FIDE
The Fédération Internationale des Échecs (FIDE; French for "International Chess Federation") is the principal governing body for international chess competition.[1] Established on 20 July 1924 in Paris, France, at the conclusion of the inaugural unofficial Chess Olympiad, FIDE was formed by representatives from 15 nations including Argentina, Belgium, Britain, Hungary, and the Netherlands to promote standardized rules and organize global events.[2][3] Its motto, Gens una sumus ("We are one family" in Latin), underscores a commitment to unity in the chess community.[1] Headquartered in Lausanne, Switzerland, since 2019 after relocating from Athens, Greece, FIDE administers a network of over 200 national member federations, maintains the official player ratings via the Elo system, and awards prestigious titles such as International Grandmaster.[4][5] The organization sanctions key tournaments, including the biennial Chess Olympiad—chess's most prestigious team event—and the World Chess Championship cycle, which determines the classical world champion through matches or tournaments.[6][7] FIDE's efforts have expanded chess's reach, culminating in recognition by the International Olympic Committee in 1999 as an official sports federation, though it has encountered governance challenges, including disputes over championship formats that prompted rival organizations like the Professional Chess Association in the 1990s.[8]Organizational Structure
Role and Objectives
The Fédération Internationale des Échecs (FIDE), also known as the International Chess Federation or World Chess Federation, functions as the global governing body for chess, regulating all international competitions and serving as the representative organization for national chess federations.[1] Established as a non-governmental, non-profit association, FIDE unites over 190 member federations and oversees the standardization of chess rules, the administration of player ratings via the Elo system, and the awarding of titles such as Grandmaster and International Master. Its regulatory authority extends to enforcing ethical standards and resolving disputes to maintain the integrity of the game.[1] FIDE's core objectives, as defined in its statutes, encompass promoting chess development worldwide, organizing and supporting major events including the World Chess Championship cycles and Chess Olympiads, and fostering participation across all nations regardless of political or economic status.[9] The organization aims to elevate chess as a competitive sport, encourage youth involvement, and facilitate knowledge exchange through training and resources, while ensuring equitable access and anti-discrimination policies in line with its non-profit mission.[10] These goals support FIDE's broader role in preserving chess's competitive framework and expanding its global footprint, with initiatives like regional development programs addressing disparities in chess infrastructure.[1]Governance and Decision-Making
The supreme governing body of FIDE is the General Assembly, which holds legislative and executive authority over all major decisions, including elections, budget approvals, charter amendments, and no-confidence votes against the President.[11][12] Composed of one voting delegate from each of its approximately 195 member federations, along with non-voting participants such as Executive Board members and commission chairs, the General Assembly convenes at least annually, typically during or near major events like the Chess Olympiad.[1][13] Decisions require a simple majority unless otherwise specified, such as a two-thirds majority for charter changes or no-confidence motions, which can be initiated by at least 65 federations or seven Council members.[11][14] The General Assembly elects the FIDE President and other key officials every four years via secret ballot, with candidates required to meet eligibility criteria verified by the Electoral Commission.[15][16] The President, limited to a maximum of two terms under the 2020 Charter, serves as the chief representative, overseeing external relations, day-to-day management, and contract execution subject to Council or Assembly approval.[11][12] The Assembly also appoints members to various standing commissions, such as the Ethics and Disciplinary Commission and the Constitutional Commission, which handle specialized oversight and dispute resolution.[17] Between General Assembly sessions, strategic and executive decision-making is delegated to the FIDE Council, a body of 15 members introduced in the 2020 Charter to replace the former Presidential Board for greater independence and efficiency.