Federation: China Qualification path: 2024-25 FIDE Women’s Grand Prix winner
Zhu Jiner’s rise has been built the hard way: through long tournaments, sustained pressure, and an almost unmatched level of week-to-week consistency. A classical specialist by temperament, she has steadily carved out a place among the elite by excelling in formats that reward patience, accuracy, and stamina. Her breakthrough came in the 2024−25 FIDE Women’s Grand Prix series, where she topped the overall standings with 352.5 points and finished in the top two in all three legs she played. That level of reliability across multiple elite events secured her place in the FIDE Women’s Candidates and confirmed her status as one of the most dominating performers in the field. Away from classical chess, Zhu has also shown growing confidence in faster formats, finishing joint third at the 2025 FIDE Women’s World Blitz Championship in Doha.
Federation: FIDE Qualification path: 2024-25 FIDE Women’s Grand Prix
Few players in the field are as closely tied to the World Championship cycle as Aleksandra Goryachkina. She announced herself at the very top in 2019 by winning the Women’s Candidates Tournament and earning the right to challenge Ju Wenjun for the world title, coming within touching distance of the crown in a tightly fought match. Since then, Goryachkina has remained a constant at elite level, combining deep positional understanding with a calm, economical style that thrives over long distances. Her victory at the 2023 Women’s World Cup underlined her strength in knockout competition, while her return to the Candidates was sealed through another strong campaign in the 2024−25 Women’s Grand Prix. In Doha in 2025, she added a major milestone by claiming her first World Championship title, winning the Women’s World Rapid Championship and proving her ability to convert elite form into gold on the biggest stage.
Federation: India Qualification path: 2025 FIDE Women’s World Cup winner
Divya Deshmukh arrives as one of the youngest contenders in the field, but already with a resume that reads well beyond her years. Her transition from junior star to senior force accelerated sharply in 2024, when she won the World Junior Girls Championship and played a key role in India’s gold-medal performance at the Chess Olympiad, earning an individual board prize along the way. The defining moment came in 2025, when she captured the FIDE Women’s World Cup at just 19 years old, becoming the youngest winner in the event’s history and securing the grandmaster title. Since then, Divya has continued to test herself against the very best, holding her own in open elite events such as the FIDE World Cup and the Grand Swiss, including a notable draw against World Champion Gukesh D in Samarkand. Her impact in 2025 was recognised beyond the chess world, earning her ESPN India’s Player of the Year award.
Federation: India Qualification path: 2025 Women’s World Cup finalist
Koneru Humpy stands as one of the defining figures of modern women’s chess, blending early prodigious talent with more than two decades at the top of the game. She burst onto the world stage by winning the World Junior Girls Championship in 2001 and became a grandmaster the following year at just 15, at the time the youngest woman and the first Indian woman to do so. Since then, she has remained a fixture among the elite across all formats. Humpy qualified for the 2026 Candidates by reaching the final of the 2025 Women’s World Cup and arrives with a formidable record in speed chess, including five World Rapid and Blitz Championship medals: one gold, two silver, and two bronze. Her Women’s World Rapid title in 2024 and a fourth-place finish in the 2024−25 Women’s Grand Prix series, including victory at the Pune leg, underline her continued competitiveness at the very highest level.
Federation: China Qualification path: 2025 Women’s World Cup third place
Tan Zhongyi brings championship pedigree and extensive match experience to the Candidates field. A long-time cornerstone of the Chinese national team, she reached the summit of women’s chess in 2017 when she won the Women’s World Championship title. Her strength in long classical events was reaffirmed in 2024, when she won the Women’s Candidates Tournament in Toronto to earn another world title challenge. Although she fell short in the subsequent championship match against Ju Wenjun, Tan showed fighting spirit and depth across extended play. She booked her return to the Candidates by finishing third at the 2025 Women’s World Cup, defeating Lei Tingjie along the way, and once again positioning herself at the sharp end of the World Championship cycle.
Federation: India Qualification path: 2025 FIDE Women’s Grand Swiss winner
Vaishali Rameshbabu has built her career on endurance, composure, and an ability to deliver across large, demanding classical fields. A prolific junior, she first gained international recognition through multiple world age-group titles before breaking through at senior level. Her victory at the 2023 FIDE Women’s Grand Swiss marked a turning point, earning her a Candidates spot and making her only the third Indian woman to achieve the grandmaster title. Vaishali was also part of India’s gold-medal-winning team at the 2024 Chess Olympiad. She confirmed her affinity for marathon formats by winning the Women’s Grand Swiss again in 2025, securing her place in the 2026 Candidates and reinforcing her reputation as one of the most resilient competitors in long classical tournaments.
Federation: FIDE Qualification path: 2025 Women’s Grand Swiss second place
Kateryna Lagno arrives with nearly two decades of elite-level experience across multiple World Championship cycles. She made her mark early, winning the European Women’s Championship in 2005 at just 15, and has since amassed an exceptional collection of titles across all time controls. Her career highlights include multiple Women’s World Blitz Championships, a Women’s World Rapid Championship, European titles, and team gold medals at Olympiads and World Team Championships. Lagno secured qualification for the 2026 Candidates by finishing second at the 2025 Women’s Grand Swiss, once again demonstrating her ability to navigate long classical events while remaining one of the most decorated speed-chess players of her era.
Federation: Kazakhstan Qualification path: 2025 FIDE Women’s Events Series
Bibisara Assaubayeva is one of the most distinctive talents in women’s chess, a player whose career has been shaped by fearless instincts, sharp calculation, and repeated success under pressure. After emerging through multiple world youth titles, she established herself at senior level as a dominant force in blitz chess, winning the Women’s World Blitz Championship in 2021 and 2022, and reclaiming the title again in 2025. Representing Kazakhstan, Assaubayeva has shown exceptional composure in knockout and fast-paced formats, where decision-making speed is paramount. Alongside her speed-chess dominance, her classical results have progressed steadily, culminating in the grandmaster title and a place among the world’s top-ranked women. She enters the Candidates as a proven world champion with the confidence that comes from repeated success on the biggest stages.