Chess has a deep-rooted history in India, widely believed to have originated from the game of chaturanga during the Gupta Empire in circa 6th century CE. Over centuries, it evolved and spread across the world, influencing modern chess as we know it today.[1]

Stamp depicting the 44th Chess Olympiad, the first hosted by India, in Chennai.

In the contemporary era, India has emerged as a major chess power, excelling in international tournaments and the country currently has the second best federation in the world with a 2712 top-ten rating.[2] The country holds multiple Chess Olympiad victories in both the men's and women's sections[3] and has crowned two World Chess Champions: Viswanathan Anand, a five-time champion who revolutionized Indian chess, and Gukesh Dommaraju, the current reigning champion.[4]

The rise of chess in modern India is often credited to Anand, whose dominance from the late 1990s to the early 2010s inspired a generation of players. His success, coupled with the growth of digital platforms and widespread grassroots training programs, has fueled a chess boom, making India one of the leading nations in the sport. The country now has a robust chess ecosystem, supported by the All India Chess Federation (AICF) and a network of state associations, academies, and online communities.[4][5]

Early history

edit
Hindu deity Krishna and Radha playing chaturanga, which laid the foundation for modern chess

Chess originated in India with its earliest known form, chaturanga, dating back roughly 1,500 years to the 6th century, during the Gupta Empire. Chaturanga is considered the earliest precursor to modern chess because it had key features that would appear in later variations: different pieces possessing different powers and victory depending on the fate of one piece, the king.[1][6]

As trade and cultural exchanges flourished along the Silk Road, Chaturanga spread to Persia, where it evolved into Shatranj. The game underwent further refinements in the Islamic world and medieval Europe, ultimately transforming into the modern chess we recognize today.[1][6]

Modern history

edit

Modern chess in India began officially with the formation of All India Chess Federation in 1951. This was soon followed by the first Indian Chess Championship, held in Eluru, Andhra Pradesh. In 1956, India made its debut at the 12th Chess Olympiad in Moscow.[4] Then, Manuel Aaron achieved the feat as the first Indian to become an International Master, in 1961.[citation needed]

In 1977, Rohini Khadilkar became the first female player to compete in the Indian Chess Championship. Some players objected to her being in the tournament because she was female. Her father wrote to the World Chess Federation president, Max Euwe, and Euwe ruled that female players could not be barred from open chess events.[7]

Former World Champion Vishwanathan Anand is credited with popularizing chess in modern India.

In 1988, 19-year old Viswanathan Anand of Chennai became India's first Grandmaster. He then embarked on a journey to become the first Indian to qualify for the Candidates Tournament, win the Candidates in 1995, 1998 and then finally become the World Champion in 2000 by beating Spain's Alexei Shirov. He would go on to defend the title for more than a decade, until he lost the Championship to Magnus Carlsen in 2013. In 1997, the All India Chess Federation for the Blind was formed with the intention of promoting chess amongst the country's visually impaired people.[4]

Subbaraman Vijayalaksmi became the country's first Woman International Master in 1996. She then became India's first Woman Grandmaster in 2001. Soon, in 2002 Koneru Humpy became the youngest female player ever, and the first Indian female player, to achieve the title of Grandmaster, aged 15 years, 1 month, 27 days, a record only since surpassed by Hou Yifan.[8][9] India's first Chess Olympiad medal was a bronze in 2014. In 2022, India won bronze medals in the Open and Women category in the first Chess Olympiad hosted by India at Chennai. The nation's first Olympiad gold was then clenched in both categories at the 45th Chess Olympiad in Budapest.[4][10]

In 2024, Gukesh D made history by becoming the youngest player to win the Candidates Tournament, subsequently clinching the World Chess Championship title with a narrow one-point victory over Ding Liren.[11]

As of December 2024, India boasts 85 chess grandmasters, with 13 ranked among the world's top 100 players. The country has over 30,000 rated players actively participating in officially sanctioned tournaments nationwide. This robust participation has solidified India's status as a chess superpower, with its top 10 players achieving an average Elo rating of 2721, ranking second globally.[12][13][14]

Current rankings

edit

Open

edit

As per FIDE's December 2025 rankings.[15]

# Title Player World Rank Rating Age
1 GM Arjun Erigaisi 5 2782 22 years, 288 days
1 GM Rameshbabu Praggnanandhaa 7 2761 20 years, 312 days
3 GM Gukesh Dommaraju 10 2754 20 years, 20 days
4 GM Viswanathan Anand 12 2743 56 years, 189 days
5 GM Vidit Gujrathi 29 2708 31 years, 237 days
6 GM Aravindh Chithambaram 31 2703 26 years, 280 days
7 GM Nihal Sarin 32 2701 21 years, 340 days
8 GM Pentala Harikrishna 35 2693 40 years, 39 days
9 GM Karthikeyan Murali 57 2660 28 years, 159 days
10 GM Pranav Venkatesh 83 2641 20 years, 248 days

Women

edit

As per FIDE's December 2025 rankings.[16]

