The 2025 IDF Masters was a professional darts tournament that was held from 13 to 16 November 2025 at Arena MK in Milton Keynes, England. Organised by the International Darts Federation (IDF), it was the second edition of the IDF Masters and the first to use a 128-player preliminary system attached to a 32-player televised main draw. The winner received £75,000 from a total prize fund of £300,000.
The main tournament featured a 32-player field. The top 24 players on the IDF Order of Merit qualified automatically, with the top 16 players seeded for the first round. Players ranked 25–32 were seeded into the preliminary knockout phase, while players ranked 33–128 competed in a group stage to determine the remaining preliminary knockout players. Eight qualifiers advanced from the preliminary rounds to complete the main draw.
Alex Brow won the tournament, defeating Elias Storm 6–4 in the final. Logan White was the number one seed and reached the semi-finals, where he lost 5–4 to Storm. Brow defeated Dean Holloway, Carter Mills, Zion Carter and Max Mad before beating Storm in the final. His 164 checkout in the final was the highest checkout of the tournament.
The preliminary rounds and main tournament were held at Arena MK in Milton Keynes, England.
The IDF Masters was established as a major ranking event on the International Darts Federation calendar. The tournament was expanded for 2025 after the IDF introduced a deeper Order of Merit structure and a larger professional field. The revised format allowed the highest-ranked players to qualify directly for the main draw while retaining a preliminary route for players outside the top 24.
The tournament was held at Arena MK in Milton Keynes from 13 to 16 November 2025. The preliminary group stage and knockout rounds were played before the main televised sessions. The expansion to a 128-player system was designed to provide more competitive opportunities for lower-ranked professionals while preserving the seeded 32-player main draw used for the final stages.
The top 16 players on the IDF Order of Merit were seeded for the first round and were drawn against the remaining 16 participants in the main tournament. Players ranked 17–24 qualified automatically but were unseeded. Players ranked 25–32 were seeded into the preliminary knockout phase. Players ranked 33–128 were randomly assigned to 32 preliminary groups, each containing three players. The winner of each group advanced to the preliminary knockout phase, where eight players qualified for the main draw.
All matches were played in traditional set format, with all sets played to the best of three legs.
The top 24 players on the IDF Order of Merit qualified directly for the main tournament. The highest 16 were seeded. Players ranked 25–32 were seeded into the preliminary rounds and were joined by 32 group winners from the players ranked 33–128.
The following 128 players were entered into the tournament. Player names are shown using the {PDCFlag} template, while sporting nationalities are listed separately for reference.
The preliminary rounds were played on 12 November. Players ranked 25–32 on the IDF Order of Merit were seeded into the knockout phase of the preliminary draw, while players ranked 33–128 were placed into 32 three-player groups. The winner of each group advanced to the knockout phase, where eight players qualified for the televised main draw.
The most notable preliminary elimination was Cooper Maddox, who was beaten by Cross in a deciding set. Spencer Taylor and Victor Vaughn also failed to qualify, while Wyatt Walker lost to Holloway despite averaging over 96 in his final preliminary match.
The first round took place across 13 and 14 November. Logan White opened his campaign with a 3–1 win over Tyler Keane, recovering from a slow start to win six of the last eight legs. The first seeded player to exit was Nate Parker, who lost 3–2 to Jordan Pike after missing two match darts in the deciding set.
White moved into the quarter-finals with a 4–2 win over Pike. Theo Bartlett edged Kai Mitchell 4–3 in the closest match of the round, while Storm defeated Tanner Vaughn 4–1 with an average of 101.77. Brow delivered one of the strongest performances of the session, averaging 102.44 in a 4–1 win over Carter Mills.
White defeated Bartlett 4–3 in the opening quarter-final. Bartlett averaged 101.12 and led 3–2, but White finished 116 to force a deciding set before taking the final two legs. Storm beat Parker 4–2, winning six of the last seven legs after trailing 2–1.
Brow defeated Zion Carter 4–3 in the match of the round. Carter missed one dart at double 16 for the match before Brow checked out 84 in the deciding leg. Mad completed the semi-final line-up with a 4–2 win over Donovan.
Storm defeated White 5–4 in the first semi-final. White led 4–3 and had throw in the eighth set, but Storm broke back with a 12-dart leg before taking the deciding set. The result ended White's attempt to reach a third major final of the season.
Brow defeated Mad 5–3 in the second semi-final. Mad started strongly and led 2–1, but Brow won four of the next five sets, including a 121 checkout in the seventh set, to reach the final.
The final was contested between Brow and Storm on 16 November. Storm led 3–2 after five sets, but Brow produced a 164 checkout to level the match and then won three of the next four sets. Storm reduced the deficit to 5–4 before Brow completed victory in the tenth set, winning the match 6–4.
Brow won his first IDF Masters title and collected £75,000. Storm finished as runner-up, while White and Mad were the losing semi-finalists.
The preliminary rounds began with a group stage for players ranked 33–128. The winner of each group advanced to the knockout phase, where they joined the players ranked 25–32. The eight winners of the section finals qualified for the main tournament.
Numbers to the left of a player's name show the 16 seeded players for the tournament. The eight preliminary round qualifiers are indicated by 'Q'. The figures to the right of a player's name show their three-dart average in a match. Players in bold denote match winners.