When does the 2026 European Tour start, how do players qualify, in which cities will it be played, and how can you get tickets?

FAQ
Wednesday, 18 February 2026 at 11:30
European Tour stage
The PDC European Tour has developed into one of the central pillars of modern professional darts. As the largest stage-based tournament series on mainland Europe, it brings the very best players from the Professional Darts Corporation (PDC) into major arenas across the continent each year.
While Germany provides the largest number of host venues and some of the sport’s loudest crowds on the PDC ProTour, it is England’s players who have consistently defined the competitive standard — dominating title counts, producing a significant share of nine-dart finishes, and shaping the latter stages of events throughout the tour’s history.
In this article, we provide all the key information about the European Tour:
1. The history and origins of the European Tour
2. When does the European Tour 2026 begin?
3. Full schedule European Tour 2026
4. All European Tour host venues in detail
5. How can I get tickets for the European Tour?
6. How can you qualify for an Euro Tour?
7. How can I watch the European Tour 2026 live on TV?
8. How much prize money is available on the European Tour?
9. Who are the most successful players in European Tour history?
10. Who has thrown a nine-darter in the history of the European Tour?

1. The history and origins of the European Tour

Today’s PDC European Tour dates back to a decision made by the Professional Darts Corporation in 2012. At that time, two Players Championship tournaments held over a single weekend were developed into a larger event format – with the aim of offering professional stage events for darts on mainland Europe. This concept gave rise to the European Tour.
In its inaugural season, the top 32 players from the PDC Order of Merit automatically qualified to compete, and £75,000 in prize money was awarded per tournament. An important feature from the very beginning was its international focus: European and national qualifiers ensured that players from the respective host country were represented at every event. While some matches were initially played off the main stage, since 2014 all matches have been staged in front of a live audience – a decisive step towards the series’ modern event character.
From both a sporting and organisational perspective, the European Tour developed rapidly. After five events in its debut year in 2012, the series expanded steadily: eight events in 2013, nine in 2015, ten in 2016, twelve in 2017 and 13 in 2018. The COVID-19 pandemic temporarily halted this upward trend (only four tournaments in 2020 and just two in 2021), before a significant expansion resumed from 2022 onwards. Following 13 events in 2022 and 14 tournaments in 2025, the 2026 season sets a new record with 15 venues.
Geographically, the tour began in Germany, Austria and the Netherlands. In the years that followed, numerous additional countries joined the schedule, including England, Gibraltar, Denmark, the Czech Republic, Belgium, Hungary, Switzerland, Poland and Slovakia. As a result, the European Tour established itself as the largest professional darts tournament series on mainland Europe. Today, events are typically held over three days (Friday to Sunday) and attract tens of thousands of spectators to arenas each weekend.
Together with the Players Championship series, the European Tour forms the so-called PDC Pro Tour – the sporting foundation of the professional darts calendar. A key element is the European Tour Order of Merit, which counts only prize money earned in these events. Since 2016, this ranking list has served as the qualification basis for the European Darts Championship: the top 32 players on the European Tour Order of Merit secure a place at the European Championship, which has been staged at the Westfalenhallen Dortmund since 2022 and is regarded as the only PDC ranking major held on German soil.
Gian van Veen on the walk-on.
Gian van Veen - the current European Champion.

2. When does the European Tour 2026 start?

The 2026 season begins with a historic first visit to Poland at the Poland Darts Open in Kraków, staged from 20–22 February 2026.
The opening session takes place on Friday, 20 February at 1pm local time, marking the official start of another year of European Tour action.

3. Full schedule European Tour 2026

The tour visits nine countries in 2026.
It opens in Kraków before travelling to Göttingen and Lebbeke. Further German stops follow in Munich and Sindelfingen, before the tour heads to Graz in Austria.
Later events take place in Riesa, Kiel and Petržalka (Slovakia), before returning to Germany in Leverkusen. The international stretch continues in Budapest, Prague and Antwerp, before concluding in Basel and Maastricht.
Germany hosts six of the 15 events, underlining its commercial importance to the tour. However, in competitive terms, England’s players continue to dominate the decisive stages across venues.
TournamentVenueDates
Poland Darts OpenKrakow, Poland20–22 February 2026
European Darts TrophyGöttingen, Germany13–15 March 2026
Belgian Darts OpenLebbeke, Belgium20–22 March 2026
German Darts Grand PrixMunich, Germany4–6 April 2026
European Darts Grand PrixSindelfingen, Germany17–19 April 2026
Austrian Darts OpenGraz, Austria8–10 May 2026
International Darts OpenRiesa, Germany22–24 May 2026
Baltic Sea Darts OpenKiel, Germany29–31 May 2026
Slovak Darts OpenPetržalka, Slovakia19–21 June 2026
European Darts OpenLeverkusen, Germany10–12 July 2026
Hungarian Darts TrophyBudapest, Hungary28–30 August 2026
Czech Darts OpenPrague, Czech Republic4–6 September 2026
Flanders Darts TrophyAntwerp, Belgium11–13 September 2026
Swiss Darts TrophyBasel, Switzerland9–11 October 2026
Dutch Darts ChampionshipMaastricht, Netherlands16–18 October 2026

