FIDE Ratings May 2026: Sindarov No. 5, Vaishali Wins Candidates

By Chandrajeet Rajawat

Last updated: 05/05/2026

FIDE Rating May 2026

The May 1, 2026, FIDE rating list is out, and it tells the story of one extraordinary month for chess.

Javokhir Sindarov, 20 years old and from Uzbekistan, won the 2026 FIDE Candidates Tournament without losing a single game. His performance rating of 2909 was the highest ever recorded at a Candidates Tournament. He earned 31 rating points in one event and will now play Dommaraju Gukesh for the World Chess Championship.

At the same venue in Paphos, Cyprus, India’s Vaishali Rameshbabu won the Women’s Candidates with a clutch victory in the final round. She will face Women’s World Champion Ju Wenjun for the title.

And in Poland, 17-year-old Roman Dehtiarov won the European Individual Chess Championship as an unseeded International Master, defeating six players rated above 2600 along the way.

This was not a quiet month for chess. Here is the full breakdown.

Top 10 Classical Rankings: May 2026

RankPlayer NameFederationMay 2026 RatingChange from April
1Magnus CarlsenNOR28400
2Hikaru NakamuraUSA2792-18
3Fabiano CaruanaUSA2788-5
4Nodirbek AbdusattorovUZB27800
5Javokhir SindarovUZB2776+31
6Anish GiriNED2767+14
7Vincent KeymerGER2759-3
8Alireza FirouzjaFRA27590
9Wesley SoUSA27540
10Wei YiCHN2753-1
11Arjun ErigaisiIND27510

The most important number on this list is 2792, next to Hikaru Nakamura’s name.

For the first time in years, Magnus Carlsen is the only player in the world rated 2800 or above. Hikaru Nakamura lost 18 points at the Candidates Tournament, dropping from 2810 to 2792. Fabiano Caruana lost 5 points and sits at 2788. Both played reasonably well in Paphos, but the Elo system is brutal at the top. When you are rated so high, drawing games against a 2750-rated opponent costs you points. There is no easy way around the math.

Anish Giri gained 14 points and moved to World No. 6, his best classical ranking in several years. His second-place finish in Cyprus with 8.5/14 was a strong, consistent tournament.

Also notable: Vincent Keymer dropped 3 points and slipped from World No. 5 to No. 7, overtaken by both Sindarov and Giri. Viswanathan Anand returned to the active top 20 at World No. 12, and Ding Liren re-entered at World No. 14 after returning to competitive play.

2026 FIDE Candidates Tournament: Open Section Final Results

Venue: Cap St Georges Hotel and Resort, Paphos, Cyprus

Dates: March 28 to April 16, 2026

Format: Double round-robin, 8 players, 14 rounds

Javokhir Sindarov won outright with 10.0/14. He was undefeated across all 14 rounds, winning six games and drawing eight. His performance rating of 2909 is the highest ever recorded in a modern Candidates Tournament.

His key wins came in Round 4 against Fabiano Caruana with the white pieces, Round 5 against Hikaru Nakamura in a surprise Marshall Gambit, and Round 10 against Rameshbabu Praggnanandhaa. By the time the rest day arrived after Round 7, Sindarov had already built a lead that nobody could close.

He will now challenge Dommaraju Gukesh for the World Chess Championship.

Final Standings - Open Candidates 2026

Rameshbabu Praggnanandhaa’s 6.0/14 finish will be a disappointment for Indian fans. He came in as one of the strongest contenders alongside Caruana and Nakamura. But Sindarov’s preparation was simply on another level, and Praggnanandhaa could not find a way through in their Round 10 game. His rating dropped 8 points to 2733, moving him to World No. 16.

For students training for competitive chess, the Candidates showed something important. Sindarov did not win by playing complicated, speculative positions. He won with deep preparation in specific opening lines, extraordinary endgame technique, and the ability to hold drawn positions calmly when needed. That is exactly the kind of chess taught at the structured elite levels at Kingdom of Chess.

RankPlayerCountryScoreW-D-L
1GM Javokhir SindarovUZB10.0 / 146-8-0
2GM Anish GiriNED8.5 / 144-9-1
3GM Fabiano CaruanaUSA7.5 / 144-7-3
4GM Wei YiCHN7.0 / 142-10-2
5GM Hikaru NakamuraUSA6.5 / 141-11-1
6GM Matthias BluebaumGER6.0 / 140-12-2
7GM Praggnanandhaa RIND6.0 / 141-10-3
8GM Andrey EsipenkoFIDE4.5 / 140-9-5

2026 FIDE Women's Candidates: Vaishali Rameshbabu Earns the Challenger Spot

Final Score: Vaishali Rameshbabu, 8.5/14 (+5 =7 -2)

Performance Rating: 2603

India’s Vaishali Rameshbabu won the Women’s Candidates Tournament in Paphos with one of the most dramatic final rounds in recent memory. Going into Round 14, she needed a win to guarantee first place without tiebreaks. Playing with the white pieces against Kateryna Lagno, she delivered exactly that, converting a sharp game under maximum pressure.

