The inaugural FIDE Freestyle Chess World Championship 2026 will take place from February 13 to 15 in Wangels, Germany, featuring eight top grandmasters in the Chess960 format. Led by world number one Magnus Carlsen, the event promises intense competition without traditional opening preparations. A $300,000 prize fund is up for grabs, with all participants guaranteed earnings.
The FIDE Freestyle Chess World Championship 2026 marks the first edition under the new Freestyle Chess branding, serving as the third official World Chess960 Championship organized by FIDE. Held at the Weissenhaus Private Nature Luxury Resort in Wangels, Germany, the tournament eliminates memorized opening theory by using Chess960, where back-rank pieces start in semi-random positions, emphasizing players' creativity and understanding.
The event features a two-stage format. On February 13, eight players will compete in a single round-robin group stage with seven rounds, using a time control of 10 minutes per player plus a 5-second increment per move. The top four advance to semifinals, while those finishing fifth to eighth play tiebreaks.
The knockout stage on February 14 and 15 uses a best-of-four games format with 25 minutes per player and a 10-second increment. Semifinals occur on February 14, followed by finals on February 15.
Qualified players include GM Magnus Carlsen (Norway, rating 2840, world rank 1), GM Fabiano Caruana (USA, 2795, rank 3), GM Vincent Keymer (Germany, 2776, rank 4), GM Arjun Erigaisi (India, 2775, rank 5), GM Levon Aronian (USA, 2729, rank 18), GM Javokhir Sindarov (Uzbekistan, 2726, rank 20), wildcard GM Hans Niemann (USA, 2725), and play-in winner GM Nodirbek Abdusattorov (Uzbekistan).
Abdusattorov earned his spot by winning the Chess.com play-in qualifier on January 14-15, defeating GM Pranav Venkatesh 2-0 in the final. Notably, 2022 Fischer Random champion Hikaru Nakamura declined his invitation, citing format changes, rushed organization, reduced prize fund, and focus on the 2026 Candidates Tournament.
The total prize fund is $300,000, with first place receiving $100,000 and eighth place $10,000. Viewers can follow live on freestyle-chess.com, FIDE's YouTube channel, Chess.com, and Chess24. India is represented by Arjun Erigaisi, ranked world number 5.
Full schedule: February 11 arrivals, February 12 media day, February 13 round-robin, February 14 semifinals, February 15 finals, February 16 departures.