Market2026 Premier League Darts
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2026 Premier League Darts

2026 Premier League Darts is an ongoing professional darts tournament organised by the Professional Darts Corporation (PDC). The 22nd edition of Premier League Darts, the event began on 5 February 2026 at the Newcastle Arena in Newcastle upon Tyne and will end with the play-offs at the O2 Arena in London on 28 May 2026. The total prize fund is £1,250,000, with the overall winner receiving £350,000 and each weekly winner receiving a £10,000 bonus.

Overview
Background 2026 Premier League Darts is the 22nd edition of the tournament to be staged by the Professional Darts Corporation (PDC) since the inaugural event in 2005. The inaugural event was played in venues across the United Kingdom and was won by Phil Taylor, who defeated Colin Lloyd 16–4 in the final. Taylor won six of the first eight editions of the tournament, only being stopped by James Wade in 2009 and Gary Anderson in 2011. The amount of participants in the event has varied over time. Originally consisting of seven players, a wildcard spot was introduced for the 2007 edition to bring the total to eight. The number increased to ten ahead of the 2013 edition, before reverting back to eight players in 2022. The tournament has expanded outside of the United Kingdom, with nights held in Germany, the Netherlands and Ireland, as well as Belgium from 2026 onward. Sportsbook BetMGM continued its sponsorship of the event after becoming title sponsor in 2024. Luke Humphries entered the tournament as defending champion after defeating Luke Littler 11–8 in the 2025 final to win his first Premier League title. Format The 2026 Premier League uses the same format that was introduced for the 2022 edition. It remains an eight-person knockout bracket every Thursday night. The players are guaranteed to meet each other once in the quarter-finals throughout the first seven weeks, and once in the quarter-finals in weeks 9–15, with weeks 8 and 16 being drawn based on the league standings at that point. Players receive two points per semi-final finish, three points per runner-up finish, and five points per final win. Following the league phase, the top four players in the table contest the two play-off semi-finals with 1st playing 4th and 2nd playing 3rd, where the winners progress to the Premier League final. Broadcasts The tournament is being broadcast on Sky Sports in the United Kingdom and Ireland. Other broadcasters include AMC Networks in Hungary; DAZN in Germany, Austria and Switzerland; Sport1 in Germany; Eurasian Broadcasting in Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Georgia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Moldova, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, Ukraine and Uzbekistan; FanDuel TV in the United States and Brazil; Peacock in the United States and Canada; Fox Sports in Australia; L'Équipe in France; Nova in the Czech Republic and Slovakia; Sky Sport in New Zealand; VTM in Belgium; Arena Sport in Serbia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Montenegro, North Macedonia, Kosovo; TV3 in the Baltic states; Viaplay in the Netherlands, Iceland, Denmark and Norway; beIN Sports in the Middle East and North Africa; and Zonasport in Croatia. It is also available for subscribers outside of Germany, Austria and Switzerland on the PDC's streaming service, PDCTV. == Venues ==
Venues
The 2026 Premier League consists of 17 nights, held in cities across the United Kingdom, Ireland, Germany, the Netherlands and Belgium. The 2026 edition marked the introduction of Belgium to the schedule, with a night at the AFAS Dome in Antwerp replacing Westpoint Exeter in Exeter. ==Players==
Players
Eight players were invited to participate in the event. The top four players on the PDC Order of Merit following the 2026 PDC World Darts ChampionshipLuke Littler, Luke Humphries, Gian van Veen and Michael van Gerwen—qualified automatically. The remaining players—Jonny Clayton, Stephen Bunting, Josh Rock and Gerwyn Price—were chosen as wildcard selections by the PDC, and were revealed live on Sky Sports News on 5 January 2026. The announcement saw three changes made from the 2025 lineup, with Van Veen, Clayton and Rock replacing Rob Cross, Chris Dobey and Nathan Aspinall. Van Veen and Rock are both making their Premier League debuts, while Clayton returned to the tournament for the first time since 2023. Notable omissions from the tournament were Aspinall, ==Summary==
Summary
Night 1 – Night 4 (pictured on night eight) won night four in Belfast, having not earned a point in the first three weeks. On night one in Newcastle, reigning world champion Luke Littler faced Premier League debutant Gian van Veen in a rematch of the 2026 World Championship final. Van Veen won the match 6–4 before beating 2021 champion Jonny Clayton 6–4 in the semi-finals. He set up an all-Dutch final against Michael van Gerwen, who earned 6–2 wins over Stephen Bunting and defending champion Luke Humphries. In the final, Van Gerwen defeated Van Veen 6–4 to claim his first Premier League nightly win in two years. Van Gerwen expressed his desire to qualify for the play-offs but stated they were not his "main priority", explaining that ranking tournaments were more important to him than non-ranking tournaments such as the Premier League. In the Premier League's first visit to Antwerp on night two, Gerwyn Price reached the final following 6–5 victories over Van Veen and Clayton, the latter marking his 10th consecutive win against his Welsh compatriot. Price won the night by defeating Van Gerwen 6–3. Ahead of the third week in Glasgow, the PDC announced that Van Gerwen had withdrawn from the night due to illness, leading to his scheduled opponent Littler receiving a bye to the semi-finals. Clayton ended his losing streak to Price before beating Littler 6–1 and Van Veen 6–2 to win night three and move to the top of the league table. On night four in Belfast, Northern Ireland's Josh Rock hit a nine-dart finish—the 22nd nine-darter in Premier League Darts history—in the seventh leg of his 6–2 loss to Van Veen. Rock received a set of 18-carat golden darts worth £30,000 for the achievement. Despite his fourth consecutive opening-match defeat, he said that hitting a nine-darter in