She gained 26 rating points from the tournament, pushing her rating to 2496. She is now ranked 13th in the world and knocking on the door of the elite 2500 barrier. She will face Women’s World Champion Ju Wenjun for the title.

Final Standings - Women's Candidates 2026

RankPlayerCountryScoreW-D-L
1GM Vaishali RameshbabuIND8.5 / 145-7-2
2GM Bibisara AssaubayevaKAZ8.0 / 144-8-2
3GM Zhu JinerCHN7.5 / 145-5-4
4GM Aleksandra GoryachkinaFIDE7.5 / 143-9-2
5GM Anna MuzychukUKR7.0 / 142-10-2
6GM Kateryna LagnoFIDE6.5 / 144-5-5
7GM Divya DeshmukhIND5.5 / 142-7-5
8GM Tan ZhongyiCHN5.5 / 141-9-4

Tan Zhongyi had a difficult tournament, losing four games and finishing with a performance rating of just 2442. That is nearly 100 points below her normal standard. She fell three places in the world rankings as a result.

Zhu Jiner played solid chess overall but lost rating points because the Elo system expects top-seeded players to score heavily. A 7.5/14 finish was not enough to break even.

Bibisara Assaubayeva of Kazakhstan secured clear second place with 8.0/14, gaining 11 rating points and reaching a career-high World No. 7. Aleksandra Goryachkina matched Zhu Jiner’s score of 7.5/14 and re-entered the women’s top 5 with a rating of 2534.

India Chess Update: May 2026

Indian Players (Open) - World Rankings

World RankPlayerMay 2026 RatingChange from April
11Arjun Erigaisi27510
16Rameshbabu Praggnanandhaa2733-8
17Dommaraju Gukesh27320
24Nihal Sarin27230
33Vidit Santosh Gujrathi27080
38Aravindh Chithambaram2692-1
44Pentala Harikrishna26760

Arjun Erigaisi held his position in the world top 15 through consistent play. His approach of playing regularly rather than waiting for invitation-only events continues to serve him well.

Rameshbabu Praggnanandhaa slipped to World No. 16 after losing 8 points at the Candidates. Dommaraju Gukesh held at World No. 17 with no change, having been inactive on the standard list outside the Candidates. Both will be looking to recover rating points at Norway Chess in May.

The bigger story for India this month is on the women’s side.

Indian Women Players - World Rankings

World RankPlayerMay 2026 RatingChange from April
5Koneru Humpy25350
13Vaishali Rameshbabu2496+26
18Harika Dronavalli24700
20Divya DeshmukhDeflationaryFrom 2510
~65Savitha Shri B2374+23

Vaishali Rameshbabu gaining 26 points and becoming the Women’s Candidates Champion is the headline achievement for Indian chess this month. Combined with Koneru Humpy at World No. 5, India now has two players firmly inside the global women’s top 15.

Savitha Shri B quietly had an excellent month on the European norm-hunting circuit, gaining 23 rating points through the Fagernes Chess International and the Bratislava Norm Week. She is now rated 2374.

Divya Deshmukh had a tough Candidates, finishing seventh, but one difficult tournament does not erase the breakthrough she made in April. She remains one of the most exciting young talents in women’s chess globally.

Want to see how Kingdom of Chess helps young Indian players build toward competitive ratings? Read about how KOC prepares students for FIDE ratings.

Women's World Rankings: May 2026

RankPlayerFederationMay RatingChange from April
1Hou YifanCHN25960
2Lei TingjieCHN25660
3Ju WenjunCHN25590
4Zhu JinerCHN2546-8
5Koneru HumpyIND25350
6Aleksandra GoryachkinaFIDE2534Back in Top 5
7Bibisara AssaubayevaKAZ2527+11
8Anna MuzychukUKR25220
9Tan ZhongyiCHNDropped-18
13Vaishali RameshbabuIND2496+26

Hou Yifan remains the highest-rated female player in the world at 2596. China still holds three of the top four positions.

But the dynamics are changing. Vaishali Rameshbabu is now the Women’s Candidates Champion and will challenge Ju Wenjun for the title. Bibisara Assaubayeva of Kazakhstan is at a career-high ranking at World No. 7. Aleksandra Goryachkina has re-entered the top 5. The women’s circuit has rarely been this competitive outside the Chinese top players.

Roman Dehtiarov Wins the European Championship

The 2026 European Individual Chess Championship took place in Katowice, Poland, from April 6 to April 20. It featured 501 players, including 95 Grandmasters and 21 players rated above 2600.

