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Buy tickets for darts World Darts Championship 2025 - 30.12.2025., Alexandra Palace, London, United Kingdom Buy tickets for darts World Darts Championship 2025 - 30.12.2025., Alexandra Palace, London, United Kingdom

DARTS

World Darts Championship 2025

Alexandra Palace, London, UK
30. December 2025. 19:00h
2025
30
December
Photo by: Domagoj Skledar/ arhiva (vlastita)

Tickets (ulaznice) for World Darts Championship 2025 darts evening session at Alexandra Palace in London

Buy tickets (ulaznice) for the evening session of World Darts Championship 2025 at Alexandra Palace in London and experience the unique Ally Pally atmosphere. One ticket gives you a full night of top level darts, crowd songs and colourful costumes, with the clear focus on easy online ticket purchase for this event

World Darts Championship returns to Ally Pally

The evening session on Tuesday, December 30, 2025, at 19:00 at Alexandra Palace in London is reserved for the most exciting moments of the World Darts Championship 2025. Three fourth-round matches are scheduled for that day, at a time when the number of remaining players is rapidly decreasing and every leg can decide the placement in the very finals of the championship. The tournament has been expanded to 128 players this season and runs from December 11, 2025, to January 3, 2026, with a record prize fund and increasingly longer matches as the competition progresses, which further raises tensions and attracts thousands of fans from all over the world. Tickets for this event are particularly sought after because they are valid for one day, i.e., for the complete evening session, so with one ticket you watch a whole series of matches, from the first walk onto the stage to the last double hit. If you want to be part of that colorful and loud sea of fans, don't wait until the last minute – secure your tickets for this event in time and prepare for an evening where every 180 will wake up the whole Ally Pally. Secure your tickets for this event now by clicking on the button labeled "

" which will be placed below the text.

Fourth round evening: three matches, three different stories

The program on December 30 in the evening session is structured to provide fans with a combination of styles and career stories rarely seen in one evening. In one match, the experienced Stephen Bunting takes the stage against Luke Woodhouse, a duel in which a player known for his deep runs in major tournaments collides with an opponent who is currently experiencing his best result at the World Championship. This is followed by the performance of multi-time world champion Michael van Gerwen against Jeffrey de Graaf, a duel in which one of the greatest in history chases a new title, while on the other side stands an opponent who has already knocked out several big names through qualifications and early rounds and wants to continue the fairy tale. The evening closes with a duel between Luke Littler and Ryan Joyce, two players of different generations but with the same goal – to break into the quarterfinals of the most expensive and most-watched tournament in darts. Tickets for this evening are therefore not just a ticket for the stands, but an opportunity to witness live how new stories are born in a few hours that will be retold for years in fan pubs and darts leagues across Europe.

Luke Littler and the new generation of darts superstars

It is difficult to talk about the World Darts Championship 2025 without highlighting Luke Littler, the teenager who shocked the world last season by winning the title and becoming the youngest world champion in darts history. This winter, he comes to Ally Pally as the defending champion and already established number one, with the ambition to join a small group of players who have taken the title two years in a row. His style of play – high average, fast pace, and bold decisions on finishes – fits perfectly into the frenetic atmosphere of the hall where every triple 20 hit causes an explosion of delight. The match against Ryan Joyce in the evening session on December 30 is also interesting because Joyce has a reputation as a quiet threat, a player who knows how to surprise favorites and who is not afraid of the big stage. Precisely because of such duels, tickets for this tournament sell out in an instant, because the audience knows that they could see a new historic game that very evening, whether it is a record average, a spectacular comeback, or an unexpected downfall of the top favorite. If you plan to be among those who can later say "I was there when it happened," buying tickets for this session is one of the most sensible decisions for every true darts lover.

Experienced champions and the return of legends to the biggest stage

Michael van Gerwen, a three-time world champion, has been synonymous with dominance in darts for years, and his performances at Alexandra Palace are almost always associated with high drama and increased decibels. In the fourth round, he is awaited by Jeffrey de Graaf, a player who has already earned a Tour Card and has a series of quality victories behind him, making the duel far more balanced than the reputation of the Dutch superstar would suggest. In the same evening, Stephen Bunting also plays, who in recent seasons has established himself among players capable of the final stages of the biggest tournaments, while Luke Woodhouse, with his best performance, shows how much the field expanded to 128 players has raised the level of competition. For fans in the stands, this means that every match that evening can turn into a thriller, and the value of the ticket itself increases further because there is no "easy" duel in which one could take a break. Tickets for this evening thus become an entry into a small encyclopedia of modern darts, in which you watch both established stars and players who are just breaking through in the same program, which is a perfect combination if you are coming to Ally Pally for the first time and want to feel the full spectrum of emotions that this tournament carries.