[11] More than half of the Council's members are elected directly by the General Assembly via secret ballot, independent of the President's slate, enabling it to exercise law-making powers, strategic oversight, and approval of major policies.[11][12] The Council complements the President's operational role and can convene to address urgent matters, ensuring continuity in governance. Operational implementation falls to the Executive Board, functioning as the Management Board, which executes decisions from the General Assembly, Council, and President on administrative and financial matters.[11] This includes managing FIDE's headquarters in Lausanne, Switzerland, and coordinating with continental associations for regional decisions.[18] All bodies adhere to quorum requirements—typically 50% of members—and decisions are binding unless overturned by higher authority, promoting a hierarchical yet federated structure that balances global oversight with national federation input.[12]Membership and Regions
FIDE membership comprises national chess federations from sovereign states, dependent territories, and certain international entities, with each federation representing a distinct geopolitical unit. Admission requires approval by the FIDE General Assembly following an application that demonstrates compliance with FIDE statutes, including promotion of chess development and payment of annual dues calculated based on the federation's zone and prior-year federation transfers. As of 2025, FIDE recognizes 201 such member federations, spanning nearly every United Nations member state plus additional non-sovereign participants like Aruba and the British Virgin Islands.[1][19] Member federations hold voting rights in the General Assembly, weighted by zone representation to balance global influence, and are responsible for organizing national championships, submitting player ratings, and enforcing FIDE laws of chess within their jurisdictions. Dues non-payment can lead to suspension of voting rights or full membership status, as occurred with several federations in the early 2020s amid financial strains from the COVID-19 pandemic, though most were reinstated by 2023 after arrears clearance. Affiliated organizations, distinct from full members, include entities like Kosova Chess Federation, which participate in congresses without voting privileges.[20] For administrative, electoral, and competitive purposes, FIDE divides its members into four continental zones: Europe, the Americas, Africa, and Asia (encompassing Oceania). This structure, outlined in FIDE's constitutional framework, ensures proportional representation in bodies like the Presidential Board, where each zone elects a representative and allocates delegates to the General Assembly based on federation count—Europe typically holding the largest bloc with over 60 members.[21][22] Each zone operates through a continental confederation: the European Chess Union (ECU) for Europe, Pan-American Chess Confederation (CCA) for the Americas, African Chess Confederation (ACC) for Africa, and Asian Chess Federation (ACF) for Asia and Oceania. These bodies coordinate regional qualifiers for world championships, host continental events such as the annual Continental Chess Championships, and address zone-specific development initiatives, like anti-corruption measures in Africa or infrastructure growth in Oceania. The zonal system also governs qualification paths for titles and tournaments, with intra-zone competitions determining spots in global cycles.[1]Competitions and Ratings
World Championship Cycles
The FIDE World Championship cycle organizes the qualification process for challenging the reigning World Chess Champion, culminating in a title match held biennially in even-numbered years since 2014. This two-year structure replaced earlier three-year cycles and knockout formats, aiming to balance merit-based qualification with competitive depth. Qualifying paths emphasize high-stakes events like the FIDE World Cup—a single-elimination knockout tournament with 128 or more players—and the FIDE Circuit, which aggregates points from elite open tournaments based on performance ratings and norms.