The FIDE rating list for April 2026 dropped on April 1 with some of the sharpest movements we have seen in years. Nodirbek Abdusattorov climbed to World No. 4 after winning the Prague Masters. Reigning World Champion D Gukesh fell to 15th place. And India’s Divya Deshmukh made history by entering the Women’s World Top 10 for the first time.
But none of that is the biggest story right now.
The 2026 FIDE Candidates Tournament is live in Paphos, Cyprus, running from March 28 to April 16. Through seven rounds, Uzbekistan’s Javokhir Sindarov has produced one of the most dominant starts in modern Candidates history, scoring 6/7 with five wins and just two draws. His live rating has crossed 2770, and the chess world is watching to see if he can hold on and earn the right to challenge Gukesh for the world title.
Here is the full breakdown of the April 2026 FIDE update.
Top 10 Classical Rankings: April 2026
The top three positions remain unchanged. Magnus Carlsen (2840), Hikaru Nakamura (2810), and Fabiano Caruana (2793) hold their ground. But everything below them has been reshuffled by the results of the Prague International Chess Festival.
| Rank | Player Name | Federation | April 2026 Rating | Change from March |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Magnus Carlsen | NOR | 2840 | 0 |
| 2 | Hikaru Nakamura | USA | 2810 | 0 |
| 3 | Fabiano Caruana | USA | 2793 | -2 |
| 4 | Nodirbek Abdusattorov | UZB | 2780 | 9 |
| 5 | Vincent Keymer | GER | 2762 | -14 |
| 6 | Alireza Firouzja | FRA | 2759 | 0 |
| 7 | Wesley So | USA | 2754 | 1 |
| 8 | Wei Yi | CHN | 2754 | 0 |
| 9 | Anish Giri | NED | 2753 | -7 |
| 10 | Arjun Erigaisi | IND | 2751 | 6 |
Carlsen and Nakamura are now the only two players in the world sitting above 2800. Caruana briefly crossed back above that line through his live Candidates results, but the official April list has him at 2793.
The most talked-about movement is Abdusattorov at World No. 4. His 9-point gain came from a commanding win at the Prague Chess Masters, where he finished a full point ahead of the entire field with 6/9. This is a career peak for the 21-year-old Uzbek, who was considered a rapid specialist just two years ago. He is now firmly established as a classical elite.
Vincent Keymer had the opposite experience in Prague. A 14-point drop pushed him from fourth to fifth, swapping positions with Abdusattorov. Anish Giri also slipped 7 points. Meanwhile, Arjun Erigaisi quietly climbed back into the top 10 with 6 points gained through consistent performance across March classical events.
Biggest Movers of the Month
Who Gained the Most
| Player | Federation | March Rating | April Rating | Points Gained | Tournament |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pavel Eljanov | UKR | 2659 | 2682 | 23 | German Bundesliga |
| David Navara | CZE | 2626 | 2643 | 17 | Prague Chess Festival |
| Pranav V | IND | 2641 | 2657 | 16 | KazChess Masters Nauryz 2026 |
| Nodirbek Abdusattorov | UZB | 2771 | 2780 | 9 | Prague Chess Festival |
| Arjun Erigaisi | IND | 2745 | 2751 | 6 | March classical events |
Ukraine’s Pavel Eljanov was the biggest gainer across all players this month, picking up 23 points through the German Chess Bundesliga and related European team competitions. Eljanov is a veteran who has been around the elite for over a decade. This kind of surge in team formats shows how targeted preparation can still produce big results even at the grandmaster level.
India’s Pranav V is the story among young players. Winning the KazChess Masters Nauryz 2026 and finishing fourth at the Saint Louis Masters pushed his rating to a career-high 2657. He is now World No. 52. At 20 years old, he is firmly on the path toward the super-grandmaster threshold.
Who Lost the Most
| Player | Federation | March Rating | April Rating | Points Lost | Reason |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| D Gukesh | IND | 2748 | 2732 | -16 | Poor form at Prague Masters |
| Vincent Keymer | GER | 2776 | 2762 | -14 | Subpar result at Prague |
| Richard Rapport | HUN | 2738 | 2729 | -9 | European Opens |
| Anish Giri | NED | 2760 | 2753 | -7 | Rating deflation |
| Leinier Dominguez | USA | 2738 | 2732 | -6 | Inactivity |
D Gukesh losing 16 points and dropping to World No. 15 raised a lot of eyebrows. But this is not unusual for a reigning World Champion. The moment you hold that title, every opponent prepares extensively against you, and every loss gets amplified. The Prague Masters was a tough event for him, and his live Candidates results will be the true test of where his form currently stands.