Alexandra Palace – the historic palace that became the home of darts

Alexandra Palace, located on a hill between Wood Green and Muswell Hill in north London, was created back in 1873 as the "People's Palace," a place for recreation, entertainment, and education of the masses. Only sixteen days after opening, the palace almost completely burned down in a large fire, but already in 1875, it reopened its doors, this time as an even larger and more ambitious complex with a concert hall, theater, and exhibition spaces. Today it is a protected cultural asset and one of London's most recognizable symbols, and since 2008, the PDC World Darts Championship has been held in its West Hall, which has since become the most prestigious tournament in the sport. The hall's capacity of about three thousand-odd seats means that every visit is as intimate as possible on a global scale – you see the players' faces, hear every gasp of the audience, and feel how the flickering LED lighting reflects the rhythm of the cheering. It is this combination of Victorian architecture, the view of the London skyline, and a modern show with music, lights, and confetti cannons that is the reason why many fans claim that their first ticket to the World Championship at Ally Pally changed the way they experience darts.

An atmosphere unlike any other sport

Anyone entering the West Hall for the first time during the World Darts Championship is often surprised by how much this competition does not resemble a classic "quiet in the hall" sporting event. The stands are full of fans in imaginative costumes, from Christmas motifs to football jerseys to completely crazy masks, and the tables around the stage turn into improvised fan zones where songs are sung, cardboard signs are held, and rhythmically chanted at every 180 hit. In recent seasons, there have been occasional discussions about the limits of behavior – some players have complained about whistling or excessive noise – but most of the audience comes precisely because this is a fusion of a carnival and top-tier sport, where cheering is taken seriously, but also with a lot of humor. The story of the "Ally Pally wasp," which appears every year somewhere around the stage and can disrupt interviews or players' concentration, has also entered legend, further strengthening the impression that the hall has its own character and "lives" with the tournament. Precisely because of such an atmosphere, tickets for the World Darts Championship are sought months in advance, and many fans plan their annual vacations to overlap with the dates of the evening sessions. If you want to feel that mix of singing, laughter, and tense finishes, buy tickets via the button below and surrender to what many describe as the most cheerful sporting event of the winter.

London in December – a winter city for darts lovers

Coming to the World Darts Championship 2025 is an ideal opportunity to combine a sporting experience with a short winter city break in one of the most visited cities in the world. London in December and early January lives in the rhythm of holiday lights, Christmas markets, and crowded shopping streets, so the day can be spent sightseeing, and the evening at Ally Pally watching the best dart players in the world. North London, where Alexandra Palace is located, offers a combination of green parks and urban districts with restaurants, pubs, and smaller independent shops, so fans often book accommodation nearby so they can walk to the hotel after the match. You can review the offer of accommodation in the city and closer to the hall through links such as accommodation near the venue, which further facilitates travel planning. For many visitors from Croatia and the region, this is an opportunity to combine a few days of sightseeing Westminster, Tower Bridge, or museums with evening trips to Ally Pally, creating a small personal "sport-tourist package" in the heart of the British metropolis. The fact that the ticket is valid for one day makes the schedule easier – you dedicate one day to a morning tour of the city, and in the evening you climb to the palace on the hill and dive into the sea of songs and fan slogans.

How to get to Alexandra Palace and where to stay

Alexandra Palace is well connected to the rest of London, which is important information for everyone buying tickets for the evening session and who doesn't want to worry about whether they will arrive on time. The nearest train station is called Alexandra Palace Station and frequent trains run to it from the main hubs in the city center, while the nearest underground station is Wood Green on the Piccadilly line, from where a city bus runs to the palace or it can be reached in about ten minutes of easy walking on foot. For fans arriving by plane, most London airports have direct connections to the city center, and from there it is enough to follow public transport towards Wood Green or directly towards Alexandra Palace Station. Almost all city transport relies on contactless cards and bank cards, so traveling is simple even if you are arriving in London for the first time. If you want to reduce travel time after the late end of matches, consider booking accommodation near Alexandra Palace in advance, as this will allow you to walk peacefully to your room after the last set and already summarize impressions of the hit checkouts and missed chances that will be retold for days on the way.

