PDC World Rankings

The PDC World Rankings, known for sponsorship purposes as the Werner Rankings Ladder,[1] is the world ranking system for professional darts players used by the Professional Darts Corporation (PDC), which ranks players according to the prize money won in PDC ranking tournaments. These world rankings are used to determine qualification and seeding for the televised ranking tournaments as well as the awarding of PDC Tour Cards at the end of the season.[2] The format has been used since the 2007 PDC World Darts Championship, superseding the original PDC World Ranking system established in 1993, where points were awarded for performances in tournaments according to their relative prestige.[3][4] Upon the introduction of the rankings, the first player to hold the number one rank was Alan Warriner.[5] Since 1993, thirteen other players have held the top spot, including Luke Littler, the current world number one.[6] Alongside the main ranking, the PDC also operate several secondary rankings which count prize money won on specific PDC Tours and may also offer qualification to specific televised events.

Methodology

A distant view of the World Championship stage from a table in the crowd.
The PDC World Darts Championship offers the highest amount of prize money of any event contributing to the Order of Merit.

The Professional Darts Corporation adopted the current Order of Merit system in 2007. In this system, the total prize money won in PDC ranking events over the eligibility period is counted. For PDC Tour Card holders, this eligibility period is either the previous two years or since the player was awarded a tour card, whichever is shorter.[4] The PDC World Darts Championship is considered last event of the season, after which the year-end Order of Merit is calculated and players in the top 64 offered a Tour Card for the following year.[4] New Tour Card holders start on £0, even if they held a Tour Card in the previous season but failed to make the top 64, resulting in them having to regain their Tour Card through the qualifying tournament, Q School.[4] Players without Tour Cards who earn money in ranking tournaments (such as Luke Littler in the 2024 PDC World Darts Championship) are eligible to be ranked during the season,[7] though if they fail to reach the top 64 at the end of the year, their ranking money is reset to £0.[4] If two players are tied and need separating for seeding or event qualification, the tie is broken by player with the highest total earnings across the previous four ranking tournaments. If this fails to break the tie, players' prize money is counted back from the most recent event until a tie can be broken, with the possibility of a play-off if this cannot break the tie.[4]

Ranking tournaments

The PDC holds ranked and unranked tournaments. Ranking tournaments are those which all PDC Tour Card holders are eligible to participate in or qualify for, while unranked tournaments are invitational and do not count toward the Order of Merit. Currently, the Premier League, World Series of Darts events and the World Cup of Darts are the only unranked PDC tournaments with Tour Card Holder participation outside of the secondary tours.[4]