The winner was 17-year-old Roman Dehtiarov of Ukraine. He entered the event rated just 2452, seeded 126th out of 501 players. He finished with 9.0/11 and a performance rating of 2781, defeating six players rated above him including Spanish GM David Anton Guijarro (rated 2656) in the final round.

He is the first non-Grandmaster to ever win the European Individual Championship since the event started in 2000. The win earned him the automatic Grandmaster title, a prize of 20,000 euros, and a spot at the 2027 FIDE World Cup.

His rating before the event was 2452. After it, he gained 45.6 points in a single tournament.

Why was his rating so low to begin with? Ukrainian GM Pavel Eljanov offered an explanation. After the war in Ukraine began in 2022, Dehtiarov chose to stay in the heavily targeted city of Kharkiv with his father rather than relocate abroad for better tournament access. That meant years of limited international competition. His official Elo had fallen far behind his actual strength. Katowice was the correction.

European Individual Championship 2026 - Top 5 Finishers

RankPlayerFederationPre-Event RatingScorePerformance Rating
1Roman DehtiarovUKR24529.0/112781
2Nijat AbasovAZE25868.5/112678
3Aydin SuleymanliAZE26538.5/112737
4Mahammad MuradliAZE26058.5/112689
5Ediz GurelTUR26358.0/112674

Three of the top four places were taken by Azerbaijani grandmasters. The country is developing a very strong classical chess program.

Top 10 Juniors (Under 20): May 2026

Junior RankPlayerFederationRatingBirth Year
1Dommaraju GukeshIND27322006
2Yagiz Kaan ErdogmusTUR27082011
3Pranav VIND26572006
4Volodar MurzinFIDE26552006
5Andy WoodwardUSA26352010
6Abhimanyu MishraUSA26382009
7Denis LazavikBLR26382006
8Aleksey GrebnevFIDE26272006
9Ediz GurelTUR26352008
10Aditya MittalIND26172006

The headline here is Yagiz Kaan Erdogmus of Turkey. He crossed 2700 at 14 years, 10 months, and 13 days old. That is the youngest any player in history has ever crossed the 2700 barrier, beating the previous record held by China’s Wei Yi by nearly a full year.

Erdogmus achieved this by defeating former World Champion Veselin Topalov 5-1 in a six-game classical match in April, gaining 21 rating points in that event alone.

Abhimanyu Mishra gained 15 points from an open event in Spain and is climbing the junior rankings fast. Denis Lazavik of Belarus picked up 16 points after winning the Karpov Tournament and broke into the junior top 10.

India still has four players in the top 10 juniors, confirming that the pipeline is as strong as ever.

Top 10 Girls (Under 20): May 2026

Girl RankPlayerFederationRatingBirth Year
1Anna ShukhmanFIDE24562009
2Alua NurmanKAZ24432007
3Lu MiaoyiCHN24292010
4Afruza KhamdamovaUZB24162009
5Alice LeeUSA24152009
6Rose AtwellUSA23902009
7Eline RoebersNED23812006
8Bodhana SivanandanENG23662015
9Zsoka GaalHUN23652007
10Amina KairbekovaKAZ23622006

Anna Shukhman (born 2009, rated FIDE) has taken the World No. 1 spot in the girls’ junior rankings after gaining 16 points at the V Open Chess Menorca 2026. She is now rated 2456.

Bodhana Sivanandan remains at World No. 8 among all girls under 20. She is 11 years old. This fact still needs a moment to sink in. At 11, she is competing with and beating players who are five to eight years older than her.

The biggest rating jump in the girls’ category this month belongs to Iris Mou, who gained 88 points in a single rating period, jumping 51 places from World No. 77 to World No. 26. That is an extraordinary surge.

Biggest Movers of the Month (Overall)

PlayerTitleFederationMay RatingPoints Gained
Liya KurmangaliyevaFMKAZ234657
Jennifer YuFMUSA235838
Javokhir SindarovGMUZB277631
Xiao YiyiWGMCHN238928
Vaishali RameshbabuGMIND249626
Savitha Shri BIMIND237423
Yagiz Kaan ErdogmusGMTUR270821
Teodora InjacIMSRB243121

Kazakhstan’s Liya Kurmangaliyeva was the biggest gainer of the entire month, picking up 57 rating points across the Reykjavik Open and the Grenke Chess Open in Germany. She is now rated 2346.

Jennifer Yu of the United States gained 38 points from the same two events and has returned to the Women’s Top 100 after an absence of nearly seven years. That comeback is a great story.

