PDC Order of Merit
The PDC Order of Merit, officially known as the Werner Rankings Ladder, is the primary world ranking system used by the Professional Darts Corporation (PDC) to rank professional darts players based on their total prize money earnings over a rolling two-year (104-week) period in designated ranking tournaments.[1] This system determines player eligibility, seeding, and invitations for major PDC events, ensuring that rankings reflect recent performance in high-stakes competitions.[2] The main PDC Order of Merit aggregates earnings from two key categories of events: Premier Events, which include flagship tournaments like the PDC World Darts Championship, World Matchplay, World Grand Prix, and UK Open; and ProTour Events, comprising Players Championship series and European Tour events.[2] Prize money from these events contributes to a player's ranking until the 104-week cutoff, after which it is removed, promoting a dynamic system that rewards consistent success over time.[2] In addition to the main list, the PDC maintains specialized Orders of Merit, such as the ProTour Order of Merit (covering 52 weeks of ProTour earnings) and separate rankings for secondary tours like the Development Tour, Challenge Tour, and Women's Series, each tailored to specific qualification criteria.[2] These rankings play a crucial role in the PDC ecosystem by allocating Tour Cards—professional licenses granted to the top 64 players on the main Order of Merit at the end of each season—and seeding participants in televised majors, such as the top 32 for the World Darts Championship or the top 16 for the World Matchplay.[2][1] Established under rules formalized in 2023, the system underscores the PDC's emphasis on merit-based progression, with updates published regularly on the official PDC website to reflect ongoing tournament results.[2]Current System
Methodology
The PDC Order of Merit serves as the official world ranking system for professional darts players affiliated with the Professional Darts Corporation (PDC), determining player standings based on the total prize money earned in qualifying ranking events.[3] This system is used to allocate seedings, qualifications, and invitations for major PDC tournaments, ensuring that rankings reflect recent performance in high-stakes competitions.[2] To be eligible for inclusion in the PDC Order of Merit, players must hold membership in the Professional Darts Players Association (PDPA), categorized as Full Members (those with a PDC Tour Card or qualifying for specific events), Associate Members (non-Tour Card holders, such as Q-School participants), European Tour Members (who pay a supplement for European Tour access), or Secondary Tour Members (for events like the Development Tour after completing five events in a year).[3] Non-members who qualify for a PDC event must join the PDPA prior to participation to have their prize money counted toward the rankings.[2] The rankings are calculated using the cumulative prize money won in British pounds (£) from Premier Ranked Events (such as the World Darts Championship and World Matchplay) and ProTour Events (including Players Championships and European Tour events), accumulated over a rolling 104-week period.[3] No single Premier Event can contribute to the rankings more than three times; if a fourth instance falls within the period, the prize money from the earliest occurrence is removed to maintain the limit.[2] Prize money is added to a player's total immediately following the conclusion of each event and is retained for exactly 104 weeks from the date earned, after which it is automatically dropped from the calculation.[3] Rankings are updated and published on the official PDC website following the completion of each ranking event, providing a dynamic reflection of player standings.[2] For the 2025 season, players ranked in the top 64 of the PDC Order of Merit are prohibited from entering Development Tour and Women's Series events, a rule introduced to prioritize elite-level competition and reserve lower-tier opportunities for emerging talent.[4] Cut-off dates for major events in 2025 are set to determine final rankings and seedings, such as January 13 for the World Masters (qualifying the top 24 players from the Order of Merit, with the top 16 seeded, plus eight qualifiers from preliminary rounds) and February 19 for the UK Open (seeding Tour Card holders by their Order of Merit position).[3] These dates ensure that only the most recent performances within the rolling period influence qualification.[3]Ranking Tournaments