# Title Player World Rank Rating Age
1 GM Humpy Koneru 5 2535 39 years, 79 days
2 GM Divya Deshmukh 12 2497 20 years, 191 days
3 GM Vaishali Rameshbabu 17 2473 24 years, 362 days
4 GM Harika Dronavalli 19 2466 35 years, 157 days
5 WGM Rakshitta Ravi 62 2381 39 years, 302 days
6 IM Vantika Agrawal 71 2369 23 years, 263 days
7 IM Padmini Rout 87 2354 32 years, 164 days
8 IM Savitha Shri B 100+ 2334 34 years, 30 days
9 IM Bhakti Kulkarni 100+ 2316 34 years, 30 days
10 IM Subbaraman Vijayalakshmi 100+ 2311 47 years, 85 days

National and international records

edit

Medal table

edit

Summary - Team

edit
TournamentTeam‹See Tfd›Gold medal – World‹See Tfd›Silver‹See Tfd›BronzeTotal
Olympiad M 1 0 2 3
F 1 0 1 2
X 1 0 1 2
World Team Championship M 0 0 1 1
F 0 1 0 1
Asian Games M 0 1 1 2
F 0 1 0 1
X 1 0 0 1
Asian Indoor and Martial Arts Games M 0 0 3 3
F 0 0 1 1
X 1 2 2 5
Asian Team Championship M 3 6 4 13
F 0 5 3 8
World Mind Sports Games X 0 1 0 1
Total 8 17 19 44

Summary - Individual

edit
TournamentGender‹See Tfd›Gold medal – World‹See Tfd›Silver‹See Tfd›BronzeTotal
World Championship M 5 5 0 10
F 0 1 6 7
World Rapid
World Blitz
M 2 2 4 8
F 1 2 3 6
World Cup M 2 1 0 3
F 1 1 0 2
Olympiad M 4 4 1 9
F 3 3 4 10
Asian Games M 0 0 0 0
F 1 0 1 2
World Team Championship M 3 0 4 7
F 2 5 4 11
Asian Team Championship M 20 15 14 49
F 6 17 10 33
Asian Indoor and Martial Arts Games M 2 0 2 4
F 2 0 2 4
Total 54 56 49 159
  • Updated till 31 December 2025

