2025 German Darts Championship
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| 2025 Elten Safety Shoes German Darts Championship | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Tournament information | |||
| Dates | 17–19 October 2025 | ||
| Venue | Halle 39 | ||
| Location | Hildesheim, Germany | ||
| Organisation(s) | Professional Darts Corporation (PDC) | ||
| Format | Legs | ||
| Prize fund | £175,000 | ||
| Winner's share | £30,000 | ||
| Nine-dart finish | Dirk van Duijvenbode | ||
| High checkout | 170 Gian van Veen | ||
| Champion(s) | |||
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The 2025 German Darts Championship (known for sponsorship reasons as the 2025 Elten Safety Shoes German Darts Championship) was the fourteenth of fourteen PDC European Tour events on the 2025 PDC Pro Tour. The tournament was held at the Halle 39, Hildesheim, Germany, from 17 to 19 October 2025.[1][2] It featured a field of 48 players and £175,000 in prize money, with £30,000 going to the winner.
Peter Wright was the defending champion after defeating Luke Littler 8–5 in the 2024 final.[3] However, he lost 6–5 to Dirk van Duijvenbode in the quarter-finals.
Nathan Aspinall won the tournament, his third European Tour title, by defeating Van Duijvenbode 8–6 in the final. Van Duijvenbode hit a nine-dart finish in his first-round win against Karel Sedláček.
The prize fund remained at £175,000, with £30,000 to the winner:[4]
| Stage (num. of players) | Prize money | |
|---|---|---|
| Winner | (1) | £30,000 |
| Runner-up | (1) | £12,000 |
| Semi-finalists | (2) | £8,500 |
| Quarter-finalists | (4) | £6,000 |
| Third round losers | (8) | £4,000 |
| Second round losers | (16) | £2,500* |
| First round losers | (16) | £1,250* |
| Total | £175,000 | |
- Pre-qualified players from the Orders of Merit who lose in their first match of the event shall not be credited with prize money on any Order of Merit. A player who qualifies as a qualifier, but later becomes a seed due to the withdrawal of one or more other players shall be credited with their prize money on all Orders of Merit regardless of how far they progress in the event.[5]
Qualification and format
In a change from the previous year, the top 16 on the two-year main PDC Order of Merit ranking were seeded and entered the tournament in the second round, while the 16 qualifiers from the one-year PDC Pro Tour Order of Merit ranking entered in the first round.[6][7][8] In another change, the 16 Pro Tour Order of Merit qualifiers were drawn against one of the 16 other qualifiers in the first round.
The seedings were confirmed on 5 September.[9] The remaining 16 places went to players from four qualifying events – 10 from the Tour Card Holder Qualifier (held on 11 September),[10] four from the Host Nation Qualifier (held on 18 May),[11] one from the Nordic & Baltic Associate Member Qualifier (held on 2 August),[12] and one from the East European Associate Member Qualifier (held on 10 August).[13]
Luke Littler withdrew before the Tour Card Qualifier and was replaced by Krzysztof Ratajski from the Pro Tour Order of Merit. Luke Humphries, Michael van Gerwen, Gary Anderson and Callan Rydz withdrew at a later date and were replaced by Gabriel Clemens, Ricky Evans, Jeffrey de Graaf and Keane Barry from the reserve list. Martin Schindler, Gian van Veen, Mike De Decker and Ryan Searle moved up into the seeded positions as 13th, 14th, 15th and 16th seeds respectively.[14]
The following players are taking part in the tournament:
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