2025 Riyadh Season Snooker Championship

2025 Riyadh Season
Snooker Championship
Tournament information
Dates19–21 November 2025 (2025-11-19 – 2025-11-21)
VenueGlobal Theatre
CityBoulevard City, Riyadh
CountrySaudi Arabia
OrganisationWorld Snooker Tour
FormatNon-ranking event
Total prize fund£785,000
Winner's share£250,000
Highest break Zhao Xintong (CHN) (138)
Final
Champion Zhao Xintong (CHN)
Runner-up Neil Robertson (AUS)
Score5–2
2024

The 2025 Riyadh Season Snooker Championship was a professional non-ranking snooker tournament that took place from 19 to 21 November 2025 at the Global Theatre in Boulevard City, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. Organised by the World Snooker Tour as part of the 2025‍–‍26 snooker season, the event featured twelve participants, comprising the defending champion, the reigning World Champion, the eight other highest-ranked players in the snooker world rankings as they stood after the 2025 Xi'an Grand Prix, and two local wildcard players.

The third edition of the tournament since it was first staged as the 2024 World Masters of Snooker, it took place during the Riyadh Season festival. It was broadcast by TNT Sports in the UK and Ireland, by Eurosport in mainland Europe, by local broadcasters in Asia, and by WST Play in all other territories. The winner received £250,000 from a total prize fund of £785,000. Additionally, the tournament featured a 20-point gold ball that could be potted only after a player had completed a maximum break to extend the break to 167. Any player who successfully potted the gold ball would win $1,000,000.

Mark Allen was the defending champion, having defeated Luca Brecel 5‍–‍1 in the final of the tournament's previous edition, but he lost 1–4 to Neil Robertson in the semi-finals. The reigning World Champion Zhao Xintong defeated Robertson 5–2 in the final to win his fourth professional title. The tournament produced 13 century breaks, of which the highest was a 138 by Zhao in his semi-final match against Judd Trump. No player compiled a maximum break at the event; the best effort was nine reds and nine blacks by Allen in the semi-finals. As such, no player had the opportunity to pot the gold ball for a 167 break.