The India Chess Update
India continues to be the most exciting country to watch in chess right now. Twelve Indian players are in the Open Top 100, and seven are in the Women’s Top 100. No other nation outside the United States has this kind of depth across both categories.
Indian Players (Open) - World Rankings
| World Rank | Player | April Rating | Change from March |
|---|---|---|---|
| 10 | Arjun Erigaisi | 2751 | 6 |
| 12 | R Praggnanandhaa | 2741 | 0 |
| 15 | D Gukesh | 2732 | -16 |
| 22 | Nihal Sarin | 2723 | 7 |
| 29 | Vidit Gujrathi | 2708 | 0 |
| 35 | Aravindh Chithambaram | 2693 | 0 |
| 43 | Pentala Harikrishna | 2676 | 0 |
| 52 | Pranav V | 2657 | 16 |
| 67 | Murali Karthikeyan | 2648 | 0 |
| 75 | Raunak Sadhwani | 2642 | 0 |
Arjun Erigaisi is back in the top 10. His approach is different from most elite players. He does not wait for invitation-only events. He plays constantly, picks up points in open formats, and avoids the big variance swings that come from relying on one or two closed tournaments per year. It is a smarter grind, and it is working.
R Praggnanandhaa held steady at 2741 through a period of deliberate pre-Candidates preparation. His focus right now is Cyprus. Nihal Sarin had a strong month, climbing to World No. 22 after picking up 7 points in the German Bundesliga.
Indian Women - World Rankings
| World Rank | Player | April Rating | Change from March |
|---|---|---|---|
| 5 | Koneru Humpy | 2535 | 0 |
| 10 | Divya Deshmukh | 2510 | 13 |
| 18 | Harika Dronavalli | 2470 | 4 |
| 19 | R Vaishali | 2470 | 0 |
| 63 | Vantika Agrawal | 2374 | 0 |
The standout here is Divya Deshmukh entering the Women’s World Top 10 for the first time. She gained 13 points with a third-place finish at the Prague Chess Festival Challengers section, pushing her rating to 2510. She is 19 years old. This is not a one-time performance. Deshmukh has been consistently climbing for two years, and the numbers now reflect what the chess world already knew: she is genuinely elite.
R Vaishali is not on this official list as a top mover, but watch her closely. She is currently playing at the Women’s Candidates in Cyprus and has been in strong form, sitting just half a point behind the leader after seven rounds.
Women's World Rankings: April 2026
| Rank | Player | Federation | April Rating | Change from March |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Hou Yifan | CHN | 2596 | 0 |
| 2 | Lei Tingjie | CHN | 2566 | 0 |
| 3 | Ju Wenjun | CHN | 2559 | 0 |
| 4 | Zhu Jiner | CHN | 2554 | -24 |
| 5 | Koneru Humpy | IND | 2535 | 0 |
| 6 | Tan Zhongyi | CHN | 2535 | 0 |
| 7 | Aleksandra Goryachkina | FIDE | 2534 | 0 |
| 8 | Anna Muzychuk | UKR | 2522 | 0 |
| 9 | Bibisara Assaubayeva | KAZ | 2516 | 0 |
| 10 | Divya Deshmukh | IND | 2510 | 13 |
Hou Yifan retains the top spot at 2596. China holds four of the top six positions, which has been the story for several years now.
The most significant change is Zhu Jiner dropping 24 points after a difficult Prague Chess Festival. She fell from World No. 2 to World No. 4, with both Ju Wenjun and Lei Tingjie moving ahead of her.
India breaking into this top 10 through Divya Deshmukh is meaningful. The top 10 has been almost entirely Chinese and Eastern European for most of the past decade. Having two Indian women in the top 20 (Deshmukh at 10, Vaishali at 19) tells a much bigger story about where Indian women’s chess is heading.
