2026 Australian Chess Championships
At the University of Sydney in Sydney, Australia, the 2026 Australian Chess Championships gather many of the country’s strongest players for an eleven-day chess festival from January 5–15, 2026. The national championship runs alongside the Australian Reserves and several supporting tournaments, all inside the modern Belinda Hutchinson Building at the University’s Business School campus.
Players, students, and fans enjoy a full program that includes the Australian Championship, Australian Reserves, USYD Major, USYD Minor, the Australian Blitz Championship, the USYD Rapid, and a FIDE Arbiters Seminar. With a total prize fund of AUD 18,750, strict competitive conditions, and convenient on-campus accommodation, this Sydney chess festival promises serious classical chess, energetic rapid and blitz events, and a welcoming atmosphere for spectators and families alike.
🗓️ Event Details
| Item | Details |
|---|---|
| 📅 Dates | January 5–15, 2026 (Monday–Thursday) |
| 📍 Location | Belinda Hutchinson Building H70, The University of Sydney, Sydney, Australia |
| ♟️ Format | Multi-division Swiss-system festival with classical, rapid, and blitz events plus a FIDE Arbiters Seminar |
| ⭐ Rating & lists | Organizers use the January FIDE Standard list and December ACF Standard list for eligibility and pairings |
| 📂 Sections | Australian Championship, Australian Reserves, USYD Major, USYD Minor, Australian Blitz Championship, USYD Rapid, FIDE Arbiters Seminar |
| ⏱️ Time control | Classical 90+30 (Championship/Reserves) and 60+30 (Major/Minor); Rapid 10+1; Blitz 3+2 |
| 🏁 Number of rounds | 11 rounds (Championship and Reserves), 7 rounds (USYD Major and USYD Minor), single-day Rapid and Blitz events |
| 💰 Prize fund | Total prize fund AUD 18,750 across all tournaments (provisional schedule of prizes) |
| 💳 Entry fees | Division-based early, standard, and late fees with concession options; free spectator registration |
| 👤 Eligibility | Australian Championship with strict ACF/FIDE-based criteria; rating-limited Reserves, Major, and Minor; Blitz and Rapid open to all; Arbiters Seminar for licensed National Arbiters |
| 👥 Capacity & audience | Organizers welcome players, students, and spectators; everyone must register (players or spectators) through the official form |
| 📝 Organizer notes | The University of Sydney Chess Club runs the festival under Australian Chess Federation regulations and the event’s Code of Ethics |
| ⚖️ Key officials | Chief Organizer: Winston Zhao Chen; Deputy Chief Organizer: Celina Wu; Chief Arbiter: IA Dr. Peter Tsai; Deputy Chief Arbiter: IA Dr. Charles Zworestine and supporting arbiters |
🏆 Prize Fund
Total prize fund: AUD 18,750 (provisional; organizers confirm exact distribution closer to the event).
Australian Championship
| Prize | Amount (AUD) |
|---|---|
| 1st Place | 3,000 |
| 2nd Place | 2,000 |
| 3rd Place | 1,500 |
| 4th Place | 1,000 |
| 5th Place | 750 |
| 6th Place | 550 |
| 7th Place | 400 |
| 8th Place | 300 |
Australian Reserves
| Prize | Amount (AUD) |
|---|---|
| 1st Place | 1,000 |
| 2nd Place | 750 |
| 3rd Place | 500 |
| 4th Place | 500 |
| 5th Place | 250 |
| Rating Prizes | 1,000 total (two rating groups with AUD 300 and AUD 200 in each group) |
USYD Major
| Prize | Amount (AUD) |
|---|---|
| 1st Place | 750 |
| 2nd Place | 500 |
| 3rd Place | 300 |
| Rating Prizes | 600 total (two rating groups with AUD 200 and AUD 100 in each group) |
USYD Minor
| Prize | Amount (AUD) |
|---|---|
| 1st Place | 400 |
| 2nd Place | 300 |
| 3rd Place | 200 |
| Best Unrated Player | 100 |
Australian Blitz Championship (Blitz Open)
| Prize | Amount (AUD) |
|---|---|
| 1st Place | 400 |
| 2nd Place | 300 |
| 3rd Place | 200 |
| Rating Prizes | 750 total (three rating groups with AUD 150 and AUD 100 in each group) |
USYD Rapid
| Prize | Amount (AUD) |
|---|---|
| 1st Place | 200 |
| 2nd Place | 150 |
| 3rd Place | 100 |
Organizers reserve the right to adjust prize amounts; they also apply a 30% administrative deduction to prizes for winners who skip the Closing Ceremony.