The PDC Order of Merit is primarily accumulated through prize money earned in designated ranking tournaments, which are divided into Premier Events and ProTour Events. These events provide the core opportunities for players to earn points that determine their world rankings over a two-year rolling period. Non-ranking events, such as the Premier League Darts, World Cup of Darts, and exhibitions, do not contribute to the Order of Merit.[2] Premier Events consist of seven major televised tournaments that form the pinnacle of the PDC calendar and offer substantial prize money with high prestige. These include the PDC World Darts Championship, World Matchplay, World Grand Prix, UK Open, European Championship, Players Championship Finals, and Grand Slam of Darts. Each event features unique formats to heighten competition: for instance, the World Darts Championship employs a single-elimination draw from the last 32, while the Grand Slam of Darts incorporates group stages followed by knockouts to allow for multiple matches among top seeds. The UK Open stands out with its open qualification format, enabling lower-ranked players to enter and potentially earn significant ranking points through progressive stages. These majors not only award the largest prize pots but also serve as key qualifiers for other events based on Order of Merit positions.[5][6] ProTour Events encompass the regular professional circuit, providing consistent opportunities for Tour Card holders to accumulate ranking points throughout the year. In 2025, this includes 34 Players Championship events, held primarily as floor tournaments in the United Kingdom with 128-player fields and single-elimination formats over two days, and 14 European Tour events, which are three-day televised tournaments across Europe featuring 48-player fields with seeded draws. These weekly and bi-weekly ProTour stops allow players to build earnings steadily, with deeper runs offering escalating prize money that directly impacts long-term rankings. Overlaps in scheduling are minimal, ensuring broad participation, though top players often prioritize them for qualification pathways to Premier Events.[7][8] A notable development in 2025 is the expansion of the PDC Asian Tour to 28 events, which operates as a separate Order of Merit based on prize money from regional tournaments in Asia. While not directly contributing to the main PDC Order of Merit, it links to the primary system by qualifying top performers for major events like the World Darts Championship and World Cup of Darts, thereby integrating Asian talent into the global rankings pathway. This structure emphasizes the role of ranking tournaments in fostering competitive depth across the PDC ecosystem.[9]Prize Money Retention and Calculation
The PDC Order of Merit operates on a rolling two-year retention period for prize money, precisely 104 weeks from the date it is earned in qualifying ranking events. This automated system ensures that earnings are dropped off exactly 104 weeks later, maintaining a dynamic total that reflects recent performance while accounting for the full eligibility window. All prize money is denominated in British pounds (GBP) and contributes equally to a player's ranking total, regardless of the event type, with no artificial weighting applied between Premier events and ProTour events. However, Premier events typically offer substantially higher prize funds, incentivizing top performances in major tournaments; for instance, the winner of the 2025 PDC World Darts Championship received £500,000.[2] A player's ranking position is determined by sorting the total retained prize money from all qualifying Premier and ProTour events in descending order, where the highest cumulative amount secures the top spot. In cases of ties, the PDC employs a countback system based on performances in the previous four eligible events to resolve positions; if still unresolved, the higher existing ranking on the main Order of Merit is used, or a play-off may be arranged. This formula emphasizes consistent earnings over the retention period, as £1 in prize money equates to one ranking point. Withdrawals from events can impact eligibility, with penalties including fines ranging from £500 to £3,000 per offense depending on the event and repetition, potentially leading to suspensions or withheld prize money if investigated by the Darts Regulation Authority (DRA).[2][2] Drop-offs occur automatically at the end of each 104-week cycle, which can significantly affect rankings, particularly during cut-off weeks aligned with major tournaments. For example, a hypothetical player who earned £10,000 in a Players Championship event in early 2023 would see that amount removed from their total in early 2025, potentially dropping their ranking by several positions if not offset by new earnings—such as needing to replicate or exceed that performance in 2025 events to maintain status. This rolling mechanism ensures the Order of Merit remains responsive to current form, with players outside the top 64 or those losing Tour Cards resetting to £0 after Q School.[2][5] For the 2025 season, the core retention and calculation rules remain unchanged, preserving the 104-week rolling total and GBP-based sorting. However, updates to penalty clauses were implemented, including revisions to section 3.7 on February 12, 2025, which refined withdrawal replacement procedures and fine escalations to better enforce participation standards without altering the fundamental earnings retention. These adjustments aim to minimize disruptions while upholding the integrity of the ranking system.[4][2]Secondary Orders of Merit