Prize money awarded towards 2026 PDC Order of Merit in ranking tournaments (£1000s)[4]
Tournament Total Winner Finalist Top 4 Top 8 Top 16 Top 32 Top 48 Top 64 Top 96 Top 128 Prelim. Top 16 Prelim. Top 32 Prelim. Top 64
2026 Prize Money
PDC Premier Events (2026)
World Championship 5,000 1,000 400 200 100 60 35 N/a 25 N/a 15 N/a
World Masters 500 100 50 30 17.5 10 5 N/a 2.5 1 0.75
UK Open 750 120 60 35 20 12.5 7.5 N/a 3 2 1.25 N/a
World Matchplay 1,000 225 125 65 35 22.5 12.5 N/a N/a
World Grand Prix 750 150 80 50 35 20 7.5 N/a
European Championship 750 150 80 50 35 20 7.5 N/a
Grand Slam of Darts[A] 1,000 200 100 60 35 20 N/a 5[B] N/a
Players Championship Finals 750 130 70 40 27.5 15 7 N/a 4 N/a
PDC Pro Tour
15 European Tours 230 35 15 10 8 5 3.5[C] 2 N/a N/a
34 Players Championships 150 15 10 6.5 4 3 2 N/a 1.25 N/a
Total 2026 payouts 19,484 3,110 1,530 1,802 2,244 2,856 3,240 752 2,533 64 1,000 40 16 12
2025 Prize Money
PDC Premier Events (2025)
World Championship 2,500 500 200 100 50 35 25 N/a 15 N/a 7.5 N/a
World Masters 500 100 50 30 12.5 10 5 N/a 2.5 1 0.75
UK Open 600 110 50 30 15 10 5 N/a 2.5 1.5 1 N/a
World Matchplay 800 200 100 50 30 15 10 N/a
World Grand Prix 600 120 60 40 25 15 7.5 N/a
European Championship 600 120 60 40 25 15 7.5 N/a
Grand Slam of Darts[A] 650 150 70 50 25 12 5[D] N/a
Players Championship Finals 600 120 60 30 20 10 6.5 N/a 3 N/a
PDC Pro Tour[E]
14 European Tours 175 30 12 8.5 6 4 2.5[C] 1.25 N/a
34 Players Championships 125 15 10 5 3.5 2.5 1.5 N/a 1.0 N/a
Total 2025 payouts 14,625 2,670 1,246 1,401 1,682 2,102 2,448 17.5 2,064 48 992 20 16 24
Prize money from the 2024 season still contributing to the Order of Merit, where differing from 2025 prize money[10][11]
World Championship 2,500 500 200 100 50 35 25 N/a 15 7.5 N/a
  1. ^ a b An additional £3,500 is awarded to the 8 group winners.
  2. ^ £12,500 and £5,000 are awarded to the second and third place finishers respectively in the group stage, which comprise the top 48.
  3. ^ a b Seeded players at European Tour events automatically qualify to the top 32, and do not receive money toward Order of Merit if they lose at this stage.
  4. ^ £8,000 and £5,000 are awarded to the third and fourth place finishers respectively in the group stage, which comprise the top 32.
  5. ^ In 2025, the Pro Tour expanded from 13 European Tour events to 14 and 30 Players Championship events to 34, meaning a total of £675,000 extra prize money was awarded relative to 2024.[8][9]