⏱️ Time Control & Pairings
Australian Championship and Australian Reserves use a classical time control of 40 moves in 90 minutes plus 30 minutes to finish the game, with a 30-second increment from move 1 over 11 rounds.
USYD Major and USYD Minor use 60 minutes for the game with a 30-second increment from move 1 over 7 rounds.
USYD Rapid uses 10 minutes for the game with a 1-second increment from move 1.
The Australian Blitz Championship uses 3 minutes for the game with a 2-second increment from move 1.
All tournaments use the FIDE Dutch Swiss system so players stay in the event for all rounds and never face knockout elimination.
Organizers use FIDE ratings first, then ACF ratings when necessary, to sort pairings in the Championship; they reverse this order in the other divisions.
The January FIDE rating list and December ACF rating list determine ratings for pairing and eligibility.
The Championship does not allow any half-point byes. Reserves permit one half-point bye in the first six rounds only. USYD Major and USYD Minor allow up to two half-point byes, but not in rounds 6 and 7. Players must request any half-point bye before the previous round begins.
Classical events apply a 30-minute default time; players who arrive more than 30 minutes late forfeit the game. Rapid and blitz events use a zero default time, and players lose on time if their clock reaches zero before they appear at the board.
📂 Sections / Groups
| Section | Rating / Eligibility | Rounds & Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Australian Championship | Primarily for players with ACF Standard rating ≥ 2150; additional automatic qualifiers include current national champions and other titled or qualifying players under ACF regulations | 11-round classical national championship |
| Australian Reserves | Open to players with ACF Standard rating under 2150, including unrated players | 11-round classical event parallel to the Championship |
| USYD Major | Open to players under 2000 ACF or FIDE (including unrated players) | 7-round classical event in the second half of the festival |
| USYD Minor | Open to players with ACF Standard rating under 1600 and FIDE Standard rating under 1750, including unrated players | 7-round classical event in the first half of the festival |
| Australian Blitz Championship | Open to all players regardless of rating or federation | One-day Swiss-format blitz championship |
| USYD Rapid | Open to all players; suitable for those who want a shorter, faster event | One-day Swiss-format rapid tournament |
| FIDE Arbiters Seminar | For currently licensed National Arbiters who want to pursue FIDE Arbiter titles | Five-morning seminar with an exam on the final day |
📅 Schedule
All dates refer to January 2026 and use local Sydney time.
Australian Championship & Australian Reserves
| Day | Date | Time | Round / Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Monday | 5 January | 3:00 pm | Round 1 and Opening Ceremony |
| Tuesday | 6 January | 9:30 am | Round 2 |
| Tuesday | 6 January | 3:30 pm | Round 3 |
| Wednesday | 7 January | 2:00 pm | Round 4 |
| Thursday | 8 January | 2:00 pm | Round 5 |
| Friday | 9 January | 2:00 pm | Round 6 |
| Saturday | 10 January | 2:00 pm–6:00 pm | Rest day for classical events; Australian Blitz Championship |
| Sunday | 11 January | 2:00 pm | Round 7 |
| Sunday | 11 January | 9:30 am–1:30 pm | USYD Rapid Championship (side event) |
| Monday | 12 January | 2:00 pm | Round 8 |
| Tuesday | 13 January | 2:00 pm | Round 9 |
| Wednesday | 14 January | 2:00 pm | Round 10 |
| Thursday | 15 January | 9:30 am | Round 11, Presentations & Closing Ceremony |
USYD Major
| Day | Date | Time | Round / Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Monday | 12 January | 11:00 am | Round 1 |
| Monday | 12 January | 2:30 pm | Round 2 |
| Tuesday | 13 January | 11:00 am | Round 3 |
| Tuesday | 13 January | 2:30 pm | Round 4 |
| Wednesday | 14 January | 11:00 am | Round 5 |
| Wednesday | 14 January | 2:30 pm | Round 6 |
| Thursday | 15 January | 11:00 am | Round 7, Presentations & Closing Ceremony |
USYD Minor
