ALL eyes will be on Frankfurt for the next four days as the best throwers participate in the World Cup of Darts – and the prize money has been revealed!
England, represented by Luke Humphries and Michael Smith, secured a record-breaking fifth title in last year’s thrilling tournament.
The Englishmen had a scintillating tournament and capped it off with a tidy 10-6 win against Austria in the final.
And as a result, both men were forced to split a staggering share of £80,000 for their troubles.
However, if England are to retain their title once again, Michael Smith won’t be seeing the payday as he has been replaced by teenage sensation, Luke Littler.
World Cup of Darts prize money 2025
The overall prize money for this year’s World Cup of Darts will be the exact same as the 2024 edition.
Read more World Cup of Darts
Meaning that the total pot stands at a whopping £450,000 for this iconic tournament.
Here is a full breakdown of the total prize pot on offer in Frankfurt.
- Winners – £80,000
- Runners-up – £50,000
- Semi-final losers – £30,000
- Quarter-final losers – £20,000
- Last 16 losers – £9,000
- Second in group – £5,000
- Third in group – £4,000
- Total – £450,000
How to watch World Cup of Darts 2025
- The World Cup of Darts will be broadcast LIVE on Sky Sports.
- Group stage matches begin at 6pm BST and then the latter stage fixtures are split in afternoon sessions (11am/12pm) and evening sessions (6pm)
- Subscription members can stream the entire four-day event on NOW TV.
- Alternatively, SunSport will be running a live blog providing leg-by-leg coverage of the World Cup of Darts 2025.
World Cup of Darts 2025 teams
Seeded nations (straight into second round)
- (1) England – Luke Littler, Luke Humphries
- (2) Wales – Jonny Clayton, Gerwyn Price
- (3) Scotland – Gary Anderson, Peter Wright
- (4) Northern Ireland – Josh Rock, Daryl Gurney
Unseeded nations
- Argentina – Jesus Salata, Victor Guillin
- Australia – Damon Heta, Simon Whitlock
- Austria – Mensur Suljovic, Rusty-Jake Rodriguez
- Bahrain – Sadiq Dasmal, Hassan Bucheeri
- Belgium – Mike De Decker, Dimitri Van den Bergh
- Canada – Matt Campbell, Jim Long
- China – Xiaochen Zong, Lihao Wen
- Chinese Taipei – Pupo Teng-Lieh, An-Sheng Lu
- Croatia – Pero Ljubic, Boris Krcmar
- Czechia – Karel Sedlacek, Petr Krivka
- Denmark – Benjamin Reus, Andreas Hyllgaardshus
- Finland – Teemu Harju, Marko Kantele
- France – Thibault Tricole, Jacques Labre
- Germany – Martin Schindler, Ricardo Pietreczko
- Gibraltar – Craig Galliano, Justin Hewitt
- Hong Kong – Man Lok Leung, Lok Yin Lee
- Hungary – György Jehirszki, Gergely Lakatos
- India – Nitin Kumar, Mohan Goel
- Italy – Michele Turetta, Massimo Dalla Rosa
- Japan – Ryusei Azemoto, Tomoya Goto
- Latvia – Madars Razma, Valters Melderis
- Lithuania – Darius Labanauskas, Mindaugas Barauskas
- Malaysia – Tengku Shah, Jenn Ming Tan
- Netherlands – Danny Noppert, Gian van Veen
- New Zealand – Haupai Puha, Mark Cleaver
- Norway – Cor Dekker, Kent Joran Sivertsen
- Philippines – Lourence Ilagan, Paolo Nebrida
- Poland – Krzysztof Ratajski, Radek Szaganski
- Portugal – Jose de Sousa, Bruno Nascimento
- Republic of Ireland – William O’Connor, Keane Barry
- Singapore – Paul Lim, Phuay Wei Tan
- South Africa – Cameron Carolissen, Devon Petersen
- Spain – Daniel Zapata Castillo, Ricardo Fernandez Carballo
- Sweden – Jeffrey de Graaf, Oskar Lukasiak
- Switzerland – Stefan Bellmont, Alex Fehlmann
- USA – Danny Lauby, Jules van Dongen