Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2025
| Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2025 | |
|---|---|
| United by Music | |
| Date and venue | |
| Final |
|
| Venue | Gymnastic Hall of Olympic City Tbilisi, Georgia |
| Organisation | |
| Organiser | European Broadcasting Union (EBU) |
| ESC director | Martin Green |
| ESC executive producer | Gert Kark |
| Production | |
| Host broadcaster | Georgian Public Broadcaster (GPB) |
| Director | Basa Potskhishvili |
| Executive producer | Natia Mshvenieradze |
| Artistic director | Marvin Dietmann |
| Presenters |
|
| Participants | |
| Number of entries | 18 |
| Returning countries | Azerbaijan Croatia Montenegro |
| Non-returning countries | Estonia Germany |
Participation map
| |
| Vote | |
| Voting system | The professional jury of each country awards a set of 12, 10, 8–1 points to 10 songs. Viewers around the world vote for 3 songs, and their votes are distributed proportionally. The votes of the jury and the audience make up 50% of all votes. |
| Winning song | France "Ce monde" |
The Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2025 was the 23rd edition of the Junior Eurovision Song Contest, held on 13 December 2025 at the Gymnastic Hall of Olympic City in Tbilisi, Georgia. It was organised by the European Broadcasting Union (EBU) and host broadcaster Georgian Public Broadcaster (GPB), which staged the event after winning the 2024 contest for Georgia with the song "To My Mom" by Andria Putkaradze.
Broadcasters from eighteen countries participated in the contest, the largest number of participants since 2021. Azerbaijan, Croatia, and Montenegro returned after absences from recent contests, while Estonia and Germany opted not to participate after doing so the previous year.
The winner was France with the song "Ce monde" by Lou Deleuze, its fourth win in six years. Ukraine won the public vote and finished in second place, its best placing since 2013, with Georgia, Armenia, and Spain completing the top five. San Marino received its best result in any Eurovision event to date, and, for the fourth year in a row, Albania received its second-best result to date. Ireland finished last for the second time in three years.