Rankings

Luke Littler, the current PDC world number one
PDC World Rankings as of 28 April 2026.[12]
Players ranked 1 - 32
Rank Change Player Earnings
1 Steady  Luke Littler £2,929,500
2 Steady  Luke Humphries £1,195,000
3 Steady  Gian van Veen £931,250
4 Steady  Michael van Gerwen £699,250
5 Steady  Jonny Clayton £668,750
6 Steady  James Wade £647,750
7 Steady  Gerwyn Price £625,750
8 Steady  Josh Rock £606,250
9 Steady  Stephen Bunting £595,250
10 Steady  Danny Noppert £590,750
11 Steady  Gary Anderson £576,250
12 Steady  Ryan Searle £562,750
13 Steady  Chris Dobey £555,750
14 Steady  Nathan Aspinall £513,250
15 Steady  Ross Smith £476,000
16 Steady  Wessel Nijman £461,000
17 Steady  Jermaine Wattimena £454,250
18 Steady  Martin Schindler £435,250
19 Steady  Mike De Decker £424,250
20 Steady  Damon Heta £408,500
21 Steady  Luke Woodhouse £405,750
22 Steady  Rob Cross £387,750
23 Steady  Krzysztof Ratajski £374,750
24 Steady  Daryl Gurney £365,500
25 Steady  Dave Chisnall £363,500
26 Steady  Ryan Joyce £361,250
27 Steady  Cameron Menzies £333,250
28 Steady  Dirk van Duijvenbode £333,000
29 Steady  Andrew Gilding £332,750
30 Increase 1  Michael Smith £324,750
31 Decrease 1  Ritchie Edhouse £319,250
32 Increase 1  Peter Wright £294,500
*Change since 19 April 2026.
PDC World Rankings as of 28 April 2026.[12]
Players ranked 33 - 64
Rank Change Player Earnings
33 Decrease 1  Joe Cullen £290,250
34 Steady  Ricardo Pietreczko £284,250
35 Steady  Kevin Doets £270,250
36 Increase 2  Niels Zonneveld £225,000
37 Decrease 1  Dimitri Van den Bergh £224,000
38 Decrease 1  Raymond van Barneveld £221,750
39 Steady  Martin Lukeman £216,750
40 Increase 1  William O'Connor £198,500
41 Decrease 1  Callan Rydz £197,750
42 Steady  Madars Razma £186,250
43 Steady  Scott Williams £176,000
44 Steady  Brendan Dolan £174,500
45 Steady  Connor Scutt £166,750
46 Decrease 1  Mickey Mansell £165,500
46 Decrease 1  Ricky Evans £165,500
48 Steady  Niko Springer £165,000
49 Increase 1  Justin Hood £161,750
50 Decrease 1  Gabriel Clemens £160,750
51 Steady  Jeffrey de Graaf £158,250
52 Steady  James Hurrell £155,500
53 Steady  Alan Soutar £151,750
54 Steady  Mensur Suljović £141,250
55 Steady  Ian White £140,250
56 Steady  Keane Barry £136,000
57 Steady  Kim Huybrechts £133,250
58 Increase 1  Ryan Meikle £124,250
59 Decrease 1  Richard Veenstra £124,000
60 Steady  Nick Kenny £118,500
61 Increase 1  Karel Sedláček £117,500
62 Decrease 1  Thibault Tricole £116,500
63 Steady  Lukas Wenig £114,000
64 Increase 1  Robert Owen £99,750
*Change since 19 April 2026.
Click "show" to view players ranked outside top 64
PDC World Rankings as of 28 April 2026.[12]
Players ranked 65th or lower
Rank Change Player Earnings
65 Decrease 1  Mario Vandenbogaerde £98,750
66 Steady  Sebastian Białecki £95,250
67 Steady  Cam Crabtree £88,750
68 Steady  Bradley Brooks £88,250
69 Steady  Wesley Plaisier £82,750
70 Steady  Max Hopp £82,500
71 Steady  Adam Lipscombe £73,000
72 Steady  Dominik Grüllich £57,750
73 Steady  Cor Dekker £57,500
74 Steady  Darryl Pilgrim £50,500
75 Increase 1  Tom Bissell £46,750
76 Decrease 1  Maik Kuivenhoven £40,500
77 Increase 1  Christian Kist £37,750
78 Increase 15  Beau Greaves £37,500
79 Steady  Andy Boulton £36,000
80 Decrease 3  Oskar Lukasiak £35,500
81 Decrease 1  Jim Long £33,250
82 Increase 1  Leon Weber £33,000
83 Decrease 2  Thomas Lovely £32,750
84 Decrease 3  Tavis Dudeney £31,500
85 Increase 1  Cristo Reyes £27,500
86 Decrease 2  Marvin van Velzen £26,000