ProTour Order of Merit
The ProTour Order of Merit is a specialized ranking system within the PDC that evaluates professional darts players based exclusively on their performances in non-televised ProTour events, providing a measure of form over a single calendar year to facilitate fair qualification and seeding opportunities. This order emphasizes consistent achievement in the core professional tour, separate from high-profile Premier events, and serves as a key tool for accessing major tournaments and maintaining Tour Card status.[10] Prize money earned in Players Championship and European Tour events is aggregated over a rolling 52-week period, with the ranking updated continuously after each tournament concludes. This contrasts with the main PDC Order of Merit, which employs a two-year (104-week) retention window and incorporates earnings from all ranking events, including Premier tournaments; by limiting inclusion to ProTour performances only, the system rewards sustained excellence in the regular professional circuit without the influence of sporadic major successes.[2] In 2025, the ProTour schedule comprised 34 Players Championship events—non-televised, open-field tournaments held throughout the year—and 14 European Tour events, which are ranked ProTour outings hosted across various European locations with fields determined by Order of Merit positions. These events offered players multiple chances to build their rankings, with the overall ProTour Order effectively resetting annually as the 52-week window aligns with calendar-year cut-offs for key qualifications, dropping prior-year earnings at the start of the new season.[11][12] The primary purpose of the ProTour Order of Merit is to determine additional qualification spots and seeding for major PDC events, particularly benefiting mid-tier Tour Card holders by filling slots not covered by the main Order of Merit. For instance, the top 40 players on the ProTour Order who are outside the top 40 of the main Order qualify for the World Darts Championship, while the top 16 provide qualifiers for the World Matchplay and World Grand Prix beyond the main Order's seeded places. Similarly, the top 64 secure entry to the UK Open, ensuring broad representation from the professional tour. Within ProTour events themselves, the top 16 on this order receive seeding advantages, such as byes to the second round. Additionally, strong rankings here contribute to Tour Card protections, as performances influence entry orders and byes in the annual Q School, where the prior year's ProTour Order of Merit ranks players for additional final-stage spots.[2][13][14]Development Tour and Challenge Tour Orders of Merit
The PDC Development Tour serves as an entry-level competitive pathway primarily for players aged 16 to 23 (as of January 4 of the season), including those without a PDC Tour Card, providing opportunities for young talent to gain professional experience and accumulate ranking points. In 2025, the tour consisted of 24 events held over multiple weekends, with prize money awarded at each tournament contributing directly to the Development Tour Order of Merit on an annual basis.[15] However, a key restriction introduced for 2025 prohibited players ranked in the top 64 of the main PDC Order of Merit from participating, ensuring that opportunities are directed toward newcomers and lower-ranked professionals without diluting the field for emerging players.[16] The Order of Merit for the Development Tour is calculated solely from prize money earned in these events, resetting at the start of each year to reflect current performance.[17] This ranking system determines seeding and entry privileges, such as seeded positions in Qualifying School (Q-School) events, allowing top performers to compete for additional Tour Card opportunities beyond the direct awards.[18] At the conclusion of the 2025 season, the top two players on the final Development Tour Order of Merit—who have not otherwise qualified for a Tour Card—earn a two-year PDC Tour Card for the following seasons, granting access to ProTour events and major qualifiers.[18] For example, Cam Crabtree and Beau Greaves secured these Tour Cards after topping the 2025 rankings with £17,775 and £15,250 in prize money, respectively. In parallel, the PDC Challenge Tour functions as a second-tier series for players of any age who participated in the annual Q-School but failed to obtain a Tour Card, offering a secondary qualification route often described as a "second-chance" pathway for aspiring professionals.[19] Like the Development Tour, it featured 24 events in 2025, with rankings based exclusively on prize money from Challenge Tour tournaments, which reset annually to prioritize recent achievements.