FIDE and Freestyle Chess have agreed to stage the 2027 FIDE Freestyle Chess World Championships in Weissenhaus, Germany, following the successful inaugural event in 2026. The women's championship will occur over the first weekend of February 2027, with the men's event on the second weekend. This decision aims to establish the venue as the permanent home for the competition.
The announcement, made on February 19, 2026, in Hamburg, confirms the return to the Weissenhaus Private Nature Luxury Resort on the Baltic Sea. This location provided stable conditions for the 2026 knockout format, where Magnus Carlsen of Norway defeated Fabiano Caruana of the USA 2.5–1.5 in the final to claim the first official title. Carlsen's victory marked his 21st major chess title.
As finalists and third-place finisher in 2026, Carlsen, Caruana, and Nodirbek Abdusattorov of Uzbekistan have qualified directly for the 2027 men's event. In the women's category, Bibisara Assaubayeva of Kazakhstan earned her spot by winning an exhibition match against Alexandra Kosteniuk of Switzerland in 2026. The 2027 women's championship introduces an official title, expanding the event over three days each weekend.
The partnership between FIDE and Freestyle Chess, formalized before the 2026 edition, recognizes the Freestyle Chess World Championship—also known as Chess960 or FIDE Fischer Random Chess—as an official world title. This builds on prior FIDE events in the Fischer Random format from 2019 and 2022. The multi-year framework ensures predictability for participants and organizers.
Qualification will continue through events like the grenke Freestyle Chess Open, scheduled for April 2–6, 2026, in Karlsruhe, Germany, which gains official status for the first time.
Jan Henric Buettner, co-founder and CEO of Freestyle Chess, stated: “The decision to return to Weissenhaus in 2027 reflects our commitment to building a stable and credible world championship cycle for Freestyle Chess. Continuity of venue and structure allows us to focus on sporting quality and long-term development.”
FIDE President Arkady Dvorkovich added: “The 2026 championship marked an important milestone as the first official Freestyle Chess World Championship, recognized by FIDE. By confirming Weissenhaus as the stage for 2027, we are reinforcing the institutional framework of the title and supporting the continued growth of this format within the international chess ecosystem, in compliance with FIDE’s rules and regulations.”
This agreement follows a reconciliation between FIDE and Freestyle Chess earlier in 2026, after previous disputes that nearly derailed talks in 2025.