2026 German Darts Grand Prix

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Dates4–6 April 2026
LocationMunich, Germany
Organisation(s)Professional Darts Corporation (PDC)
2026 Elten Safety Shoes German Darts Grand Prix
Tournament information
Dates4–6 April 2026
VenueKulturhalle Zenith
LocationMunich, Germany
Organisation(s)Professional Darts Corporation (PDC)
FormatLegs
Prize fund£230,000
Winner's share£35,000
High checkout
Champion(s)
 Nathan Aspinall (ENG)
«Event 3 Event 5»

The 2026 German Darts Grand Prix (known for sponsorship reasons as the 2026 Elten Safety Shoes German Darts Grand Prix) was a professional darts tournament that took place at the Kulturhalle Zenith in Munich, Germany, from 4 to 6 April 2026.[1] It was the fourth of fifteen PDC European Tour events on the 2026 PDC Pro Tour. It featured a field of 48 players and £230,000 in prize money, with £35,000 going to the winner.

Michael van Gerwen was the defending champion, having defeated Gian van Veen 8–5 in the 2025 final.[2][3] However, he lost 6–1 to Niko Springer in the second round.

Nathan Aspinall won the tournament, his fourth European Tour title, by defeating Danny Noppert 8–5 in the final.

As part of a mass boost in prize money for Professional Darts Corporation (PDC) events in 2026, the prize fund for all 2026 European Tour events rose to £230,000, of which the winner will receive £35,000.[4][5]

Stage (num. of players) Prize money
Winner (1) £35,000
Runner-up (1) £15,000
Semi-finalists (2) £10,000
Quarter-finalists (4) £8,000
Third round losers (8) £5,000
Second round losers (16) £3,500*
First round losers (16) £2,000*
Total £230,000
  • 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.[6]

Qualification and format

The top 16 players on the two-year PDC Order of Merit were seeded and entered the tournament in the second round, while the next 16 highest-ranked players from the one-year PDC Pro Tour Order of Merit automatically qualified for the first round. The seedings were confirmed on 12 February.[7][8] The remaining 16 places went to players from four qualifying events – 10 from the Tour Card Holder Qualifier (held on 18 February),[9] four from the Host Nation Qualifier (held on 28 February),[10] one from the Nordic & Baltic Associate Member Qualifier (held on 28 March),[11] and one from the East European Associate Member Qualifier (held on 25 January).[12]

Gary Anderson, Gerwyn Price, Luke Humphries and Chris Dobey withdrew and were replaced by Andrew Gilding, Karel Sedláček, Ian White and Cor Dekker. Mike De Decker, Luke Woodhouse, Dave Chisnall and Daryl Gurney moved up to become the 13th, 14th, 15th and 16th seeds respectively.[13]

Summary

Draw

References

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