Rapid and Blitz Rankings: May 2026

Rapid Top 10

RankPlayerFederationRapid Rating
1Magnus CarlsenNOR2832
2Alireza FirouzjaFRA2755
3Hikaru NakamuraUSA2742
4Arjun ErigaisiIND2741
5Vladislav ArtemievRUS2739
6Ding LirenCHN2737
7Fabiano CaruanaUSA2727
8Wesley SoUSA2705
9Nodirbek AbdusattorovUZB2703
10Rameshbabu PraggnanandhaaIND2663

Blitz Top 10

RankPlayerFederationBlitz Rating
1Magnus CarlsenNOR2869
2Hikaru NakamuraUSA2838
3Wesley SoUSA2798
4Alireza FirouzjaFRA2796
5Daniil DubovRUS2792
6Nodirbek AbdusattorovUZB2785
7Arjun ErigaisiIND2776
8Ian NepomniachtchiFIDE2765
9Fabiano CaruanaUSA2749
10Rameshbabu PraggnanandhaaIND2698

Magnus Carlsen leads all three time formats by a wide margin. His 2869 blitz rating is 31 points ahead of Hikaru Nakamura in second. Nobody else is close.

Arjun Erigaisi is the top Indian player in both rapid (World No. 4) and blitz (World No. 7). India has two players in the blitz top 10, with Rameshbabu Praggnanandhaa at No. 10. Alireza Firouzja sits at No. 2 in rapid and No. 4 in blitz, while Wesley So holds No. 3 in blitz and No. 8 in rapid.

Top 10 Federations: May 2026

RankFederationAverage Top 10 Rating
1United States2726
2India2697
3China2654
4Russia2647
5Germany2635
6Ukraine2629
7France2626
8Azerbaijan2622
9Uzbekistan2617
10Spain2613

No change at the top, but Uzbekistan’s rise is worth noting. With Javokhir Sindarov now rated 2776 and Nodirbek Abdusattorov at 2780, Uzbekistan has two players in the world top 5. Their federation average will rise sharply on the next list.

FIDE Notable Milestone: Greenland Plays Its First National Championship

This deserves a mention even though it does not affect the top rankings.

In April 2026, Greenland held its first-ever official national chess championship. Twenty-four-year-old Egon Mattaaq, a fish packer from Upernavik who lives in a town of roughly 1,000 people, won the title with 6/7. He is the first Greenlandic Chess Champion in history.

Chess is growing into places that tournament organizers would not have imagined a decade ago. This is what global expansion looks like at the grassroots level.

What to Watch Next: Norway Chess and the June Rating List

Norway Chess 2026 begins on May 25 in Oslo and runs through June 5. This is an elite 6-player event with a confirmed lineup of Magnus Carlsen, Vincent Keymer, Alireza Firouzja, Rameshbabu Praggnanandhaa, Dommaraju Gukesh, and Wesley So.

A parallel women’s event will include Zhu Jiner and Women’s World Champion Ju Wenjun.

Norway Chess is one of the most prestigious events on the calendar. For Gukesh and Praggnanandhaa, it is also a chance to recover some of the rating points lost in Cyprus. For Carlsen, it is home turf.

The June 1 rating list will also carry extra significance because FIDE is using it to calculate qualification standings for the 2026 Total Chess World Championship Tour pilot, which runs October 3 to 15. Every classical game in May counts.

Check out the full 2026 chess tournament calendar to stay updated on upcoming events.

FAQ: FIDE Ratings May 2026

Javokhir Sindarov of Uzbekistan won the Open Candidates with a score of 10.0/14, undefeated across all 14 rounds. He will challenge Dommaraju Gukesh for the World Chess Championship title. Vaishali Rameshbabu of India won the Women's Candidates with 8.5/14 and will face Women's World Champion Ju Wenjun.

Hikaru Nakamura finished with 6.5/14 at the Candidates, scoring just one win against a field he was expected to compete with at the top. The Elo system is strict at high ratings. When you are rated 2810 and draw many games against 2750-rated opponents, you lose points. His rating dropped from 2810 to 2792, ending his time in the 2800 club. Magnus Carlsen is now the only player in the world rated 2800 or above.

Yagiz Kaan Erdogmus is a 14-year-old Turkish Grandmaster who crossed the 2700 rating barrier in April 2026. This makes him the youngest player in chess history to reach 2700, beating the previous record held by Wei Yi by nearly a full year. He achieved this by defeating former World Champion Veselin Topalov 5-1 in a six-game match.

Every FIDE-rated game adjusts your Elo score based on expected results. If you are rated 2810 and play a 2750-rated opponent, you are expected to score around 58% of the points. If you score less, you lose rating. If you score more, you gain. This is why top players lose points even when they perform reasonably well. The higher your rating, the harder it is to gain points and the easier it is to lose them.

FIDE has not yet announced the official dates and venue for the Sindarov vs Gukesh World Championship match. Check the 2026 chess tournament calendar for updates as they are confirmed.

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