HomeChessFIDE Transforms 2027 World Cup Format

FIDE Transforms 2027 World Cup Format


The International Chess Federation has announced a big shake-up in the format for the 2027 FIDE World Cup and Women’s World Cup. Instead of huge 206 and 107-player knockouts, the last stage will now involve only the final 16 players in each event, with the qualifiers decided by a Swiss group stage where all participants play nine games. The overall numbers and prize fund have grown, however, to 224 (Open) and 128 (Women) players, with a total of $3.3 million up for grabs.

The FIDE World Cup is one of the biggest, longest, and most dramatic tournaments in chess, with the field traditionally getting cut in half every three days. In the 2025 FIDE World Cup in Goa, India, 78 players had already been knocked out before the top-50 seeds even began their event. With 24 playing days and two rest days, the tournament had lasted 26 days before GM Javokhir Sindarov overcame GM Wei Yi to be crowned World Cup winner and take home the $120,000 top prize.

Over 200 players traveled to Goa for the 2025 World Cup. Photo: Michal Walusza/FIDE.

That’s all set to change, as FIDE announced today that a new format has been adopted for 2027. The players will first be split into four groups of 56 players (two groups of 64 players for the Women’s event), and play a nine-round Swiss tournament. The top-four (top-eight for the Women) will qualify to the Round of 16, when the format switches back to the same two-game classical matches plus rapid-and-blitz playoffs used in previous World Cups.

The Swiss tournament will be held over five days, with double rounds on four of those days. That’s possible because of the adoption of a “fast classical” time control, where players have 45 minutes in total, plus a 30-second increment added each move. A full week will be shaved off the run-time of the tournament.

The new format for the FIDE World Cups. Image: FIDE.

In some ways it’s a return to the origins of the first World Cup events, which were held with just 24 players, split into four groups of six players. The top-two qualified for the Quarterfinals, with GM Viswanathan Anand winning both events. It should be noted, however, that at the time there were also huge and controversial knockout tournaments being held for the FIDE World Championship title, before the format was adopted for the almost universally approved World Cup we’ve witnessed since 2005.  

FIDE World Cup Winners

Year Venue Players Knockout  Winner Runner-up
2000 Shenyang, China 24 8 Viswanathan Anand Evgeny Bareev
2002 Hyderabad, India 24 8 Viswanathan Anand Rustam Kasimdzhanov
2005 Khanty-Mansiysk, Russia 128 128 Levon Aronian Ruslan Ponomariov
2007 Khanty-Mansiysk, Russia 128 128 Gata Kamsky Alexei Shirov
2009 Khanty-Mansiysk, Russia 128 128 Boris Gelfand Ruslan Ponomariov
2011 Khanty-Mansiysk, Russia 128 128 Peter Svidler Alexander Grischuk
2013 Tromso, Norway 128 128 Vladimir Kramnik Dmitry Andreikin
2015 Baku, Azerbaijan 128 128 Sergey Karjakin Peter Svidler
2017 Tbilisi, Georgia 128 128 Levon Aronian Ding Liren
2019 Khanty-Mansiysk, Russia 128 128 Teimour Radjabov Ding Liren
2021 Sochi, Russia 206 206 Jan-Krzysztof Duda Sergey Karjakin
2023 Baku, Azerbaijan 206 206 Magnus Carlsen Praggnanandhaa Rameshbabu
2025 Goa, India 206 206 Javokhir Sindarov Wei Yi
2027 TBD 224 16 TBD TBD

So why the change? FIDE’s announcement explains: “By combining a Swiss qualification stage with the traditional knockout finals, FIDE preserves the excitement and prestige of the World Cup while providing every participant with significantly more games and a better overall tournament experience.”

Let’s look at some of the factors:

1. Reducing The Tournament Length

A four-week event is a challenge for all involved. FIDE calls it “increasingly difficult to fit into the international chess calendar,” while you need a venue that can go from accommodating hundreds of players and officials to the handful that remain at the end. 

For players, there’s the challenge of planning their calendars not knowing how long they’ll stay at the event, as well as the sheer length. GM Alireza Firouzja, explaining why he skipped the event in 2023, commented, “I didn’t see myself playing one month every day chess.”

Carlsen beat Praggnanandhaa to win the 2023 FIDE World Cup—could he be tempted back to the event? Photo: Maria Emelianova/Chess.com.

Many have pointed out in the past, however, that it’s appealing that either you’re successful and earn a good prize with a longer stay, or your misery is cut short as you go home. For the top players, the new format makes less difference, as they were in any case given a bye through the first three days of round one, but FIDE may hope to tempt the likes of 2025 absentees GMs Magnus Carlsen, Hikaru Nakamura, and Fabiano Caruana back into the event.     

2. Guaranteeing Everyone At Least Nine Games

For many players the World Cup was short and sweet—short, as they were knocked out in two days, but sweet, as they headed home with a healthy guaranteed prize. For the world’s best, however, the lack of margin for error over two games could mean a bitter early exit. 

Diptayan Ghosh stunned Ian Nepomniachtchi in round two in 2025. Photo: Eteri Kublashvili/FIDE.

This time, all participants will spend at least five days in the venue, get to play nine games, and potentially face off against the world’s very best. The atmosphere may feel more like the Olympiad, at least for the first week, though it’s likely that only the very best will make it through to the Round of 16.    

3. More Participants And Higher Prize Funds

The inclusion of a Swiss stage makes it easy to include more players, and has allowed FIDE to add 18 places to the Open event and 21 to the Women’s, while increasing the Open prize fund from $2 million to $2.3 million and the Women’s prize fund from $0.676 million to $1 million. That increased prize fund will keep providing guaranteed prizes for all players, while the top prizes—$120,000 for the Open and $50,000 for the Women’s World Cup, are set to stay the same (but for fewer days of work!).

FIDE President Arkady Dvorkovich explains: “We are making the FIDE World Cups more inclusive than ever before. The increased number of places, including additional qualification spots for Africa and the Americas, will provide more opportunities for talented players from every continent to compete on one of the biggest stages in world chess.”

4. Combining The Two Events?

One possibility not mentioned in the announcement is hosting the two events together, which clearly becomes easier than ever before, since both will follow exactly the same schedule, instead of the Women’s event having one round less. 

Divya Deshmukh won the 2025 Batumi World Cup but was also able to play in Goa later in the year. Photo: Anna Shtourman/FIDE.

The changes are likely to divide chess players and fans. One top player to give his stamp of approval was U.S. GM Hans Niemann, who was glad to see the adoption of a faster time control.

Latvian GM Arturs Neiksans also approved of the time control, but wondered why the faster games couldn’t have been used to hold the same big knockout at a faster tempo.

GM Anish Giri predicted a backlash: “I understand the reasoning behind all of these changes, but dropping this on the chess community without any warning is bound to lead to some backlash.”  


What do you think of the change? Was the format broken, and do you approve of the fix? Let us know in the comments below!