The WTT Finals marks the dramatic conclusion of the season — where ambition meets legacy and the stakes soar sky-high.
From 10–14 December 2025, Hong Kong will host the grand finale of the WTT Series, featuring the top 16 men’s and women’s singles players and eight mixed doubles pairs (including one host wildcard).
At the heart of it all? A staggering USD 1.3 million prize pool and the chance to etch names into history.
Catch every match live on SPOTV NOW.
Every spot in the draw is earned, not given. Qualification is based on points accumulated exclusively from WTT Series events: Grand Smashes, WTT Champions, and WTT Contenders.
For singles, rankings reflect the best four Grand Smash results, four Champions finishes, and six Contender performances. Missed events still count toward the race, while Feeder Series results only come into play if Contender quotas aren’t met. Mixed Doubles qualification combines top Grand Smash and Contender results.
Women’s Singles: Sun Yingsha Faces Early Fire
The draw opened with World No.1 Sun Yingsha front and center. But the dominant force of women’s table tennis won’t have a smooth ride — her first-round opponent is none other than Wang Yidi, a fellow Chinese star hungry for redemption.
Yingsha holds a commanding seven-match winning streak in their rivalry, including three victories this season, but Wang came close at China Smash 2025 and will be eager to flip the script.
The winner of that blockbuster clash will meet Japanese opposition, as Mima Ito and Miyu Nagasaki renew their rivalry for the first time since 2018. Rising talent Kuai Man faces a stern test against Hina Hayata, fresh off her maiden WTT Champions title in Frankfurt. Elsewhere, Satsuki Odo and Honoka Hashimoto round out a fiercely competitive section.
Defending champion Wang Manyu opens against teenage sensation Miwa Harimoto, while Zhu Yuling and Chen Yi revisit their epic United States Smash 2025 Final.
Men’s Singles: Heavyweights and Rising Stars Collide
The men’s draw is stacked with blockbuster matchups. Three-time WTT Finals champion Wang Chuqin faces fast-rising prodigy Sora Matsushima in a mouthwatering opener.
They’ve gone the distance twice before, and with Matsushima fresh off his Frankfurt triumph, expect fireworks at Hong Kong Coliseum.
Truls Moregard meets Anders Lind in an all-Scandinavian showdown, while former WTT Champions winner Lin Yun-Ju starts against Benedikt Duda — both potential semifinal threats to Wang Chuqin.
Elsewhere, Felix Lebrun and Hugo Calderano renew their rivalry five months after their six-game thriller in Ljubljana. Waiting in the wings? Tomokazu Harimoto, the Yokohama 2025 champion, ready to pounce in round two.
Add Lin Shidong vs. Liang Jingkun — a rematch of the Singapore Smash 2025 Final — and this bracket is pure dynamite.
Mixed Doubles: A Historic First
For the first time, the WTT Finals features a Mixed Doubles draw, split into two groups. World No.1 duo Lin Shidong and Kuai Man headline Group 1, joined by wildcard stars Wang Chuqin and Sun Yingsha, local favorites Wong Chun Ting and Doo Hoi Kem, and India’s Manush Shah and Diya Chitale.
Group 2 is equally compelling, led by Lim Jonghoon and Shin Yubin, alongside Sora Matsushima and Miwa Harimoto. Brazilian pair Hugo Calderano and Bruna Takahashi bring flair and firepower, while Alvaro Robles and Maria Xiao complete the lineup.