[20] Eligibility is limited to non-Tour Card holders, naturally excluding those in the main Order of Merit's top 64, and the system supports entries into Q-School and other minor qualifiers based on ranking position.[21] The Challenge Tour Order of Merit similarly culminates in direct Tour Card awards, with the top two finishers at year-end—who have not already secured a card—receiving a two-year PDC Tour Card to elevate their professional status. This process integrates with the broader Tour Card distribution framework, where these awards complement the 29 cards available through Q-School finals, ensuring a structured progression from secondary tours to the elite level.[22] In 2025, Stefan Bellmont and Darius Labanauskas claimed these honors, leading the rankings with £11,550 and £10,200 in earnings. Both tours thus play a vital role in talent identification, with their year-end rankings also influencing invitations to high-profile events like the Grand Slam of Darts for the top-ranked player.[23]Regional and Other Orders of Merit
The PDC Asian Tour Order of Merit ranks players based on prize money earned across 28 tournaments in the 2025 season, providing opportunities for top performers from Asia to qualify for major events such as the PDC World Darts Championship and the PDC Asian Championship.[24] Introduced in 2018, this regional circuit emphasizes growth in non-European markets, with each event featuring a $10,000 prize fund and culminating in the identification of leading players for international representation, including seeding for the Asian Championship where the winner secures a World Championship spot.[25] The PDC Nordic & Baltic Order of Merit operates through 12 ProTour events held from February to September 2025, awarding points via prize money to determine regional rankings that facilitate entry into higher-level PDC competitions.[26] Top-ranked players benefit from direct pathways, including the top two qualifying for the World Darts Championship, the top eight receiving free entry to Q-School (with the leader exempt to the final stage), and the top 24 advancing to the annual Nordic & Baltic Championship for the Jann Hoffmann Trophy.[27] Additional qualifiers during tour weekends allow the highest-ranked participants to enter European Tour events, promoting regional talent progression without integration into the primary PDC Order of Merit.[28] The PDC Women's Series Order of Merit, comprising 24 tournaments in 2025, enables female players to accumulate prize money-based rankings that secure invitations to women's-specific PDC events, bypassing the standard top-64 restriction applied to the main Order of Merit.[29] The top two-ranked players qualify for the World Darts Championship, while the leading player earns a spot in the Grand Slam of Darts; furthermore, the top eight from the 12-month rolling rankings advance to the Women's World Matchplay, fostering dedicated opportunities for women in professional darts.[30] These regional and niche Orders of Merit reset annually and indirectly contribute to the PDC ecosystem by identifying qualifiers for Q-School, ProTour events, and international representation, enhancing global inclusivity without altering the core ranking calculations.[2]Historical Development
Origins and First Rankings
The Professional Darts Corporation (PDC), originally founded as the World Darts Council (WDC) in January 1992, emerged from a schism in professional darts when 16 leading players, including former BDO World Champions like Eric Bristow, John Lowe, and Phil Taylor, broke away from the British Darts Organisation (BDO) to create a more commercially viable alternative circuit. This split was driven by dissatisfaction with the BDO's governance and limited television exposure, leading to the establishment of independent events that formed the basis for the WDC's initial invitational seedings and rankings system. The WDC aimed to professionalize the sport through higher prize money and global broadcasting, setting the stage for a formalized ranking structure separate from the BDO's traditional setup.[31] The first official WDC Order of Merit rankings debuted in 1993, comprising 16 players selected primarily from the founding group and early event participants, with Alan Warriner-Little topping the list as the inaugural World No. 1 from January 1993 until November 1994. These rankings were determined by a straightforward accumulation of prize money earned in WDC-sanctioned tournaments, such as the early invitational events held in 1992 and 1993, without any rolling time limit or decay mechanism in the initial phase. This prize-money-based approach provided a meritocratic foundation, rewarding consistent performance in the nascent circuit's limited schedule of regional and televised matches. Warriner-Little's position reflected his strong showings in these formative competitions, underscoring the system's emphasis on emerging talent alongside established stars.