87 Decrease 2  Greg Ritchie £23,500
88 Increase 1  Dennie Olde Kalter £23,000
89 Decrease 2  Adam Gawlas £22,500
90 Decrease 2  Scott Waites £21,250
91 Increase 2  Charlie Manby £20,750
91 Decrease 1  Adam Paxton £20,750
93 Decrease 2  Viktor Tingström £20,500
94 Increase 3  Tom Sykes £20,250
95 Decrease 3  Adam Warner £20,000
96 Decrease 1  Shane McGuirk £19,500
97 Increase 5  Alexander Merkx £19,000
98 Increase 4  Joe Hunt £18,000
99 Decrease 3  Kai Gotthardt £17,750
100 Decrease 2  Jimmy van Schie £17,000
101 Increase 4  Jurjen van der Velde £15,250
102 Decrease 3  Maximilian Czerwinski £15,000
103 Decrease 2  Darius Labanauskas £14,500
104 Decrease 5  Tytus Kanik £13,750
105 Steady  Owen Bates £13,250
106 Decrease 4  Jeffrey de Zwaan £13,000
106 Increase 3  Jeffrey Sparidaans £13,000
106 Increase 1  Martijn Dragt £13,000
109 Decrease 2  Stefaan Henderyck £11,750
110 Increase 11  Benjamin Pratnemer £11,500
110 Increase 1  Arno Merk £11,500
110 Increase 1  Jack Tweddell £11,500
113 Decrease 4  Stephen Burton £11,000
114 Increase 1  Mervyn King £10,000
114 Increase 1  Sietse Lap £10,000
114 Decrease 1  Niall Culleton £10,000
117 Decrease 3  David Sharp £9,750
118 Increase 5  Rusty-Jake Rodriguez £8,750
118 Decrease 3  Steve Lennon £8,750
120 Decrease 2  Rhys Griffin £8,500
120 Decrease 2  Carl Sneyd £8,500
120 Decrease 2  Boris Krčmar £8,500
123 Increase 11  Chris Landman £8,000
123 Decrease 1  Andy Baetens £8,000
125 Steady  Adam Leek £7,750
125 Decrease 1  Tyler Thorpe £7,750
127 Increase 10  Tommy Lishman £7,500
128 Increase 6  Stefan Bellmont £7,000
129 Steady  Stephen Rosney £6,500
130 Increase 4  Samuel Price £6,250
131 Decrease 5  Michael Unterbuchner £5,500
131 Decrease 5  Paul Krohne £5,500
131 Decrease 5  Tommy Morris £5,500
134 New entry  Nathan Potter £5,250
134 Decrease 5  Pascal Rupprecht £5,250
134 Decrease 5  Derek Coulson £5,250
134 Decrease 5  Henry Coates £5,250
134 Decrease 5  Pero Ljubić £5,250
139 Decrease 2  Marvin Kraft £4,500
140 Increase 5  Filip Bereza £3,750
140 Decrease 1  Scott Campbell £3,750
142 Decrease 2  Valters Melderis £3,500
142 Decrease 2  Marcel Hausotter £3,500
142 Decrease 2  Patrik Kovács £3,500
145 Decrease 2  Daniel Klose £3,000
145 Decrease 2  Patrik Williams £3,000
147 Decrease 2  Yorick Hofkens £2,500
147 Decrease 2  Graham Hall £2,500
149 Decrease 1  Michael Hurtz £2,000
149 Decrease 1  Petr Křivka £2,000
149 Decrease 1  Robin Masino £2,000
149 Decrease 1  Jack Aldridge £2,000
149 Decrease 1  Anton Östlund £2,000
149 Decrease 1  Finn Behrens £2,000
149 Decrease 1  Jan Schmidt £2,000
149 Decrease 1  Kevin Troppmann £2,000
149 Decrease 1  François Schweyen £2,000
149 Decrease 1  Jani Haavisto £2,000
149 Decrease 1  Pascal Devroey £2,000
149 Decrease 1  Dragutin Horvat £2,000
149 Decrease 1  Florian Hempel £2,000
149 Decrease 1  Florian Preis £2,000
149 Decrease 1  Jonas Masalin £2,000
149 Decrease 1  Wojciech Bruliński £2,000
149 Decrease 1  Sam Spivey £2,000
149 Decrease 1  Andreas Harrysson £2,000
149 Decrease 1  Dawid Robak £2,000
149 Decrease 1  Krzysztof Kciuk £2,000
149 Decrease 1  Mirosław Grudziecki £2,000
149 Decrease 1  Piotr Maciejczak £2,000
171 Decrease 1  Ted Evetts £1,250
171 Decrease 1  Matthias Ehlers £1,250
171 Decrease 1  Jack Todd £1,250
171 Decrease 1  Jamai van den Herik £1,250
171 Decrease 1  Oliver King £1,250
171 Decrease 1  Ron Meulenkamp £1,250
171 Decrease 1  Samuel Whittaker £1,250
178 Decrease 1  Danny van Trijp £750
178 Decrease 1  Jesús Sálate £750
*Change since 19 April 2026.