| Day | Date | Time | Round / Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Monday | 5 January | 3:00 pm | Round 1 |
| Tuesday | 6 January | 10:00 am | Round 2 |
| Tuesday | 6 January | 1:30 pm | Round 3 |
| Wednesday | 7 January | 10:00 am | Round 4 |
| Wednesday | 7 January | 1:30 pm | Round 5 |
| Thursday | 8 January | 10:00 am | Round 6 |
| Thursday | 8 January | 1:30 pm | Round 7, Presentations & Closing Ceremony |
FIDE Arbiters Seminar
| Day | Date | Time | Focus |
|---|---|---|---|
| Wednesday | 7 January | 9:00 am–1:00 pm | Laws of chess, including rapid and blitz |
| Thursday | 8 January | 9:00 am–1:00 pm | Laws of chess case studies; Swiss system and pairing rules |
| Friday | 9 January | 9:00 am–1:00 pm | Competition rules, equipment standards, systems of games, tiebreak methods, rating and title regulations |
| Sunday | 11 January | 9:00 am–1:00 pm | Regulations for arbiters’ titles, fair play guidelines, use of electronic clocks |
| Monday | 12 January | 9:00 am–1:00 pm | Examination |
📝 Registration
Players register and pay entry fees online through the official registration page:
https://australianchampionships.usydchessclub.org/registration/All attendees, including spectators, must register so organizers can manage access to the venue and side activities. Spectator registration remains free and allows access to live commentary, simuls, lectures, and other festival events.
Entry fees follow three tiers: Early Bird, Standard, and Late, with concession prices for eligible players (shown in brackets on the official form). Juniors cannot claim concession discounts.
Entry fees (AUD)
| Division | Early Bird | Standard | Late |
|---|---|---|---|
| Australian Championship | 190 (concession 175) | 210 (concession 200) | 275 |
| Australian Reserves | 170 (concession 150) | 190 (concession 175) | 250 |
| USYD Major | 100 (concession 80) | 120 (concession 100) | 150 |
| USYD Minor | 75 (concession 50) | 100 (concession 80) | 125 |
| Australian Blitz Championship | 35 | 35 | 55 |
| USYD Rapid | 35 | 35 | 55 |
| FIDE Arbiters Seminar | 200 | 200 | 300 |
Key registration rules:
Early Bird fees apply until November 5 at 12:00 pm.
Standard fees apply from November 5 after midday until December 24.
Late fees apply from December 25 onward.
Grandmasters, International Masters, Women’s Grandmasters, and Women’s International Masters receive free entry if they complete registration before December 24.
Players who request refunds receive:
A full refund (minus processing fees) if they cancel within two weeks of entry and before December 5.
A 50% refund if they cancel more than two weeks after entry but still before December 5.
No refund for entries after December 5.
Players must also complete a separate Code of Conduct acknowledgment form immediately after registration; the confirmation email contains the link. Entries remain invalid until players submit that form.
Any requests for refunds or eligibility clarifications go via email to auschamps@usydchessclub.org.
👥 Organizer
The University of Sydney Chess Club runs the 2026 Australian Chess Championships on behalf of the Australian Chess Federation, combining student energy with national-level organizational standards. The team coordinates the playing venues, arbiters, side events, and live commentary to create a professional yet welcoming environment for every participant.
Email: auschamps@usydchessclub.org
Event website: https://australianchampionships.usydchessclub.org/
Club website: https://www.usydchessclub.org/
USYD Chess Club page (USU): https://usu.edu.au/clubs/chess-club/
Facebook group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/usydchessclub/
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/usydchessclub/
🏨 Venue
Organizers host all tournament games and activities at the Belinda Hutchinson Building H70 (formerly Abercrombie Business School) on the main campus of The University of Sydney. This modern business school building offers spacious lecture theaters, comfortable playing halls, and dedicated spaces for live commentary, analysis, and social areas, all just a short walk from Sydney’s inner-city cafes and public transport hubs.