What an evening of the World Darts Championship looks like

The evening session of the World Darts Championship is carefully directed so that the fan gets the maximum for their ticket, especially in the fourth-round phase such as the one on the schedule for December 30. The doors open well before the first match, giving enough time for entry, security checks, and finding a table or a seat in the stands, while music is already playing in the background and fan songs are starting up. Each match begins with the famous entrance of players onto the stage accompanied by selected walk-on songs, while the audience writes on cardboard signs and tries to catch a frame on the big screens. The competition format itself is based on sets and legs in a game of 501, with the "double out" rule, whereby in later rounds the number of sets required to win increases, so an evening session can last several hours. This means that fans with a ticket for one evening get three complete high-level matches, with enough breaks for drinks and food, but also with the feeling that they have attended a real marathon of concentration and skill. Whoever buys tickets for this session gets an experience that is closer to a festival day than a classic match, because between the first and last walk towards the oche, enough time passes to get to know the company at the table, sing a few choruses, and perhaps make new friends with whom you will already be arranging a joint return to Ally Pally next year.

Tickets, passes, and what to expect from your seat

Tickets for the World Darts Championship 2025 generally sell out in pre-sale and many sessions do not reach general sale at all, which speaks volumes about the tournament's status as one of the most sought-after sporting events of the winter. West Hall accommodates only a few thousand spectators per session, so every table and every stand chair is precious and in demand, especially for evenings like December 30 when fourth-round matches are played. Most tickets refer to tables closer to the stage, where fans are in the foreground of television broadcasts, and to the stands which offer a slightly quieter but equally good view of the stage and the huge electronic scoreboard. It is important to emphasize that the ticket is valid for one day, i.e., for a specific session, so with one ticket you have access to all matches of that program without additional surcharges. If you are planning a trip from abroad, it is reasonable to buy tickets as early as possible and coordinate them with the booking of accommodation for event visitors, as this makes it easier to plan both transport and the rest of the stay. Tickets for this evening disappear quickly, so buy tickets on time and take the opportunity to follow a whole evening of top-tier darts from one seat, from the first walk onto the stage to the last handshake before heading to the locker room.

Tips for fans from Croatia and the region

For fans coming to Ally Pally from Croatia, Slovenia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, or neighboring countries, a trip to London for the World Darts Championship can be relatively easily integrated into a few free days around the New Year. Flights to London airports are available throughout the day, and thanks to well-organized public transport, it is simple to get from the airport to the city center and further to Wood Green or Alexandra Palace Station. It is worth counting on the fact that December in London is cold and often damp, so it is smart to combine a fan jersey or costume with a warm jacket and layers of clothing that you can take off when the atmosphere in the hall heats up. If you are traveling in a group, it is good to agree in advance where you will meet after the match, as the exit from the hall and the park surrounding it can be very busy when several thousand people empty at the same time. In your travel plan, definitely include a review of the accommodation offers in the host city, to find the combination of price, location, and cancellation flexibility that suits you best. When you put all that together, only one thing remains – secure your tickets for this event immediately, click on the "" button below the text, and prepare flags, jerseys, and vocal cords for an evening that could change the way you experience darts.

Sources:
- Sports portal from the United Kingdom, schedule and results of the World Darts Championship 2025 2026.
- Tournament organizer's page, data on dates, draw expansion, and the World Championship's stay at Alexandra Palace.
- Guides to the history and architecture of Alexandra Palace, emphasis on the creation of the "People's Palace" and the fire of 1873.
- Articles on West Hall capacity, data on public interest, and planned move to the larger Great Hall from next season.
- Tourist guides for darts and sporting event fans in London, information on winter facilities and the city's transport connections to Alexandra Palace.

Everything you need to know about tickets for the 2025 World Darts Championship, Alexandra Palace, London, United Kingdom

+ Where to find tickets for the 2025 World Darts Championship?

+ How to choose the best seat to enjoy the 2025 World Darts Championship?

+ When is the best time to buy tickets for the 2025 World Darts Championship?

+ Can tickets for the 2025 World Darts Championship be delivered electronically?

+ Are tickets for the 2025 World Darts Championship purchased through partners safe?

+ Are there tickets for the 2025 World Darts Championship available in family sectors?

+ What to do if tickets for the 2025 World Darts Championship are sold out?

+ Can I buy last-minute tickets for the 2025 World Darts Championship?

+ What information do I need to buy tickets for the 2025 World Darts Championship?

+ How to find tickets for specific sectors at the 2025 World Darts Championship?

22 December, 2025, Author: Sports desk

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