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Top 10 Juniors (Under 20): April 2026
| Junior Rank | Name | Federation | Rating | Birth Year |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Gukesh D | IND | 2732 | 2006 |
| 2 | Yagiz Kaan Erdogmus | TUR | 2687 | 2011 |
| 3 | Pranav V | IND | 2657 | 2006 |
| 4 | Volodar Murzin | FIDE | 2655 | 2006 |
| 5 | Andy Woodward | USA | 2635 | 2010 |
| 6 | Ediz Gurel | TUR | 2635 | 2008 |
| 7 | Pranesh M | IND | 2632 | 2006 |
| 8 | Aleksey Grebnev | FIDE | 2627 | 2006 |
| 9 | Abhimanyu Mishra | USA | 2623 | 2009 |
| 10 | Aditya Mittal | IND | 2617 | 2006 |
Gukesh remains the top-rated junior despite his difficult month. But the real focus belongs to Turkey’s Yagiz Kaan Erdogmus. He is 14 years old and rated 2687. That number is not a typo. For context, reaching 2700 usually takes players until their mid-to-late teens even on a fast track. Erdogmus is approaching it before most kids finish middle school.
Four of the top ten juniors are Indian, which points to a pipeline that will keep producing elite players for years to come. Andy Woodward of the USA (born 2010) and Abhimanyu Mishra (born 2009) show that the American development system is also producing world-class young talent.
Top 10 Girls (Under 20): April 2026
| Girl Rank | Name | Federation | Rating | Birth Year |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Alua Nurman | KAZ | 2443 | 2007 |
| 2 | Anna Shukhman | FIDE | 2440 | 2009 |
| 3 | Lu Miaoyi | CHN | 2429 | 2010 |
| 4 | Afruza Khamdamova | UZB | 2416 | 2009 |
| 5 | Alice Lee | USA | 2415 | 2009 |
| 6 | Rose Atwell | USA | 2390 | 2009 |
| 7 | Eline Roebers | NED | 2381 | 2006 |
| 8 | Bodhana Sivanandan | ENG | 2366 | 2015 |
| 9 | Zsoka Gaal | HUN | 2365 | 2007 |
| 10 | Amina Kairbekova | KAZ | 2362 | 2006 |
Kazakhstan’s Alua Nurman jumped to World No. 1 Girls after a 65-point gain across the Prague Festival Open and the Agzamov Memorial. That is a remarkable surge.
But the name everyone is talking about is Bodhana Sivanandan at No. 8. She was born in 2015. She is 11 years old. She gained 98 rating points at the Cannes Open and recently became the youngest female player in history to defeat a Grandmaster in classical chess, breaking a record previously held by Carissa Yip. She has already earned the WIM title and her first WGM norm.
To put this in perspective: the current record for the youngest Grandmaster in history is held by Abhimanyu Mishra at roughly 12 years and 4 months. Sivanandan’s trajectory suggests that record could be under serious threat within a few years, and from a female player no less.
Rapid and Blitz Rankings: April 2026
Rapid Top 10
| Rank | Player | Federation | Rapid Rating |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Magnus Carlsen | NOR | 2832 |
| 2 | Alireza Firouzja | FRA | 2755 |
| 3 | Hikaru Nakamura | USA | 2742 |
| 4 | Arjun Erigaisi | IND | 2741 |
| 5 | Vladislav Artemiev | RUS | 2739 |
| 6 | Ding Liren | CHN | 2737 |
| 7 | Fabiano Caruana | USA | 2727 |
| 8 | Wesley So | USA | 2705 |
| 9 | Nodirbek Abdusattorov | UZB | 2703 |
| 10 | Praggnanandhaa R | IND | 2663 |
Blitz Top 10
| Rank | Player | Federation | Blitz Rating |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Magnus Carlsen | NOR | 2869 |
| 2 | Hikaru Nakamura | USA | 2838 |
| 3 | Wesley So | USA | 2798 |
| 4 | Alireza Firouzja | FRA | 2796 |
| 5 | Daniil Dubov | RUS | 2792 |
| 6 | Nodirbek Abdusattorov | UZB | 2785 |
| 7 | Arjun Erigaisi | IND | 2776 |
| 8 | Ian Nepomniachtchi | FIDE | 2765 |
| 9 | Fabiano Caruana | USA | 2749 |
| 10 | Praggnanandhaa R | IND | 2698 |
Carlsen leads all three formats: classical (2840), rapid (2832), and blitz (2869). No one else is even close in blitz.
What stands out in the rapid and blitz lists is how well the younger players are competing. Arjun Erigaisi is World No. 4 in rapid and No. 7 in blitz. Abdusattorov is in the top 10 of all three formats. Praggnanandhaa is in the blitz top 10 as well. These are not players who happen to be good at one format. They are all-around elite players, which makes the coming years even more exciting to watch.
