The PDC Q-School is appearing on the horizon. For those of you with questions about what an arduous and bruising experience it is, Darts World has you covered.
Every January, while the darting elite are still nursing bruises from Alexandra Palace and the confetti is barely swept from the floor, another, far more ruthless drama begins. No lights. No walk-ons. No safety net. Just tungsten, tension and survival. This is PDC Q-School – the sport’s most unforgiving proving ground.
From 5th to 11th January, nearly nine hundred hopefuls will descend on two venues with one shared obsession: relevance. The UK based half of the army will march into Milton Keynes, the others from Europe and far beyond, into Kalkar. By the end of the week, only 29 of them will emerge holding a PDC Tour Card. For everyone else, it’s back to the ‘wilderness’.
This is Q-School’s sixteenth edition, and by now its reputation precedes it. Brutal. Relentless. Merciless. Careers are launched or reborn here. Others quietly end. And the stories that come out of it often shape the sport for the next decade.
If anyone doubts its importance, look no further than Gian van Veen. Less than three years ago, he was just another name on the Kalkar entry list. Today, he’s a European Champion, World Youth Champion and PDC World Championship finalist.
Q-School doesn’t promise success – but it offers the door. What happens next is on you.Two stages. One obsession.
Q-School is split into two brutal chapters. stage one runs from 5th to 7th January – a survival filter for the masses. Anyone without exemption must pass through here. Only those who lost their Tour Card the previous season, or finished highly on the Challenge or Development Tours, earn direct passage to stage two.
Progression is simple in theory and savage in practice. Reach the last 16 on any stage one day and you punch your ticket forward. Miss that, and every single win becomes currency. From 2026 onwards, each full-round victory equals one ranking point, feeding into the First Stage Order of Merit. Consistency, not just flashes of brilliance, gets you through.
Stage two, running 8th to 11th January, is where careers are decided. The golden tickets or Tour Cards are split between the two locations on a pro-rata basis. In total, 29 are available. In a change from the norm, sixteen go directly to the finalists across the four stage two days – a major shift from earlier years when only daily winners were rewarded.
The remaining 13 are handed out via the Q-School Order of Merit, rewarding players who grind relentlessly deep across the week. The top five on the UK ranking together with highest eight place on its European counterpart receive the golden tickets.
It’s darts’ most democratic brutality. No reputation points. No shortcuts. Perform or perish.
The cost of a dream is not symbolic. Around £475 (plus VAT in the UK) buys you a seat at the table.
Enough money to ensure only those with genuine belief – or glorious delusion – step forward. But that fee unlocks more than Q-School.
Every entrant becomes eligible for the PDC Challenge Tour, a shadow battlefield where Pro Tour call-ups are constantly available. Start hot there, and doors creak open fast.
What a Tour Card really means
And if you fail? Q-School failure is not the end – just a detour. The Challenge Tour, WDF circuit, MODUS Super Series, and the rapidly expanding Amateur Darts Circuit all offer routes back to the light.
Some, like Rob Cross and Luke Humphries, never won a Tour Card at Q-School at all – yet climbed anyway.
That’s the beauty and cruelty of darts in 2026. There is always a path. But none of them are easy.Q-School is not about talent alone. It’s about resilience. Timing. Nerve. It doesn’t create champions – it exposes them.
And for those stepping up this January, remember one thing: Finding the golden ticket is only the beginning.
Keeping hold of it… that’s where the real fight starts.
—–Ends—–
Images: PDC