front of his home crowd was "phenomenal". He continued: "I honestly don’t care if I never hit a nine-darter in my life again—to have it in Belfast has just made my life a dream come true." Bunting secured his first points through a 6–4 victory over Humphries and a 6–0 whitewash of Clayton, before winning the week outright with a 6–2 win against Van Veen. Moving up to fifth in the table, Bunting called it "one of the best wins of my career". Night 5 – Night 8 (pictured on night eight), who hit a nine-dart finish on night four, earned his first points of the tournament on night eight. On night five in Cardiff, Luke Littler became the fifth different nightly winner in five weeks, rising from seventh to third in the table. After defeating Josh Rock, he produced a three-dart average of 111.05 and landed a 170 checkout to beat Gerwyn Price 6–3 in the semi-finals. He hit another 170 checkout and missed double 15 for a nine-dart finish on his way to winning the final 6–4 against Jonny Clayton. On night six in Nottingham, Clayton became the first two-time winner during the season's league stage. He followed 6–3 wins over Michael van Gerwen and Stephen Bunting with a 6–1 victory against Luke Humphries in the night's final, putting him eight points clear at the top of the table. Night six marked Humphries' first final of the season, which he reached after beating Littler 6–5 in the semi-final—his first win over Littler since their 2025 Premier League final. Suffering with gout in his ankle during the night's action, Clayton remarked that he "wasn't expecting much", revealing that he had to keep practising as his condition got worse when he sat down. Ahead of the seventh week in Dublin, the PDC announced that Gian van Veen had withdrawn from the night after being diagnosed with kidney stones, leading to his scheduled opponent Van Gerwen receiving a bye to the semi-finals. Following a 6–3 win against Bunting, Littler survived a total of eight match darts—three from Van Gerwen and five from Price—to win the night, staging a comeback from 5–0 down to defeat Price 6–5 in the final. "I have no idea how I have done that," admitted Littler, who jokingly waved goodbye to the crowd when Price attempted match-winning shots while 5–1 ahead. "I may as well have been off the stage. This is darts, things happen." On night eight in Berlin, Rock earned his first win of the tournament, defeating Clayton 6–3 in the quarter-finals before being eliminated in the semi-finals by Van Gerwen. Littler surpassed Clayton at the top of the table by beating Van Gerwen 6–4 in the night's final, where Littler hit two 170 checkouts. Night 9 – Night 12 (pictured on night eight) established a five-point lead at the top of the table by winning night eleven. In the final leg of his quarter-final match against Luke Littler on night nine in Manchester, Gian van Veen missed a match dart at double 15 and turned his head to see celebrations from Littler, who gestured towards Van Veen to continue playing. Littler then missed two match darts of his own and mimed a crybaby in front of the crowd as Van Veen secured a 6–5 victory, leading to a brief handshake between the two players. The Dutchman called Littler's behaviour "out of order", to which Littler responded by posting laughing emojis on his Instagram story, as well as an image showing his list of PDC titles. Van Veen later stated: "I'm here for myself. He's a fantastic darter, the world No 1, so what he does for the sport is great, but I care little about what he thinks of me." He reached the final of the night, where he lost 6–2 to Gerwyn Price. Despite boos from the Dutch crowd on night eleven in Rotterdam, Littler reached the final following wins over Price and Luke Humphries, whereas home favourites Van Veen and Van Gerwen were eliminated in their respective opening matches against Humphries and Clayton. Clayton defeated Littler 6–4 to win the night and establish a five-point lead over second-placed Littler. On night twelve in Liverpool, Littler was met with boos again but went on to secure his fourth nightly win, defeating Humphries, Van Gerwen, and Clayton. Addressing the race at the top of the table, Littler said: "I'm very close to Jonny [Clayton] now, three points off. I'm going to go chasing—I want to finish top once again—and if it's not to be, it's not to be. But there's still four weeks to go." Night 13 – Night 16 On night thirteen in Aberdeen, Luke Littler claimed his fifth nightly win by recovering from 5–3 down to defeat Luke Humphries 6–5 in the final. Littler went two points clear of Clayton, who lost 6–2 to Gian van Veen in the quarter-finals, while Humphries went within two points of the top four. With Littler and Clayton securing qualification for the play-offs, this left Gerwyn Price, Michael van Gerwen, Van Veen, Humphries, Stephen Bunting, and Josh Rock to claim the last two spots in the remaining three weeks of the league stage. ==League stage==
League stage
The fixtures were released on 22 January 2026. All matches during the league stage are played to the best of 11 legs. Match winners are shown in bold and all players are accompanied by their three-dart average for the match. 5 February – Night 1 Newcastle Arena, Newcastle 12 February – Night 2 AFAS Dome, Antwerp 19 February – Night 3 OVO Hydro, Glasgow 26 February – Night 4 SSE Arena, Belfast 5 March – Night 5 Cardiff International Arena, Cardiff 12 March – Night 6 Nottingham Arena, Nottingham 19 March – Night 7 3Arena, Dublin 26 March – Night 8 Uber Arena, Berlin 2 April – Night 9 Manchester Arena, Manchester 9 April – Night 10 The Brighton Centre, Brighton 16 April – Night 11 Rotterdam Ahoy, Rotterdam 23 April – Night 12 Liverpool Arena, Liverpool 30 April – Night 13 P&J Live, Aberdeen 7 May – Night 14 Leeds Arena, Leeds 14 May – Night 15 Arena Birmingham, Birmingham 21 May – Night 16 Sheffield Arena, Sheffield ==Standings==
Standings
Five points are awarded for a night win, three points for the runner-up and two points for the losing semi-finalists. When players are tied on points, nights won is used first as a tie-breaker and after that overall matches won. The top four players after 16 nights advance to the play-offs. (C) Champion(RU) Runner-up(E) Eliminated (Q) Qualified == Streaks ==
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