Each
fiddler plays a set (or 'round') of three tunes, which must include a
hoedown, a
waltz, and a tune of choice, which can neither be a waltz nor a hoedown. The fiddlers with the highest scores move on to the next round of competition. The number of fiddlers that get to play in each round is decided before the contest starts. In all divisions, only five fiddlers compete in the final round of competition and scores are cumulative throughout the contest. The contest is divided into seven divisions:
Small Fry, for contestants 8 years of age and younger;
Junior-Junior, for contestants 12 years of age and younger;
Junior, for contestants less than 18 years of age;
Young Adult, for ages 18–36;
Adult, ages 37–59;
Senior, ages 60 and above; and
Grand Champion, which is open to competitors of any age. No competitor may enter more than one of these divisions. There is no competition between divisions. There are three rounds of competition for the Small Fry and Junior-Junior divisions, four for the Junior, Young Adult, Adult, and Senior divisions, and six for the Grand Championship. If a contestant wins an age specific division three times, they can no longer compete in that division, but they may play in the next most competitive division the next year (Small Fry and Junior-Junior move up to the next age group, all other ages move up to the Grand Championship). If a fiddler wins the Grand Championship three years, they are asked to sit out a year, and are invited to judge the contest instead of competing. Contestants may perform with up to three accompanists, and no contestant may play the same tune twice. There is a time limit of four minutes for rounds one through three, five minutes for rounds four and five, and no time limit for the final round of the Grand Champion division. All contestants must use the microphone provided. No sheet music is allowed on stage and there is no "trick" or "fancy fiddling", nor can there be any
cross tuning on stage. Anyone may enter the contest. ==Judging==