Other PDC rankings

In addition to the main two-year ranking, the PDC also operates three rankings for subsets of the PDC Tour and four rankings for secondary tours. These rankings offer qualification to televised events and are the basis for seeding in tournaments. Additionally, some secondary tours offer Tour Cards. These are secondary Orders of Merit are the:

  • Pro Tour Order of Merit, which counts money earned in Players Championships and European Tour events over a 12-month rolling period. In addition to qualification for televised tournaments, this ranking determines the seedings for Players Championship events.[13]
  • European Tour Order of Merit, which counts money earned in European Tour events during the calendar year. The top 32 on this ranking list qualify for the European Championship at the end of the year, where all players are seeded according to their European Tour ranking.[14]
  • Players Championship Order of Merit, which counts money earned in Player Championship events during the calendar year. The top 64 on this ranking qualify for the Players Championship Finals. Similarly to the European Championship, all players are seeded according to their rank.[15]
  • World Series Order of Merit, which counts points earned in a calendar year in the world series. The top 8 on this ranking are seeded for the World Series of Darts Finals.
  • Challenge Tour Order of Merit, which counts money earned in a calendar year on the Challenge Tour, a secondary tour open to players without Tour Cards that participated in the most recent Q-School. Top ranked players at the end of the year may qualify for televised tournaments and receive Tour Cards, depending on their rank.[16] The Challenge Tour Order of Merit also acts as a reserve list for Pro Tour events.[4]
  • Development Tour Order of Merit, which counts money earned in a calendar year on the Development Tour, a secondary open to some Tour Card holders and players without Tour Card aged 16–23. Top ranked players at the end of the year may qualify for televised tournaments and receive Tour Cards, depending on their rank.[17]
  • Women's Series Order of Merit, which counts money earned in a calendar year on the Women's Series, a secondary tour for female players.[4] Top ranked players at the end of the year may qualify for televised tournaments and receive Tour Cards, depending on their rank.[18]
  • Women's World Matchplay Order of Merit, which counts money earned on the Women's Series earned over an approximately 12-month period prior to the Women's World Matchplay, to the which the top 8 players are invited.[4]
Qualification and seedings to PDC events via PDC Orders of Merit[4]
Tournament Qualifiers (seeds)
By Order of Merit Other
Main PT ET PC WS CT DT WO
Ranked televised events
World Championship 40 (32) 40 N/a 3 3 3 39
World Masters 24 (16)[a] N/a [b] [b] [b] 8[c]
UK Open TCH N/a 8 8 N/a 16
World Matchplay 16 (16) 16 N/a
World Grand Prix 16 (16) 16 N/a
European Championship N/a 32 (32) N/a
Grand Slam of Darts 0 (8) N/a 1 1 1 21
Players Championship Finals N/a 64 (64) N/a
PDC Pro Tour
European Tour events 16 (16) 16 N/a 16
Players Championship events TCH 0 (32) N/a
Non-ranked televised events
Premier League Darts 4 N/a 4
World Series of Darts Finals N/a 8 (8) N/a 24
World Cup of Darts [d] N/a [d]
Tour Cards 64 N/a 2 2 N/a 60[e]
  1. ^ Players Ranked 25–56 will enter at the last 64 of the preliminary round, while Players Ranked 57–88 will be seeded in the preliminary round group stage, and Players Ranked 89–128 will enter at the preliminary rounded group stage non-seeded[19]
  2. ^ a b c The top 8 eligible players from the Secondary Tours holders enter at the preliminary round group stage
  3. ^ The 8 qualifiers from the preliminary round.
  4. ^ a b Customarily, up to 2 Tour Card Holders are invited where possible from each nation, with priority for selection given to the highest-ranked players in the main Order of Merit. However, on some occasions (such as John Henderson's defence of Scotland's 2021 title), a lower-ranked player is invited. Where no Tour Card holders are available for a participating nation, players are invited directly by the PDC or through national qualifiers.[4][20]
  5. ^ Players who have one year remaining of a two-year Tour Card and players qualifying through Q-school.

Previous world ranking system

Prior to 2007, a ranking point system was used where ranking points were awarded according to the stage reached in a tournament and the relative prestige of the tournament.[21] There was no limit on the number of tournaments which counted to the tally, which meant that the top-ranked players were not necessarily the best-performing in the major tournaments. For instance, Colin Lloyd was the world number one player in the PDC for most of 2005 and 2006, despite most of the major titles being shared between Phil Taylor, Raymond van Barneveld and John Part.[22]

PDC World Rankings Points System, 2003[21]
Tournament Category Winner Runner-up Top 4 Top 8 Top 16 Top 32 Top 40 Top 64
World Championship 50 40 35 30 24 16 12 [a]
Premier Event 30 24 20 16 12 8 N/a [b][c]
Category One 16 12 10 8 6 4 N/a [d]
Category Two 8 6 4 3 2 1 N/a
Category Three 5 4 3 2 1 N/a
  1. ^ 2, 4 or 6 points for players who reached the later rounds of qualifying.
  2. ^ For events with more than 128 players, 4 points.
  3. ^ 1, 2, or 4 points for players who reached the later rounds of qualifying for the World Matchplay.
  4. ^ For events with more than 128 players, 2 points.