4. All European Tour host venues in detail

In 2026, Germany once again forms the backbone of the European Tour calendar with six events, but there are also visits to Poland, Slovakia, Hungary, the Czech Republic, and the Netherlands, among others, in the most expanded European Tour in many years. The venues are:
TournamentVenueCityApproximate Capacity
Poland Darts OpenExpoKrakow10,000+
European Darts TrophyLokhalleGöttingen4,000 – 7,500
Belgian Darts OpenOktoberhallenWieze3,000
German Darts Grand PrixZenith MünchenMunich3,000 – 6,000
European Darts Grand PrixGlaspalastSindelfingen3,000 – 5,000
Austrian Darts OpenSteiermarkhalleGraz1,800 - 2,400
International Darts OpenWT Energiesysteme ArenaRiesa5,000 – 9,000
Baltic Sea Darts OpenWunderino ArenaKiel10,000 – 13,500
Slovak Darts OpenInchebaBratislava5,500
European Darts OpenOstermann-ArenaLeverkusen3,000 – 3,500
Hungarian Darts TrophyMVM DomeBudapest20,022 - 20,028
Czech Darts OpenPVA EXPOPrague3,000 - 6,700
Flanders Darts TrophyAntwerp ExpoAntwerp1,700 - 3,000
Swiss Darts TrophySt JakobshalleBasel12,400+
Dutch Darts ChampionshipMECCMaastricht5,000+
These arenas have become established stops on the European Tour and regularly draw thousands of fans per session.

5. How do you get tickets for European Tour?

Tickets for all European Tour events are sold via PDC Europe.
Fans can purchase tickets directly through the official PDC Europe website, where each event has its own dedicated page showing session times, ticket categories and availability. Demand is typically strongest for German and Dutch events, with many sessions selling out well in advance.

6. How can you qualify for a European Tour?

Each European Tour event features 48 players.
The field is made up of:
  • The Top 16 players from the PDC Order of Merit
  • The Top 16 players from the Pro Tour Order of Merit (not already qualified via the main ranking)
  • 10 players from the Tour Card Holder Qualifier
  • 4 Host Nation Qualifiers
  • 1 Nordic & Baltic Qualifier
  • 1 East Europe Qualifier
This structure ensures elite quality at the top end while still providing opportunities for emerging and regional players.

7. How can you watch the European Tour 2026 live?

UK and English viewers can follow the action through the PDC’s international broadcast partners and official streaming platforms, ensuring full coverage of the tour’s 15 events. This is available on PDCTV.
Luke Littler in action
Luke Littler is a two-time world champion

8. How much prize money is available on European Tour?

Each European Tour event carries a total prize fund of £230,000.
RoundPrize Money
Winner£35,000
Runner-up£15,000
Semi-finalists£10,000
Quarter-finalists£8,000
Last 16£5,000
Second Round£3,500
First Round£2,000
These earnings count towards both the PDC Order of Merit and the European Tour Order of Merit.

9. Who are the most successful players in European Tour history?

The record holder is Michael van Gerwen with 38 titles.
However, England’s strength in depth is evident across the all-time rankings. Multiple English players have won five or more titles, including:
  • Dave Chisnall
  • Luke Humphries
  • Michael Smith
  • Luke Littler
  • Phil Taylor
England provides more individual title winners than any other nation in the tour’s history, reinforcing its continued dominance at elite level.
RankNameNationTitles
1Michael van GerwenNetherlands38
2Peter WrightScotland9
2Gerwyn PriceWales9
4Dave ChisnallEngland8
4Luke HumphriesEngland8
6Michael SmithEngland6
7Luke LittlerEngland4
7Phil TaylorEngland4
9Mensur SuljovicAustria3
9Ian WhiteEngland3
9Nathan AspinallEngland3
9Jonny ClaytonWales3
9Gary AndersonScotland3
9Joe CullenEngland3
9Martin SchindlerGermany3

10. How many nine-dart finishes have been hit on European Tour?

A total of 23 nine-dart finishes have been thrown in European Tour history.
TournamentRoundPlayerResultOpponent
Austrian Darts Open 2012R1Michael Smith6–4Jamie Caven
Austrian Darts Open 2012R2Simon Whitlock4–6Joe Cullen
German Darts Championship 2012R1Colin Lloyd6–5Alex Roy
German Darts Masters 2012R1Mark Webster4–6Andree Welge
German Darts Masters 2012R3Ian White6–5Andy Hamilton
Gibraltar Darts Trophy 2013R2Ross Smith5–6Adrian Lewis
European Darts Matchplay 2018R1Michael van Gerwen6–2Ryan Joyce
European Darts Open 2019SFMichael van Gerwen7–5Mensur Suljovic
German Darts Championship 2019L16James Wade5–6Darren Webster
German Darts Open 2019PreliminarySteve Beaton6–3Kirk Shepherd
Czech Darts Open 2019R2Gerwyn Price6–4Glen Durrant
Gibraltar Darts Trophy 2019QFDave Chisnall6–4James Wade
Belgian Darts Open 2022SFDave Chisnall7–4Danny Noppert
Hungarian Darts Trophy 2023FinalLuke Humphries7–8Dave Chisnall
German Darts Championship 2023R1Scott Waites5–6George Killington
Belgian Darts Open 2024FinalLuke Littler8–7Rob Cross
Baltic Sea Darts Open 2024FinalLuke Humphries6–8Rob Cross
Dutch Darts Championship 2024R2Ross Smith4–6Dimitri Van den Bergh
Hungarian Darts Trophy 2024R2Cor Dekker2–6Stephen Bunting
Hungarian Darts Trophy 2024R2Michael van Gerwen6–2Martin Lukeman
Hungarian Darts Trophy 2024L16Martin Schindler4–6Stephen Bunting
German Darts Grand Prix 2025L16Michael van Gerwen6–1Ryan Searle
German Darts Championship 2025R1Dirk van Duijvenbode6–4Karel Sedlacek
English players account for a significant proportion of these perfect legs, again underlining England’s technical depth and consistent excellence on the European stage.
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