[23][24] The Candidates Tournament, featuring eight players in a double round-robin format over 14 rounds, determines the challenger. Participants qualify via: the winner of the FIDE World Cup (held in odd years, such as the 2025 edition in Goa, India, from October 31 to November 27); the top two finishers from the FIDE Circuit of the preceding year; the runner-up from the prior World Championship match; and, if necessary, the highest-rated player or FIDE president's nominee to fill vacancies, ensuring a field of elite competitors typically rated above 2700 Elo. Time controls are 120 minutes for 40 moves, followed by 60 minutes for 20 moves and 15 minutes thereafter, with a 30-second increment from move 61; ties are resolved by rapid, blitz, and armageddon games. The tournament awards the challenger while distributing a prize fund, such as the €500,000 offered in recent editions.[23][25] The World Championship Match follows in the same even year, consisting of 14 classical games between the champion and Candidates winner. The first player to reach 7.5 points secures victory, with no further games if achieved early; ties proceed to four rapid games (25 minutes plus 10-second increment), two blitz games (5 minutes plus 3-second increment), and armageddon if needed. Matches feature substantial prize funds, split 60-40 between winner and loser, such as the €2 million in the 2024 edition between Ding Liren and D. Gukesh Dommaraju, held in Singapore from November 25 to December 12. Controls mirror the Candidates, emphasizing strategic depth over speed.[26][23] Historically, FIDE's cycles evolved from multi-stage zonal-interzonal-Candidates processes in the 1948–1993 era, involving regional qualifiers feeding into interzonals every three years, to post-1993 experiments with annual knockouts during the title schism. Reunification in 2006 restored matchplay, with the biennial cycle stabilizing participation and reducing fatigue, though debates persist on format equity, as evidenced by champion abstentions like Magnus Carlsen's 2023 decline. Recent proposals, including a 2027 "Combined World Champion" integrating classical, rapid, and blitz disciplines, signal potential shifts but do not alter the 2025–2026 cycle.[27][28]Other Major Tournaments
FIDE organizes the Chess Olympiad as its flagship team event, held every two years since 1950 in its current biennial format, with national teams competing in open and women's sections using a round-robin format among teams and individual board matches.[29] The event originated in 1927 but has been under FIDE's direct auspices since the organization's early years, drawing over 190 teams in recent editions like the 45th Olympiad in Budapest in 2024, where Uzbekistan defended its open title and Georgia won the women's section.[29] It emphasizes collective national performance over individual play, awarding team medals and individual board prizes based on performance ratings.[29] The FIDE World Cup, a knockout tournament introduced in 2005, occurs biennially and features 206 players in a single-elimination format with mini-matches, serving as a high-stakes qualifier for the Candidates Tournament while standing as a major standalone event.[30] Early editions were annual until 2011, after which the schedule aligned with the World Championship cycle; the 2023 edition in Baku saw Praggnanandhaa Rameshbabu reach the final, losing to Ding Liren.[30] A parallel Women's World Cup follows a similar structure, held in even-numbered years outside Olympiad scheduling.[7] FIDE also sanctions annual World Rapid and World Blitz Championships, separate events crowning specialists in faster time controls, with the rapid format using 15-minute games plus increments and blitz at 3 minutes.[7] These began in their modern form in 2012, attracting top grandmasters; Magnus Carlsen has dominated recent rapid titles, winning in 2023 with a score of 10.5/13.[7] Additional significant FIDE events include the World Junior Championship for under-20 players and senior championships, but the Olympiad, World Cup, and speed events form the core of FIDE's non-cycle majors.[31]Titles, Ratings, and Rules
FIDE awards international chess titles based on players' performances in rated tournaments, requiring a combination of norms—specific score thresholds against rated opponents—and minimum published ratings. The primary open titles are Grandmaster (GM), requiring a 2500 rating and three norms of at least 2600 performance; International Master (IM), with a 2400 rating and norms of 2450 performance; FIDE Master (FM), 2300 rating and 2300 norms; and Candidate Master (CM), awarded directly at 2200 rating without norms. Women's titles mirror these with lower thresholds: Woman Grandmaster (WGM) at 2300 rating and 2400 norms, Woman International Master (WIM) at 2200 and 2250 norms, Woman FIDE Master (WFM) at 2100 and 2100 norms, and Woman Candidate Master (WCM) directly at 2000. Titles are lifelong once achieved, though norms must include games against opponents averaging at least 2380 for open titles, with restrictions on results against lower-rated players; applications are reviewed quarterly by the Qualification Commission.