Format Q Tour Europe events are generally played over three days. The first day is an open qualifying day with 16 places available. The main draw starts on the second day when the 16 qualifiers are joined by the 48 seeded players who qualified based on their rankings in the 2024 Q School Orders of Merit to make a first round field of 64 players. There are two rounds on the second day and a further four on the final day, to determine the winner of the event. The 48 who qualified directly included the top 32 eligible players from the 2024 UK Q School Order of Merit, the top eight from the 2024 Asia-Oceania Q School Order of Merit, and the eight highest ranked junior players on the 2024 UK Q School Order of Merit, not already qualified. • Winner: £3,000 • Runner-up: £1,500 • Semi-final: £900 • Quarter-final: £600 • Last 16: £300 • Last 32: £200 • Total: £14,300
Schedule The schedule for the seven Q Tour Europe events is given below. The top-ranked player gets a place on the main tour for the 2024–25 season. 16 other players—the tournament winners and the highest-ranked players who have not already got a place on the main tour—will gain entry to a further event, the WPBSA Q Tour Global Playoff.
Event 1 The first Q Tour Europe event took place at Northern Snooker Centre in
Leeds from 15 to 18 August 2024.
Andres Petrov beat
Ryan Thomerson 4–3 in the final. Petrov came from 3–1 down in both the quarter and semi-finals and, after leading 3–0, also won the final in the deciding frame. Thomerson had had to qualify to reach the last-64 stage and won a further five matches to reach the final.
Event 2 The second Q Tour Europe event took place at the National Snooker Academy of Bulgaria in
Sofia from 20 to 22 September 2024.
Dylan Emery beat
Harvey Chandler 4–3 in the final, winning the last three frames after trailing 1–3. Emery and
Liam Highfield both made a 142 total clearance in the first frame of their respective semi-finals, the highest breaks of the event.
Event 3 The third Q Tour Europe event took place at the Snookerhallen in
Stockholm from 4 to 6 October 2024. Zhao beat
Craig Steadman 4–3 in the final. In the event Zhao won 8 matches and made 8 century breaks.
Event 4 The fourth Q Tour Europe event took place at the Club 200 in
Manchester from 7 to 10 November 2024.
Event 5 The fifth Q Tour Europe event took place at the Austrian Snooker Academy in
Vienna from 13 to 15 December 2024.
Event 6 The sixth Q Tour Europe event took place at the Delta Moon Snooker Club in
Mons, Belgium, from 10 to 12 January 2025. In the third frame of his last-64 match against Daan Leyssen,
Iulian Boiko made a
maximum break, becoming the second player after
Zhao Xintong to record a maximum break on the Q Tour. Zhao defeated Ehsan Heydari Nezhad 4–1 in the final to win his fourth Q Tour Europe event and 32nd match on the Q Tour in a row.
Event 7 The seventh Q Tour Europe event was held at the Landywood Snooker Club in
Great Wyrley from 7 to 9 February 2025.
Liam Highfield defeated
Dylan Emery 43 in the final, thereby winning his first Q Tour event. Emery made the highest break of the event, a 140 compiled in his match against
Anton Kazakov in the early rounds of the event. ==Q Tour Global==