[32][33] A pivotal development came with the 1994 WDC World Darts Championship, the organization's first major ranking event, which featured 24 players in a group-stage format and awarded significant points toward the Order of Merit based on prize money, including £16,000 to winner Dennis Priestley.[34] This tournament solidified the rankings' role in qualifying for high-profile competitions and marked the shift from ad-hoc seedings to a more competitive, performance-driven hierarchy. By the mid-1990s, the rankings had expanded to accommodate 32 players, reflecting the growing field of professional dart players attracted to the WDC's rising profile and financial incentives. Over the ensuing years, this system evolved from its rudimentary prize-money model into a more structured framework by 2000, indirectly pressuring the BDO to refine its own ranking processes in response to the rival organization's success.[31][35]Previous World Ranking Systems
Prior to 2007, the PDC employed a points-based ranking system for seeding players in tournaments, where points were awarded based on performance relative to the prestige of each event, such as major championships versus smaller ranked tournaments. This approach incorporated subjective elements in determining point values and relied on event-specific results rather than cumulative earnings, leading to seedings that reflected recent form but lacked a standardized financial metric.[36] The modern Order of Merit format, based on prize money, was introduced in January 2007 following the PDC World Darts Championship, superseding the points system and establishing a one-year rolling period for earnings in ranked events. This shift provided an objective, performance-driven ranking but introduced annual resets that amplified volatility, as players' positions could fluctuate sharply at the start of each year based on the previous season's results. Phil Taylor's prolonged dominance exemplified how consistent high earnings could maintain top spots, yet the system enabled rapid rises for emerging talents during peak seasons.[37][36] In 2011, alongside the launch of the Tour Card system, the PDC established the ProTour Order of Merit as a secondary ranking focused on prize money from Players Championship and European Tour events over a 12-month period, used primarily for qualifying top players into Premier events. This complemented the main Order of Merit by emphasizing floor tournament performances, while limited two-year rolling trials were implemented for seeding in select events to assess longer-term stability.[38][39] Critics of the one-year retention period argued that it disproportionately rewarded short-term peaks and penalized sustained excellence, with annual resets fostering instability that disrupted qualification pathways and player planning.[36] The system's impacts were evident in events like the 2017 Grand Slam of Darts, where ranking volatility prompted the creation of a dedicated Tour Card Holders' Qualifier to secure eight additional PDC spots beyond the top 32, ensuring broader representation amid shifting positions. Pre-2019 data indicated high turnover, with up to 20% of the top 32 changing annually due to major wins, as seen in Rob Cross's ascent to third after his 2018 World Championship victory.[40]Evolution to the Modern System
The PDC Order of Merit underwent a significant shift in 2019 with the adoption of a two-year prize money retention period for ranking purposes in January 2019 following the 2018/19 World Championship, aimed at mitigating the volatility inherent in the previous one-year system by emphasizing consistent performance over an extended timeframe. The rationale centered on rewarding sustained excellence rather than short-term peaks, which had previously led to frequent and disruptive ranking fluctuations among the top players.[41] Subsequent refinements addressed external challenges and structural expansions. By 2023, the system incorporated an increased number of ProTour events, with the European Tour expanding to 13 fixtures and Players Championships reaching 30, broadening the opportunities for ranking points while aligning with the two-year cycle to further promote long-term consistency.[2] The 2025 updates marked further evolution toward a more structured and global framework, formalizing restrictions that bar players in the top 64 of the Order of Merit from competing in the Development Tour and Women's Series to prioritize main tour participation and reduce crossover dilution. Additionally, deeper integration of the Asian Tour—expanded to 28 events with $280,000 in total prize money—facilitated global expansion by providing ranking pathways for Asian players, though prize money from these events feeds into a separate Order of Merit rather than the main list. These measures built on the 104-week rolling basis to enhance fairness and international reach.[4][25] The modern system's outcomes have included greater stability in the upper echelons, with the top 10 experiencing fewer than five positional shifts per week on average since 2020, compared to over ten annually in the prior decade, fostering a more predictable elite hierarchy while still allowing upward mobility for emerging talents.[42]World Number One Rankings