[32] Direct titles are granted without norms for players reaching exceptional ratings, such as 2500 for juniors under 14 or 2400 under 12 in open categories, effective from 1 January 2024, with adjustments for women's equivalents. Additional titles exist for organizers, arbiters, and trainers, but player titles emphasize over-the-board standard chess under FIDE Laws.[32][33] The FIDE rating system, adapted from Arpad Elo's model, assigns numerical values updated monthly based on game outcomes relative to expected scores, using the formula where rating change equals K-factor times (actual score minus expected score), with K varying by player experience (e.g., 40 for established players above 2400, higher for juniors or unrated starters). Ratings are calculated separately for standard (longer time controls), rapid, and blitz, with initial ratings starting at 1000 for unrated players or provisional based on early results; tournaments must be pre-registered and adhere to FIDE standards for inclusion. The system caps rating differences at 400 points for calculation purposes below 2650 to prevent inflation from mismatches, and ratings are published on the first day of each month.[34][35][36] FIDE enforces the Laws of Chess, codified in the FIDE Handbook and effective from 1 January 2023, which define gameplay fundamentals including piece movements, castling, en passant, promotion, the 50-move rule for draws (now 75 moves without capture or pawn move), threefold repetition, and stalemate. Persistent violations result in penalties up to game loss, with arbiters resolving disputes; the laws distinguish rapid (10-60 minutes per player) and blitz (under 10 minutes) variants with adjusted draw claims and touch-move enforcement. Online chess follows separate regulations for transmission via internet, but standard rules prioritize physical boards for title and rating eligibility.[37][38]Historical Development
Foundation and Pre-WWII Era (1924–1945)
The Fédération Internationale des Échecs (FIDE), the international governing body for chess, was established on 20 July 1924 during its inaugural congress in Paris, coinciding with the closing of an unofficial international team tournament held alongside the 1924 Summer Olympics.[39] The initiative was led by Pierre Vincent, general secretary of the French Chess Federation, with initial member federations including those from Argentina, Belgium, Britain, Hungary, Spain, and others, totaling around 15 countries at the outset.[6] Dutch lawyer and diplomat Alexander Rueb was elected as the first president, a position he held from 1924 until 1949, guiding the organization through its formative years.[40] FIDE's early statutes emphasized promoting chess globally, standardizing rules, and organizing international events, though its authority over world championships remained limited initially.[41] In its initial decade, FIDE focused on fostering international competition through the Chess Olympiads, beginning with the first official edition in London in 1927, which featured 16 national teams competing in a round-robin format.[42] Hungary emerged victorious, scoring 36 game points, followed by Denmark and England. Subsequent Olympiads followed biennially: The Hague in 1928 (Hungary repeated as champions), Hamburg in 1930 (Poland won), Prague in 1931 (United States took first), Folkestone in 1933 (United States defended), Moscow in 1935 (United States again prevailed amid growing Soviet participation), and Bad Oeynhausen in 1937 (Germany hosted and won on home soil).[41] These events expanded FIDE's membership and visibility, with participation growing from 16 to over 20 teams by the late 1930s, though logistical and financial challenges persisted. FIDE also recognized José Raúl Capablanca as the official world champion in 1925, but efforts to regulate title matches, such as proposing candidates tournaments, faced resistance from reigning champion Alexander Alekhine, who defended his title independently against Efim Bogoljubov in 1929 and 1934.[41] The outbreak of World War II disrupted FIDE's operations profoundly. The 1939 Chess Olympiad in Buenos Aires, intended as a major event, was interrupted on 1 September 1939 when Germany invaded Poland, leading to the withdrawal of several European teams and the tournament's incomplete status, with Germany declared winners among remaining participants.