Previous World Number Ones

PDC Ranking Leaders Timeline[5][23]

14 players have held the position of World Number One since the World Darts Council started new rankings in 1993. Seven different players held the position in the old points system, and eight players have held the position since the PDC switched to the two-year earnings based Order of Merit system in 2007, with Phil Taylor being the only player to have been number one in both eras.

Notable players not to be ranked world number one in the PDC include: Two-time back-to-back PDC World Champions Adrian Lewis and Gary Anderson, 11-time major title winner James Wade and 2018 world champion Rob Cross.[24]

Player # Years in which player stood Number 1
England Phil Taylor 13
  • 1996
  • 2000
  • 2002
  • 2003
  • 2004
  • 2006
  • 2007
  • 2008
  • 2009
  • 2010
  • 2011
  • 2012
  • 2013
Netherlands Michael van Gerwen 7
  • 2014
  • 2015
  • 2016
  • 2017
  • 2018
  • 2019
  • 2020
England Alan Warriner 6
  • 1993
  • 1994
  • 1997
  • 1998
  • 2001
  • 2002
England Rod Harrington 5
  • 1995
  • 1996
  • 1998
  • 1999
  • 2000
England Colin Lloyd 3
  • 2005
  • 2006
  • 2007
England Dennis Priestley 2
  • 1994
  • 1995
England Peter Manley 2
  • 2000
  • 2001
Wales Gerwyn Price 2
  • 2021
  • 2022
England Luke Humphries 2
  • 2024
  • 2025
England Luke Littler 2
  • 2025
  • 2026
Netherlands Raymond van Barneveld 1 2008
Canada John Part 1 2003
Scotland Peter Wright 1 2022
England Michael Smith 1 2023
Italic indicates the player was reigning world champion that year
Bold indicates the player stood number one at the conclusion of that year's world championship

Periods

No. Player(s) From Length Ref.
1 Alan Warriner January 1993 Incarnation of the WDC 674 days[A] [5]
2  Dennis Priestley 6 November 1994 1994 Lada UK Masters 155 days [5][25]
3  Rod Harrington 10 April 1995 1995 UK Matchplay 479 days[A] [5][25]
4  Phil Taylor August 1996 31 days[A] [5][25]
Alan Warriner (2) September 1996 699 days[A] [5][25]
 Rod Harrington (2) 1 August 1998 1998 World Matchplay 728 days [5][25]
 Phil Taylor (2) 29 July 2000 2000 World Matchplay 57 days [5][25]
5  Peter Manley 24 September 2000 2000 Windy City Open 399 days [5][25]
Alan Warriner (3) 28 October 2001 2001 World Grand Prix 69 days [5][25]
Alan Warriner (4) and Phil Taylor (3) 5 January 2002 2002 World Championship 28 days [5][25]
Alan Warriner (5) 2 February 2002 2002 Eastbourne Open 88 days[A] [5][25]
 Phil Taylor (4) May 2002 248 days[A] [5][25]
6  John Part 4 January 2003 2003 World Championship 203 days [5][25]
 Phil Taylor (5) 26 July 2003 2003 Bobby Bourn Memorial Trophy 582 days [5][25]
7  Colin Lloyd 27 February 2005 2005 West Tyrone Open 469 days [26][25]
 Phil Taylor (6) 11 June 2006 2006 UK Open 7 days [27][28]
 Colin Lloyd (2) 18 June 2006 2006 Players Championship 3 197 days [28][25]
 Phil Taylor (7) 1 January 2007 2007 World Championship 365 days [5][25]
8  Raymond van Barneveld 1 January 2008 2008 World Championship 159 days [29][25]
 Phil Taylor (8) 8 June 2008 2008 UK Open 2,033 days [29][30]
9  Michael van Gerwen 1 January 2014 2014 World Championship 2,559 days [30][31]
10  Gerwyn Price 3 January 2021 2021 World Championship 427 days [31][32]
11  Peter Wright 6 March 2022 2022 UK Open 140 days [32][33]
 Gerwyn Price (2) 24 July 2022 2022 World Matchplay 77 days [33]
 Peter Wright (2) 9 October 2022 2022 World Grand Prix 21 days [34]
 Gerwyn Price (3) 30 October 2022 2022 European Championship 65 days [34][35]
12  Michael Smith 3 January 2023 2023 World Championship 365 days [35]
13  Luke Humphries 3 January 2024 2024 World Championship 683 days [36][37]
14  Luke Littler 16 November 2025 2025 Grand Slam 164 days [6]
  1. ^ a b c d e f Uses 1st of month where exact date unknown.
Key
Before January 2007 Used old points system
Current Reigning number one on Order of Merit

