4th – 0.00 |
7 | ![]() |
63.50 | ![]() 17th – 0.13 (T 8th-21st) |
![]() 3rd – 11.69 |
![]() 2nd – 17.37 |
![]() 7th – 3.15 |
![]() 22nd – 0.00 |
![]() 1st – 25.16 |
![]() T 5th-8th – 6.00 |
8 | ![]() |
57.40 | ![]() 3rd – 12.14 |
![]() 51st – 0.00 |
![]() 12th – 0.41 (T 7th-17th) |
![]() 1st – 21.55 |
![]() 1st – 14.77 |
![]() 6th – 8.15 |
![]() 18th – 0.38 (T 7th-20th) |
9 | ![]() |
56.39 | ![]() 1st – 19.79 |
![]() 6th – 7.64 |
![]() 5th – 7.45 |
![]() 3rd – 10.79 |
![]() 5th – 10.34 |
![]() 26th – 0.00 |
![]() 14th – 0.38 (T 7th-20th) |
10 | ![]() |
53.56 | ![]() 34th – 0.00 |
![]() 4th – 15.17 |
![]() 1st – 13.82 |
![]() 3rd – 12.11 |
![]() 4th – 12.46 |
![]() 23rd – 0.00 |
![]() 36th – 0.00 |
11 | ![]() |
51.73 | ![]() 2nd – 10.33 (T 2nd-3rd) |
![]() 1st – 8.60 |
![]() 8th – 1.89 |
![]() 1st – 14.07 |
![]() 2nd – 14.05 |
![]() 7th – 2.79 |
![]() 16th – 0.00 |
12 | ![]() |
50.98 | ![]() 2nd – 13.04 |
![]() 55th – 0.00 |
![]() 2nd – 14.34 |
![]() 1st – 23.60 |
![]() 29th – 0.00 |
![]() 75th – 0.00 | |
13 | ![]() |
49.16 | ![]() 3rd – 17.14 |
![]() T 5th-7th – 0.00 |
![]() 5th – 0.00 |
![]() T 6th-7th – 0.00 |
![]() 1st – 11.25 |
![]() 3rd – 16.58 |
![]() T 1st-2nd – 15.44 |
14 | ![]() |
47.88 | ![]() 1st – 15.15 |
![]() 1st – 13.74 |
![]() 28th – 0.00 |
![]() 23rd – 0.00 |
![]() 2nd – 7.38 |
![]() 4th – 11.23 |
![]() 16th – 0.38 (T 7th-20th) |
15 | ![]() Chithambaram |
47.25 | ![]() 1st – 9.52 |
![]() 16th – 0.13 (T 8th-21st) |
![]() 2nd – 16.52 |
![]() 13th – 0.00 |
![]() 12th – 0.49 (T 7th-15th) |
![]() 6th – 0.00 |
![]() 1st – 20.59 |
16 | ![]() |
46.77 | ![]() 3rd – 11.36 (T 2nd-4th) |
![]() 9th – 1.93 (T 5th-12th) |
![]() 1st – 20.06 |
![]() 10th – 0.00 |
![]() 6th – 0.00 |
![]() 3rd – 13.42 |
![]() 64th – 0.00 |
17 | ![]() |
44.01 | ![]() 7th – 0.00 |
![]() 2nd – 7.69 |
![]() 1st – 20.82 |
![]() 7th – 6.66 |
![]() 15th – 0.00 |
![]() 4th – 2.84 (T 2nd-7th) |
![]() T 5th-8th – 6.00 |
18 | ![]() |
38.59 | ![]() 3rd – 10.30 |
![]() 4th – 9.27 |
![]() 6th – 4.18 |
![]() 41st – 0.00 |
![]() 4th – 3.68 (T 2nd-5th) |
![]() 15th – 0.00 |
![]() 1st – 11.16 |
19 | ![]() |
36.20 | ![]() 1st – 8.99 |
![]() 12th – 0.00 |
![]() 7th – 0.00 |
![]() 3rd – 9.89 |
![]() 16th – 0.00 |
![]() 7th – 0.93 (T 6th-20th) |
![]() T 1st-2nd – 16.39 |
20 | ![]() Vachier-Lagrave |
35.77 | ![]() T 5th-7th – 0.00 |
![]() T 2nd-4th – 6.33 |
![]() T 4th-5th – 0.00 |
![]() T 3rd-4th – 9.12 |
![]() 2nd – 20.32 |
![]() 5th – 0.00 |
![]() 34th – 0.00 |
Criticism
[edit]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.[5][6][7]
Flawed point allocations
[edit]Critics argue the points system is poorly designed, rewarding players inconsistently and only rewarding the first three players in closed tournaments. For example, Gukesh, Abdusattorov, and Giri tied for first in the Tata Steel Masters (with a +4 score), but earned only 14.22 points each, while Leon Luke Mendonca gained 15.15 points for winning the significantly weaker Challengers section and Aravindh Chithambaram earned 16.52 points for second in the Dubai Police Global Chess Challenge. 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, despite performing well and scoring +2 at a strong tournament.
Caruana expressed frustration that lesser performances in open events can surpass scores in elite tournaments (if they finish higher in the final tournament ranking) calling it “absurd.
Exclusion of certain events
[edit]The Circuit excludes tournaments where over 50% of participants are from the same federation unless it is a national championship. For instance, the American Cup, a high-stakes tournament featuring elite players, did not count because all participants were from the United States.
FIDE CEO Emil Sutovsky justified this rule as a response to perceived exploitation in prior years (e.g., Ding Liren’s qualification via Chinese-organized events). Aronian suggested allowing only tournament with per-announced participants.
Financial burden on players
[edit]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
[edit]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
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ a b "FIDE CIRCUIT 2024 REGULATIONS" (PDF). FIDE. 25 January 2024. Retrieved 28 January 2024.
- ^ "Arjun Erigaisi's Candidates 2026 hopes end with defeat in World Rapid Championship 2024". Sportstar. 29 December 2024.
- ^ a b "FIDE Circuit". fide.com. Retrieved 2024-05-04.
- ^ Doggers (PeterDoggers), Peter (2022-02-28). "FIDE Condemns Military Action; Takes Measures Against Russia, Belarus". Chess.com. Retrieved 2023-10-15.
- ^ McGourty (Colin_McGourty), Colin (2024-05-03). "Giri, Caruana, Aronian Criticize "Completely Broken" FIDE Circuit". Chess.com. Retrieved 2024-12-16.
- ^ C-Squared (2024-12-24). World Rapid & Blitz Championships Start In New York, FIDE Changes The Rules. Retrieved 2025-01-09 – via YouTube.
- ^ "Fabiano Caruana on X". X. Dec 22, 2024. Retrieved Jan 9, 2025.