[43] FIDE's congress that year in Buenos Aires addressed the crisis, transferring headquarters temporarily to Argentina for safety, but activities ceased as war engulfed Europe.[44] President Rueb maintained informal correspondence with members from neutral locations like Switzerland, preserving organizational continuity, though no formal events or elections occurred until postwar reconstruction. Assets were safeguarded in Switzerland to avoid confiscation, reflecting adaptive measures amid global conflict.[45] By 1945, with the war's end, FIDE's framework endured, setting the stage for revival despite membership attrition and geopolitical shifts.[41]Postwar Expansion and Cold War Challenges (1946–1993)
Following World War II, FIDE reconvened its first postwar congress in Winterthur, Switzerland, from July 25 to 27, 1946, with nine participating federations excluding the Soviet Union and Spain due to political considerations related to the Spanish Civil War and World War II alignments.[41] The assembly, under President Alexander Rueb, focused on restoring organizational structures and establishing a new world championship system to fill the vacancy left by Alexander Alekhine's death in 1946, initially planning a match between reigning champion Max Euwe and challenger Mikhail Botvinnik before opting for a five-player tournament.[46] The Soviet Union formally joined FIDE at the 1947 congress in The Hague, exerting immediate influence by advocating for the inclusion of additional Soviet players in the championship cycle and objecting to participants like Miguel Najdorf on ideological grounds.[41][47] In 1949, Swedish lawyer Folke Rogard was elected FIDE president, succeeding Rueb, and served until 1970, leveraging Sweden's neutrality to navigate East-West tensions and expand the federation's global footprint.[48] Rogard's tenure saw membership grow from 23 federations at the 1948 Saltsjöbaden congress—where Spain was readmitted after postwar exclusion—to broader inclusion of emerging nations, including China's admission in 1966 following its 1960 withdrawal amid the Cultural Revolution.[41][48] This expansion accelerated in the 1970s under President Max Euwe (1970–1978), who prioritized recruiting from decolonizing regions in Asia, Africa, and Latin America, increasing the number of member countries from around 50 in the early 1950s to over 80 by the late 1970s, reflecting chess's appeal as a low-cost, ideologically flexible pursuit amid geopolitical shifts. By the 1980s, under Florencio Campomanes (elected 1982), membership approached 120, with non-European federations gaining voting influence that challenged traditional European dominance.[49] FIDE formalized the world championship cycle in the postwar era, culminating in the 1948 tournament across The Hague and Moscow, where Botvinnik emerged victorious with 14/25 points, initiating a quarter-century of Soviet champions (Botvinnik, Vasily Smyslov, Mikhail Tal, Tigran Petrosian, Boris Spassky) sustained by state-funded training programs.[46] The federation introduced Candidates Tournaments starting in 1950 in Budapest, where seven of ten participants were Soviet, raising accusations of collusion to block non-Soviet contenders like Bobby Fischer, who in 1962 publicly alleged rigged draws among USSR players to control matchups.[46] FIDE responded by adjusting rules, such as limiting national representation in later cycles, but Soviet influence persisted, with championships often hosted in Moscow until Fischer's 1972 victory over Spassky in Reykjavik, Iceland—a neutral venue selected to mitigate Cold War boycotts.[50] Cold War ideological pressures manifested in defections and match disruptions, notably Viktor Korchnoi's 1976 asylum in the Netherlands, prompting the Soviet Chess Federation to boycott him and pressure FIDE to bar his participation.[51] The 1978 World Championship in Baguio, Philippines, between Anatoly Karpov and Korchnoi devolved into farce, with Soviet demands for adjournments, complaints over yogurt deliveries suspected of tampering, and the presence of a Soviet parapsychologist allegedly to hypnotize Korchnoi, leading to arbitration disputes and threats of walkouts.[50] Similar controversies plagued the 1981 Merano match, where Korchnoi forfeited a game over lighting issues, underscoring FIDE's struggles to enforce neutrality amid state interventions.[52] By the late 1980s, Garry Kasparov's rise and criticisms of FIDE's handling of cycles foreshadowed the 1993 schism, as growing third-world membership diluted Western leverage and amplified debates over match formats and sanctions.[53] Despite these strains, FIDE maintained operational continuity, introducing the Elo rating system in 1970 to standardize player assessments amid expanding participation.[54]Division and Reunification (1993–2006)