Total Days at Number One

Sources: [23][38]

No. Player Total Days at No 1 Longest Consecutive Run
1 Phil Taylor 3323 2033
2 Michael van Gerwen 2559 2559
3 Alan Warriner-Little 1558 699
4 Rod Harrington 1207 728
5 Luke Humphries 683 683
6 Colin Lloyd 666 469
7 Gerwyn Price 569 427
8 Peter Manley 399 399
9 Michael Smith 365 365
10 John Part 203 203
11 Peter Wright 161 140
12 Raymond van Barneveld 159 159
13 Dennis Priestley 155 155
14 Luke Littler 164 164
Active players in bold.

First WDC/PDC rankings

Following the World Darts Council split from the British Darts Organisation between 1992 and 1994, the WDC drew up its first ranking list in the run-up to its inaugural 1994 World Championship. Mike Gregory and Chris Johns later went back to the BDO set up, and Bobby George and many of the non-UK players never competed in the early days of the WDC.

Ranking Player   Ranking Player
1 England Alan Warriner 16 Denmark Jann Hoffmann
2 England Rod Harrington = Wales Chris Johns
3 England Phil Taylor = Netherlands Roland Scholten
4 England John Lowe 19 Netherlands Raymond van Barneveld
5 England Mike Gregory = England Keith Deller
6 England Peter Evison 21 England Bobby George
7 England Kevin Spiolek 22 Denmark Per Skau
= England Dennis Priestley 23 Germany Bernd Hebecker
9 England Bob Anderson = Germany Andree Welge
10 Scotland Jocky Wilson = Belgium Pascal Rabau
11 Scotland Jamie Harvey 26 Belgium Leo Laurens
12 England Eric Bristow = Netherlands Bert Vlaardingerbroek
13 England Cliff Lazarenko = Republic of Ireland Tom Kirby
14 Sweden Magnus Caris = Australia Wayne Weening
= England Steve Beaton = Finland Mauro Levy

References

  1. ^ Phillips, Josh (2 July 2025). "Werner unveiled as PDC's 'Official Ladder Partner'". PDC. Retrieved 2 July 2025.
  2. ^ "PDC Order of Merit | PDC". www.pdc.tv. Archived from the original on February 25, 2019. Retrieved 2025-06-21.
  3. ^ "PDC Rankings". Global Darts. Retrieved 18 October 2020.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m "PDC Order of Merit Rules". PDC. Retrieved 21 June 2025.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q "World Number 1 (PDC)". Professional Dart Players Association. Retrieved 10 October 2020.
  6. ^ a b "Littler crowned world No 1 after reaching Grand Slam of Darts final". Sky Sports. 16 November 2025. Retrieved 3 November 2025.
  7. ^ Wood, Kieran (4 January 2024). "PDC Order of Merit after World Darts Championship 2024: Luke Humphries new number one, Luke Littler and Scott Williams into top-32, Peter Wright down to 8th". Darts News. Retrieved 21 June 2025.
  8. ^ Allen, Dave (29 August 2024). "More darts than ever in 2025 as PDC calendar released". PDC. Retrieved 22 June 2025.
  9. ^ Gill, Samuel (29 August 2024). "PDC announces 2025 Calendar with over 130 days of ranking action including expanded ProTour confirmed". Darts News. Retrieved 22 June 2025.
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