Darts World Cup 2026: Live Stream & TV Schedule | German Players

London in December: As every year, the focus is on Alexandra Palace in the north of the city. Every day, with the exception of a short break in play around Christmas, up to 15,000 darts fans will put on a spectacle – costumes and lots of alcohol included.

Let’s start with that one PDC Darts World Championship am December 11th with defending champions Luke Littler. The final will take place on 3 January 2026 instead of.

Future of the Darts World Cup

:Ever bigger, ever further

The World Darts Association is planning the next change: the World Cup should last longer and the number of players and spectators should increase. The question is whether the capacity at Alexandra Palace will be expanded – or whether there will even be a move to Saudi Arabia.

SZ PlusBy Korbinian Eisenberger

When are the Germans playing?

Eight Germans are taking part in London – this has never happened before at a World Cup. In addition to well-known names such as Martin Schindler, Ricardo Pietreczko, Gabriel Clemens and Max Hopp, Niko Springer, Lukas Wenig, Dominik Grüllich and Arno Merk are also represented at the World Cup. What’s new this year is that 128 participants are taking part. The top seeded players also have to go to the oche in the first round. There are five Germans in the second round, three have already been eliminated. Ricardo Pietreczko even managed to survive the Christmas break. An overview of who and when the German representatives are competing against.

2. Round

  • 20.12.: Ricardo Pietreczko vs. Dave Chisnall (ENG) 3:2
  • 21.12.: Max Hopp vs. Luke Woodhouse (ENG) 0:3
  • 21.12.: Martin Schindler vs. Keane Barry (IRL) 3:0
  • 22.12.: Gabriel Clemens vs. Wessel Nijman (NED) 3:0
  • December 23rd, 4:30 p.m. slot: Arno Merk vs. Peter Wright (SCO)

3. Round

  • 28. Destay: Ricar of Pietresko vs. Harrysson’s (SWE)

1. Round

  • 11.12.: Arno Merk vs. Kim Huybrechts (BEL) 3:1
  • 13.12.: Gabriel Clemens vs. Alex Spellman (USA) 3:0
  • 12/14: Lukas Wenig vs. Wesley Plaisier 1:3 (NED)
  • 15.12.: Max Hope vs. Martin Lukeman (ENG) 3:1
  • 16.12.: Ricardo Pietreczko vs. João de Sousa (POR) 3:1
  • 16.12.: Niko Springer vs. Joe Comito (AUS) 1:3
  • 17.12.: Martin Schindler vs. Stephen Burton (ENG) 3:1
  • 12/18: Dominik Grüllich vs. Jermaine Wattimena (NED) 2:3

OpinionMajor sporting events

:The Darts World Cup is a bloated event that is damaging the sport

SZ PlusComment by Korbinian Eisenberger

When do the top players play?

All top 10 players advanced in the first round, some without problems, others with minor problems.

  • 20.12.: Chris Dobey (8) vs. Andrew Gilding 1:3
  • 20.12.: Stephen Bunting (4) vs. Nitin Kumar 3:0
  • 20.12.: Jonny Clayton (5) vs. Dom Taylor, no fight
  • 21.12 .: Gerwyn Price (9) Vs. Wesley Plaisier 0:3
  • 21.12.: Luke Littler (1) vs. David Davies 3:0
  • 22.12.: James Wade (7) vs. Ricky Evans 2:3
  • 22. Dezember, 20 Uhr-Slot: Gian van Veen (10) vs. Alan Soutar
  • December 22nd, 10pm slot: Luke Humphries (2) vs. Paul Lim
  • December 23, 8 p.m. slot: Danny Noppert (6) vs. Justin Hood
  • 23. Dezember, 22 Uhr-Slot: Michael van Gerwen (3) vs. William O’Connor

Darts World Cup on television and stream

As transmitted every year Sport1 the darts world championship Free-TV and in the free live stream on the Sport1 website. The sports channel shows all games, and every game is also broadcast by the paid streaming service Dazn.

Schedule for the Darts World Cup 2026

In the first two rounds, the winner must win three sets to win the match. A set consists of three legs, in each leg the players have to throw from 501 to 0 points. The last arrow must land in a double square for the leg to be won.

From the third round onwards, the “best-of-seven” mode applies, which means that the first player to win four sets advances to the next round. In the quarter-finals you have to win five sets to advance, in the semi-finals it is played best-of-eleven. In the final, the first player to win seven sets wins.

Darts-WM in London

:Success factor: drunk fans

Even more than in previous years, the players are trying to get the spectators at London’s Alexandra Palace on their side. The mood in the hall influences the matches – but the audience’s sympathy can change quickly.

Wednesday December 17th

Thursday, December 18th

  • 4 x 1st round, 1.30 p.m
  • 4 x 1st round, 8 p.m

Friday, December 19th

  • 4 x 1st round, 1.30 p.m
  • 4 x 1st round, 8 p.m

Saturday December 20th

  • 4 x 2nd round, 1.30 p.m
  • 4 x 2nd round, 8 p.m

Sunday, December 21st

  • 4 x 2nd round, 1.30 p.m
  • 4 x 2nd round, 8 p.m

Monday, December 22nd

  • 4 x 2nd round, 1.30 p.m
  • 4 x 2nd round, 8 p.m

Tuesday, December 23rd

  • 4 x 2nd round, 1.30 p.m
  • 4 x 2nd round, 8 p.m

Saturday December 27th

  • 3 x 3rd round, 1.30 p.m
  • 3 x 3rd round, 8 p.m

Sunday December 28th

  • 3 x 3rd round, 1.30 p.m
  • 3 x 3rd round, 8 p.m

Monday, December 29th

  • 3 x 3rd round, 1.30 p.m
  • 1 x 3rd round, 8 p.m
  • 2 x round of 16, 8 p.m

Tuesday, December 30th

  • 3 x round of 16, 1.30 p.m
  • 3 x round of 16, 8 p.m

Thursday, January 1st

  • 2 x quarter-finals, 1.30 p.m
  • 2 x quarter-finals, 8 p.m

Friday, January 2nd

  • 2 x semi-finals, 8.30 p.m

Saturday, January 3rd

Prize money at the Darts World Cup

A total of five million pounds (almost 5.7 million euros) will be paid out at the tournament. This means that the prize money will increase twice compared to last year. How this affects the individual rounds.

  • Winner: 1,000,000 British pounds (around 1.1 million euros)
  • Finalist: 400,000 British pounds (around 455,000 euros)
  • Semi-final 200,000 British pounds (around 227,000 euros)
  • Quarterfinals: 100,000 British pounds (around 113,000 euros)
  • Round of 16: 60,000 British pounds (around 68,000 euros)
  • 3rd round: 35,000 British pounds (around 40,000 euros)
  • 2nd round: 25,000 British pounds (around 28,000 euros)
  • 1st round: 15,000 British pounds (around 17,000 euros)
  • Nine-darter finish: 60,000 British pounds (around 68,000 euros) each

Aiko Tanaka

Aiko Tanaka is a combat sports journalist and general sports reporter at Archysport. A former competitive judoka who represented Japan at the Asian Games, Aiko brings firsthand athletic experience to her coverage of judo, martial arts, and Olympic sports. Beyond combat sports, Aiko covers breaking sports news, major international events, and the stories that cut across disciplines — from doping scandals to governance issues to the business side of global sport. She is passionate about elevating the profile of underrepresented sports and athletes.

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