In 1993, tensions between reigning World Chess Champion Garry Kasparov and FIDE escalated over the organization's control of the world championship match against challenger Nigel Short, including disputes on venue selection, prize fund distribution, and match format changes favoring FIDE's authority.[55] Kasparov and Short announced their withdrawal from FIDE in February 1993, forming the Professional Chess Association (PCA) to independently organize and sponsor their title match, which Kasparov won 12.5–7.5 in London from September to November.[56] FIDE responded by stripping Kasparov of his title, declaring the PCA match illegitimate, and proceeding with its own championship cycle, where Anatoly Karpov defeated Jan Timman 12.5–8.5 in November 1993 to claim the FIDE World Championship.[57] The schism created parallel world titles: the "Classical" line under PCA (later continued by the World Chess Council and Professional Chess Association remnants), with Kasparov retaining the title until losing to Vladimir Kramnik 8.5–6.5 in 2000; and the FIDE line, featuring Karpov (1993–1999), Alexander Khalifman (1999–2000 after knockout format introduction), Viswanathan Anand (2000–2002), Ruslan Ponomariov (2002–2004), Rustam Kasimdzhanov (2004–2005), and Veselin Topalov (2005–2006).[57] FIDE shifted to a knockout system for its championships starting in 1997 to reduce costs and increase participation, crowning six champions in rapid succession, while the Classical title emphasized long matches among elite players.[58] This division fragmented the chess world, with top players split in allegiance; Kasparov criticized FIDE's leadership under President Florencio Campomanes (until 1995) and successor Kirsan Ilyumzhinov for prioritizing political influence over competitive integrity.[59] Reunification efforts gained momentum after Ilyumzhinov's 1995 election, amid pressure from sponsors and players for a single champion. Preliminary agreements in 2002 between FIDE and the Classical title holders aimed to merge cycles, but disputes delayed progress until a 2004 pact committed to a unification match.[60] The process culminated in the 2006 World Chess Championship in Elista, Kalmykia, where Kramnik faced Topalov in a 14-game match tied at 6–6, with Kramnik winning the rapid tiebreaks 2.5–1.5 to become the undivided champion and end the 13-year split.[57] FIDE integrated the Classical title into its framework thereafter, though Kasparov, who retired in 2005 without rejoining, viewed the outcome as partial vindication of merit-based challenges over FIDE's format.[59]Globalization and Institutional Reforms (2006–Present)
Following the reunification of FIDE in 2006, the organization pursued aggressive globalization efforts, expanding its footprint into emerging markets in Asia, Africa, and Latin America through targeted development programs and hosting major events in non-traditional venues. Membership grew from approximately 156 federations in 2006 to 195 by 2024, reflecting recruitment drives in developing regions where chess participation surged due to subsidized training and infrastructure support.[61][7] This era saw World Championship cycles and Olympiads rotated to countries like India (2013 Candidates) and Georgia (2018 Olympiad), aiming to democratize access and foster grassroots growth amid criticisms of uneven resource allocation favoring established powers.[62] Under President Kirsan Ilyumzhinov (reelected in 2006 and 2010), institutional governance faced scrutiny for opacity and alleged mismanagement, including delayed financial reporting and unverified claims of IOC recognition progress, though FIDE maintained operational continuity with initiatives like the FIDE Online Arena launched in 2016 to broaden digital participation.[63] The 2018 presidential election marked a pivotal shift, with Arkady Dvorkovich defeating incumbent Ilyumzhinov by 103 votes to 78, campaigning on promises of enhanced transparency, anti-corruption measures, and streamlined administration to align with international standards.[64] Dvorkovich's tenure introduced structural overhauls, including the establishment of independent commissions for ethics, ratings, and development to mitigate past conflicts of interest.