China Masters
| Official website | |
| Founded | 2005 |
|---|---|
| Editions | 18 (2025) |
| Location | Shenzhen (2025) China |
| Venue | Shenzhen Arena (2025) |
| Prize money | US$1,250,000 (2025) |
| Men's | |
| Draw | 32S / 32D |
| Current champions | Weng Hongyang (singles) Kim Won-ho Seo Seung-jae (doubles) |
| Most singles titles | 6 Lin Dan |
| Most doubles titles | 3 Lee Yong-dae |
| Women's | |
| Draw | 32S / 32D |
| Current champions | An Se-young (singles) Jia Yifan Zhang Shuxian (doubles) |
| Most singles titles | 3 Chen Yufei |
| Most doubles titles | 4 Yu Yang |
| Mixed doubles | |
| Draw | 32 |
| Current champions | Dechapol Puavaranukroh Supissara Paewsampran |
| Most titles (male) | 3 Xu Chen |
| Most titles (female) | 3 Ma Jin Huang Yaqiong Huang Dongping |
| Super 750 | |
| Last completed | |
| 2025 China Masters | |
The China Masters (Chinese: 中国羽毛球大师赛, formerly known as Fuzhou China Open), is an annual badminton tournament held in China. It became part of the BWF Super Series tournaments in 2007. Following the restructurisation to BWF World Tour, since 2018 it became one of only six tournaments to be granted Super 750 level and was renamed as Fuzhou China Open. From 2023 onwards, the tournament is held in Shenzhen, and its name is changed back to its former name, China Masters.