List of World Number Ones
The PDC Order of Merit, established in 1993, has crowned 14 players as world number one based on cumulative prize money from ranking events over a rolling two-year period. Phil Taylor holds the record for the most time at the top with 3,343 days across eight separate reigns, while Michael van Gerwen's uninterrupted tenure from 2014 to 2021 remains the longest single spell at 2,558 days. Early rankings featured frequent changes among British players, reflecting the sport's growth, before Taylor's dominance in the 2000s and van Gerwen's in the 2010s; recent years have seen shorter reigns amid rising competition from new talents. As of November 19, 2025, Luke Littler is the world number one.[43][1][33] The following table lists all individual reigns chronologically, including start and end dates, and total days held (calculated to the nearest day). Dates reflect official ranking updates, typically issued after major tournaments.[43]| No. | Player | Nationality | From | Until | Days |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Alan Warriner-Little | English | 1 January 1993 | 5 November 1994 | 673 |
| 2 | Dennis Priestley | English | 6 November 1994 | 9 April 1995 | 154 |
| 3 | Rod Harrington | English | 10 April 1995 | 31 July 1996 | 478 |
| 4 | Phil Taylor | English | 1 August 1996 | 31 August 1996 | 30 |
| 5 | Alan Warriner-Little | English | 1 September 1996 | 31 July 1998 | 698 |
| 6 | Rod Harrington | English | 1 August 1998 | 28 July 2000 | 727 |
| 7 | Phil Taylor | English | 29 July 2000 | 23 September 2000 | 56 |
| 8 | Peter Manley | English | 24 September 2000 | 27 October 2001 | 398 |
| 9 | Alan Warriner-Little | English | 28 October 2001 | 4 January 2002 | 68 |
| 10 | Alan Warriner-Little & Phil Taylor (tied) | English | 5 January 2002 | 1 February 2002 | 27 |
| 11 | Alan Warriner-Little | English | 2 February 2002 | 30 April 2002 | 87 |
| 12 | Phil Taylor | English | 1 May 2002 | 3 January 2003 | 247 |
| 13 | John Part | Canadian | 4 January 2003 | 25 July 2003 | 202 |
| 14 | Phil Taylor | English | 26 July 2003 | 26 February 2005 | 581 |
| 15 | Colin Lloyd | English | 27 February 2005 | 10 June 2006 | 468 |
| 16 | Phil Taylor | English | 11 June 2006 | 17 June 2006 | 6 |
| 17 | Colin Lloyd | English | 18 June 2006 | 31 December 2006 | 196 |
| 18 | Phil Taylor | English | 1 January 2007 | 31 December 2007 | 364 |
| 19 | Raymond van Barneveld | Dutch | 1 January 2008 | 7 June 2008 | 158 |
| 20 | Phil Taylor | English | 8 June 2008 | 31 December 2013 | 2032 |
| 21 | Michael van Gerwen | Dutch | 1 January 2014 | 2 January 2021 | 2558 |
| 22 | Gerwyn Price | Welsh | 3 January 2021 | 5 March 2022 | 422 |
| 23 | Peter Wright | Scottish | 6 March 2022 | 23 July 2022 | 139 |
| 24 | Gerwyn Price | Welsh | 24 July 2022 | 8 October 2022 | 76 |
| 25 | Peter Wright | Scottish | 9 October 2022 | 29 October 2022 | 20 |
| 26 | Gerwyn Price | Welsh | 30 October 2022 | 2 January 2023 | 64 |
| 27 | Michael Smith | English | 3 January 2023 | 2 January 2024 | 364 |
| 28 | Luke Humphries | English | 3 January 2024 | 16 November 2025 | 683 |
| 29 | Luke Littler | English | 17 November 2025 | Present (as of 19 November 2025) | 3+ |
Periods and Total Days at No. 1
The durations of reigns at the top of the PDC Order of Merit have varied significantly since the system's inception, reflecting changes in the ranking methodology and the competitive landscape of professional darts. Phil Taylor holds the record for the most cumulative days at No. 1 with 3,343 days across multiple periods, underscoring his unparalleled dominance in the sport's formative years. Michael van Gerwen ranks second with 2,558 days, primarily from a single extended reign, while all other players have accumulated fewer than 1,000 days in total.[43] Among individual periods, van Gerwen's longest unbroken stint of 2,558 days from 2014 to 2021 stands as the benchmark for longevity at the summit, a feat enabled by consistent major wins. In contrast, the shortest recorded reign belongs to Taylor with just 6 days in June 2006, highlighting the potential for rapid shifts even for established stars. These extremes illustrate how the Order of Merit has evolved from a structure favoring sustained excellence to one demanding consistent performance amid rolling updates.[43] The table below summarizes total days at No. 1 for each player, based on all reigns combined (as of November 19, 2025):| Player | Total Days at No. 1 |
|---|---|
| Phil Taylor | 3,343 |
| Michael van Gerwen | 2,558 |
| Alan Warriner-Little | 1,553 |
| Rod Harrington | 1,205 |
| Luke Humphries | 683 |
| Colin Lloyd | 664 |
| Gerwyn Price | 565 |
| Peter Wright | 159 |
| John Part | 202 |
| Peter Manley | 398 |
| Raymond van Barneveld | 158 |
| Michael Smith | 364 |
| Dennis Priestley | 154 |
| Luke Littler | 3+ |