[65] A cornerstone reform was the adoption of the new FIDE Charter on March 1, 2020, replacing outdated statutes to modernize governance and enhance democratic oversight. Key provisions included substituting the Presidential Board with a 15-member FIDE Council—over half elected independently via secret ballot—for strategic decision-making; clarifying the president's role in external representation and daily operations while imposing a two-term limit; and empowering the General Assembly with veto powers via a two-thirds no-confidence vote requiring support from at least 65 federations or seven council members.[11] This update, approved by 112 votes with minimal opposition, addressed inefficiencies and aligned FIDE closer to IOC-compliant models, though subsequent 2023 amendments controversially removed presidential term limits to allow Dvorkovich's potential reelection.[66] Complementary changes encompassed rating system adjustments, such as 2024 deflation corrections adding points to over 350,000 players and 2025 circuit regulations prioritizing high-quality tournaments.[67][68] Globalization accelerated post-2020 with digital and educational initiatives, including the FIDE Academy's online courses reaching thousands in underserved areas and partnerships for chess-in-schools programs projected to culminate in the 2026 Year of Chess in Education.[69] Enhanced development funding announced in March 2025 allocated resources via the Planning and Development Commission to low-rated federations, emphasizing infrastructure in Africa and Asia to counter rating deflation and promote equitable growth.[70] These reforms, while advancing institutional professionalism, have coexisted with ongoing debates over enforcement consistency, as evidenced by persistent cheating scandals and geopolitical neutral stances amid sanctions.[71]Leadership
Presidents and Elections
The presidency of FIDE is determined through elections conducted at the organization's General Assembly, where delegates from member national federations cast votes, typically every four years in conjunction with the Chess Olympiad.[15] Candidates often run on tickets including proposed deputy presidents and other officials, with voting conducted by secret ballot among accredited representatives.[72] FIDE's first president was Alexander Rueb of the Netherlands, who served from the organization's founding on July 20, 1924, until 1949 without a formal election process in the initial years.[73] He was succeeded by Folke Rogard of Sweden, elected in 1949 and serving until 1970.[73] Max Euwe, also from the Netherlands and a former world chess champion, was elected president in 1970 and held the office until losing re-election in 1978.[73] Fridrik Ólafsson of Iceland won the 1978 election against Euwe and served until 1982.[73] Florencio Campomanes of the Philippines then prevailed in the 1982 election and was re-elected in 1986 against challengers including Lincoln Lucena and Raymond Keene, remaining in office until 1995.[73][74] Kirsan Ilyumzhinov of Russia (Kalmykia) was elected in 1995 and secured re-elections in 1998, 2002, 2006, 2010, and 2014, holding the position until 2018 amid growing international scrutiny over his leadership.[75] In the 2018 election held in Batumi, Georgia, on October 3, Arkady Dvorkovich of Russia defeated Georgios Makropoulos of Greece with 103 votes to 78 after British candidate Nigel Short withdrew his candidacy, assuming office on October 4, 2018.[72] Dvorkovich was re-elected without opposition in Chennai, India, on August 7, 2022, receiving 157 votes and serving a second term.[76] In December 2023, FIDE's General Assembly voted to eliminate presidential term limits, enabling Dvorkovich's potential candidacy in the next election scheduled for 2026.[66]| President | Country | Term | Notable Election Details |
|---|---|---|---|
| Alexander Rueb | Netherlands | 1924–1949 | Founding president; no election.[73] |
| Folke Rogard | Sweden | 1949–1970 | Elected 1949.[73] |
| Max Euwe | Netherlands | 1970–1978 | Elected 1970; lost re-election 1978.[73] |
| Fridrik Ólafsson | Iceland | 1978–1982 | Elected 1978 over Euwe.[73] |
| Florencio Campomanes | Philippines | 1982–1995 | Elected 1982; re-elected 1986 over Lucena/Keene ticket.[73][74] |
| Kirsan Ilyumzhinov | Russia | 1995–2018 | Elected 1995; re-elected 1998, 2002, 2006, 2010, 2014.[75] |
| Arkady Dvorkovich | Russia | 2018–present | Elected 2018 (103-78 over Makropoulos); re-elected 2022 (157 votes, unopposed).[72][76] |