Top 10 Federations: April 2026
| Rank | Federation | Average Rating (Top 10) |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | United States | 2726 |
| 2 | India | 2697 |
| 3 | China | 2654 |
| 4 | Russia | 2647 |
| 5 | Germany | 2635 |
| 6 | Ukraine | 2629 |
| 7 | France | 2626 |
| 8 | Azerbaijan | 2622 |
| 9 | Uzbekistan | 2617 |
| 10 | Spain | 2613 |
The United States leads with a 2726 average, built on a strong roster of established veterans. India is second at 2697, and closing. The key difference is age. The USA average relies heavily on players in their 30s. India’s top 10 is almost entirely under 25. That gap will keep narrowing.
Uzbekistan entering the top 10 federations at No. 9 is a new development worth noting. Their average is driven by four players under the age of 22. Abdusattorov, Sindarov, and Khamdamova represent a generational core that could push Uzbekistan much higher by the end of the decade.
FIDE Regulatory Update: The 45+30 Time Control Reform
This month, the FIDE Council passed a significant rule change allowing tournaments with a 45-minute plus 30-second increment time control to be rated as standard classical chess.
What does this mean in practice? Open tournaments can now run two rounds per day without exhausting the players, cutting a typical 9-round event from nine days down to five. This makes organizing classical chess events much cheaper and more practical, especially at the national and regional level.
To protect the GM and IM title norms from being devalued, FIDE added a safeguard: players can count only one norm earned under the 45+30 format toward their total norm requirements. The Qualification Commission will also vet these events individually before approving them.
This change matters for young players and their parents. More classical-rated events with shorter schedules means more opportunities to gain rating points and chase norms without the travel costs and time commitments of a nine-day open.
FIDE also announced that the annual FIDE Circuit format is being replaced by a two-year cycle covering 2026 and 2027. A player’s final standing for World Championship qualification will now be calculated from their 12 best event scores across 24 months, with limits on how many rapid and blitz events can count.
The Candidates Tournament: Cyprus, April 2026
The 2026 FIDE Candidates Tournament is the biggest story in chess right now. It is being played at the Cap St Georges Resort in Paphos, Cyprus, running from March 28 to April 16.
The winner of the Open section earns the right to challenge World Champion D Gukesh. The Women’s winner will challenge Ju Wenjun.
Through seven rounds, Javokhir Sindarov has been sensational. His 6/7 score, which includes wins over Fabiano Caruana, Hikaru Nakamura, and Wei Yi, is the kind of start not seen in a Candidates since Veselin Topalov at San Luis in 2005. His live rating has crossed 2770, which would place him at World No. 6 if it holds.
Caruana sits second at 4.5/7, but that 1.5-point gap is substantial heading into the second half.
In the Women’s Candidates, Ukraine’s Anna Muzychuk leads with 4.5/7. India’s R Vaishali is right behind at 4/7, keeping Indian fans very much in the conversation.
For students at Kingdom of Chess, this Candidates Tournament is a masterclass in preparation and nerve. Sindarov has shown that facing Nakamura or Caruana in a must-win situation does not require you to reinvent your chess. Clean, well-prepared openings and deep endgame understanding are enough. That is exactly what our coaches work on with students at every level.
Looking Ahead: What Comes After the Candidates
Once Cyprus concludes on April 16, the elite circuit moves to Norway Chess in Oslo, running from May 25 to June 5. Magnus Carlsen is already confirmed in the Open field. The event will include both Open and Women’s sections.
Players also have their eyes on the June 1 rating list. Qualification parameters for the 2026 Total Chess World Championship Tour pilot (October 3-15) will be calculated using June standings, meaning every classical game between now and then carries extra weight.
FAQ: FIDE Ratings April 2026
FIDE publishes a new classical rating list on the first day of every month. Rapid and blitz ratings are updated more frequently, often after specific events.
Being World Champion does not protect your rating. Gukesh had a tough time at the Prague Masters in March and lost points. The ELO system adjusts based on results alone. His championship title is a separate matter from his monthly rating.
It means more officially rated classical chess events will become available, often shorter and cheaper to participate in. For junior players building toward GM or IM norms, this opens more pathways to earn those norms without needing to attend week-long tournaments.
The USA leads the federation rankings by average rating, but India is second and closing fast. India has 12 players in the Open Top 100 and seven in the Women's Top 100, all of them young and still improving. Many analysts expect India to top the federation rankings before 2030.
Sindarov is a 20-year-old Grandmaster from Uzbekistan who qualified by winning the 2025 FIDE World Cup. He gained 19 rating points in March and came into Cyprus on the best form of his career. His 6/7 start has already produced wins over three of the world's top five players, which is extraordinary at any age.