🛎️ Accommodation
The official website lists convenient on-campus accommodation options within walking distance of the venue.
St Andrew’s College (on-campus)
Address: 19 Carillon Avenue, Newtown NSW 2042
Modern double rooms with shared bathrooms from around AUD 110 per night per person, or approximately AUD 130 per night per couple (minimum three-night stay).
Ensuite rooms from around AUD 130 per night per person or AUD 150 per night per couple.
Rooms include linen and towels, regular light and full room service, wardrobes, mirrors, and study desks.
Facilities include a gym, multi-purpose sports court, lift, Wi-Fi, shared kitchenette, laundry facilities, and a large lounge and foyer area.
Players express interest and submit booking requests using the group code “USYD Chess” before the stated deadline via the college events page:
https://events.standrewscollege.edu.au/group-summer-stays/For booking questions, guests contact Yulia Alder at eventsmanager@standrewscollege.edu.au.
Sancta Sophia College (on-campus)
Address: 8 Missenden Road, Camperdown NSW 2050
Single ensuite rooms (king single bed) from around AUD 138 per night.
Guests receive Wi-Fi, linen, towels, regular room servicing, shared kitchen facilities, and access to a rooftop terrace with city views.
Parking and meals are not included.
For availability and bookings, guests email Hayden Edwards at conference@sancta.edu.au and provide full stay details; early booking is strongly recommended due to limited capacity.
Players can also choose independent hotels or short-term rentals in nearby suburbs such as Newtown, Camperdown, and the Sydney CBD, all within a short commute to the university.
🚗 How to Get There
By train: Redfern Station lies about a 10-minute walk from the Belinda Hutchinson Building and connects to major Sydney train lines, including Western, Inner West, Airport, and Northern lines. Players can walk from Redfern through the campus following signs to the Business School.
By bus: Many bus routes stop at “University of Sydney, City Road,” roughly five minutes on foot from the venue. Services from Central Station and the CBD frequently pass this stop, making bus travel a convenient option during peak hours.
By car: Limited paid parking exists on campus. Organizers recommend the Shepherd Street Carpark and similar pay-as-you-go facilities, typically capped at a daily maximum charge. Visitors manage parking sessions through the CellOPark app and should carefully observe any staff-only restrictions near the Business School.
From the airport: Passengers can take the Airport Line train to Central, then transfer to a Redfern train or a bus heading to the University of Sydney. Taxis and rideshare services also provide direct door-to-door transfers to the campus.
🧾 Other
All games follow the event’s Code of Ethics and the FIDE Laws of Chess, with specific articles applying separately to classical, rapid, and blitz play.
Players may not carry phones or other electronic devices on their person during a game unless they receive explicit approval from a tournament official; violations can lead to time penalties, forfeiture, or expulsion from the event.
Spectators and players who finish their games must keep the playing hall quiet; the arbiter team issues one warning only before removing repeat offenders from the venue.
The organizers allow photography and video only during the first 10 minutes of each round for general spectators; afterward, only accredited photographers and videographers may shoot in the playing area. Flash photography and noisy shutter sounds remain strictly prohibited.
Smoking does not take place in or directly outside the venue; smokers must use the designated outdoor smoking area a short walk away on campus.
Prize winners should attend the Closing Ceremony on January 15; absent winners forfeit 30% of their prize money as an administrative fee.
Players who forfeit a game without a valid reason may need to pay a re-entry fee before they continue in the tournament, with a higher fee for classical events than for blitz.
Appeals follow a structured process: players first submit appeals to the Chief Arbiter, and if they remain unsatisfied, they can escalate to the Tournament Appeals Panel after lodging a refundable deposit.
Sydney’s flagship national championship festival invites players, students, and fans to immerse themselves in eleven days of top-level chess, learning, and community in one of Australia’s most vibrant campus settings. If you plan your trip early, secure your entry, and bring your best preparation, this event can become one of the most memorable tournaments of your chess year.