Olympiad

edit

Open

edit

Open Individual

edit

Women

edit

Women Individual

edit

Online

edit

World Championship

edit

Open

edit

Women

edit

World Rapid and Blitz Championships

edit

World Team Championship

edit

Open

edit

Women

edit

Asian Team Championship

edit

Open

edit
Medal Event Team
‹See Tfd›Bronze 1983 New Delhi Dibyendu Barua
Pravin Thipsay
Pabitra Mohanty
Syed Nasir Ali
Mohamed Rafiq Khan
Neeraj Kumar Mishra
‹See Tfd›Silver 1986 Dubai Vaidyanathan Ravikumar
Arun Vaidya
Ahanthem Meetei
Viswanathan Anand
Devaki Prasad
Balottam Verma
‹See Tfd›Bronze 1989 Genting Highlands Viswanathan Anand
Pravin Thipsay
Lanka Ravi
Raja Ravi Sekhar
Dibyendu Barua
N. Sudhakar Babu
‹See Tfd›Bronze 1999 Shenyang Sasikiran Krishnan
Pravin Thipsay
Abhijit Kunte
Devaki Prasad
G. B. Prakash
‹See Tfd›Silver 2003 Jodhpur Sasikiran Krishnan
Surya Shekhar Ganguly
Pentala Harikrishna
Dibyendu Barua
Abhijit Kunte
‹See Tfd›Bronze 2003 Jodhpur Neelotpal Das
Sriram Jha
Lanka Ravi
Dinesh Kumar Sharma
Roktim Bandyopadhyay
‹See Tfd›Gold 2005 Esfahan Sasikiran Krishnan
Abhijit Kunte
Surya Shekhar Ganguly
Sundararajan Kidambi
Sandipan Chanda
‹See Tfd›Silver 2008 Visakhapatnam Sasikiran Krishnan
Surya Shekhar Ganguly
Abhijit Kunte
Geetha Narayanan Gopal
Abhijeet Gupta
‹See Tfd›Gold 2009 Kolkata Pentala Harikrishna
Sasikiran Krishnan
Surya Shekhar Ganguly
Parimarjan Negi
J. Deepan Chakkravarthy
‹See Tfd›Silver 2012 Zaozhuang Sasikiran Krishnan
Pentala Harikrishna
Parimarjan Negi
Abhijeet Gupta
Geetha Narayanan Gopal
‹See Tfd›Silver 2014 Tabriz S. P. Sethuraman
Adhiban Baskaran
Sasikiran Krishnan
Parimarjan Negi
Musunuri Rohit Lalit Babu
‹See Tfd›Gold 2016 Abu Dhabi Adhiban Baskaran
S. P. Sethuraman
Vidit Gujrathi
Sasikiran Krishnan
Deep Sengupta
‹See Tfd›Silver 2018 Hamadan Adhiban Baskaran
S. P. Sethuraman
Sasikiran Krishnan
Surya Shekhar Ganguly
Abhijeet Gupta
Medal Event Player Category
‹See Tfd›Silver 1977 Auckland Nasiruddin Ghalib Board 6
‹See Tfd›Bronze 1981 Hangzhou Manuel Aaron Board 1
‹See Tfd›Gold Tiruchi Natesan Parameswaran Board 2
‹See Tfd›Bronze 1983 New Delhi Dibyendu Barua Board 1
‹See Tfd›Gold Pravin Thipsay Board 2
‹See Tfd›Silver 1986 Dubai Ahanthem Meetei Board 3
‹See Tfd›Gold Viswanathan Anand Board 4
‹See Tfd›Silver Devaki Prasad Board 5
‹See Tfd›Gold 1987 Singapore Devaki Prasad Board 5
‹See Tfd›Gold 1989 Genting Highlands Viswanathan Anand Board 1
‹See Tfd›Bronze Dibyendu Barua Board 5
‹See Tfd›Gold N. Sudhakar Babu Board 6
‹See Tfd›Bronze 1991 Penang P. D. S. Girinath Board 1
‹See Tfd›Bronze 1993 Kuala Lumpur Jayant Suresh Gokhale Board 6
‹See Tfd›Bronze 1999 Shenyang Abhijit Kunte Board 3
‹See Tfd›Gold G. B. Prakash Board 5
‹See Tfd›Bronze 2003 Jodhpur Sasikiran Krishnan Board 1
‹See Tfd›Gold Pravin Thipsay Board 2
‹See Tfd›Gold Lanka Ravi Board 3
‹See Tfd›Silver Dinesh Kumar Sharma Board 4
‹See Tfd›Silver Abhijit Kunte Board 5
‹See Tfd›Silver 2005 Esfahan Sasikiran Krishnan Board 1
‹See Tfd›Bronze Abhijit Kunte Board 2
‹See Tfd›Gold Surya Shekhar Ganguly Board 3
‹See Tfd›Silver Sundararajan Kidambi Board 4
‹See Tfd›Silver Sandipan Chanda Board 5
‹See Tfd›Silver 2008 Visakhapatnam Sasikiran Krishnan Board 1
‹See Tfd›Silver Surya Shekhar Ganguly Board 2
‹See Tfd›Bronze Abhijit Kunte Board 3
‹See Tfd›Gold Geetha Narayanan Gopal Board 4
‹See Tfd›Silver Abhijeet Gupta Board 5
‹See Tfd›Bronze 2009 Kolkata Pentala Harikrishna Board 1
‹See Tfd›Gold Sasikiran Krishnan Board 2
‹See Tfd›Gold Surya Shekhar Ganguly Board 3
‹See Tfd›Gold Parimarjan Negi Board 4
‹See Tfd›Bronze J. Deepan Chakkravarthy Board 5
‹See Tfd›Gold 2012 Zaozhuang Parimarjan Negi Board 3
‹See Tfd›Gold Abhijeet Gupta Board 3
‹See Tfd›Gold 2014 Tabriz Sasikiran Krishnan Board 3
‹See Tfd›Silver Parimarjan Negi Board 4
‹See Tfd›Bronze Musunuri Rohit Lalit Babu Board 5
‹See Tfd›Silver 2016 Abu Dhabi Adhiban Baskaran Board 1
‹See Tfd›Bronze S. P. Sethuraman Board 2
‹See Tfd›Gold Vidit Gujrathi Board 3
‹See Tfd›Silver Sasikiran Krishnan Board 4
‹See Tfd›Silver 2018 Hamadan Adhiban Baskaran Board 1
‹See Tfd›Gold S. P. Sethuraman Board 2
‹See Tfd›Gold Sasikiran Krishnan Board 3
‹See Tfd›Bronze Abhijeet Gupta Board 5

Women

edit
Medal Event Team
‹See Tfd›Bronze 1999 Shenyang Bhagyashree Thipsay
Subbaraman Vijayalakshmi
Swati Ghate
Shahnaz Safira
‹See Tfd›Bronze 2003 Jodhpur Subbaraman Vijayalakshmi
Nisha Mohota
Aarthie Ramaswamy
Harika Dronavalli
‹See Tfd›Silver 2005 Esfahan Nisha Mohota
Mary Ann Gomes
Swati Ghate
Anupama Gokhale
‹See Tfd›Silver 2008 Visakhapatnam Harika Dronavalli
Nisha Mohota
Tania Sachdev
Aarthie Ramaswamy
‹See Tfd›Silver 2009 Kolkata Harika Dronavalli
Eesha Karavade
Tania Sachdev
Soumya Swaminathan
Kruttika Nadig
‹See Tfd›Silver 2012 Zaozhuang Harika Dronavalli
Eesha Karavade
Tania Sachdev
Mary Ann Gomes
Padmini Rout
‹See Tfd›Silver 2014 Tabriz Harika Dronavalli
Tania Sachdev
Eesha Karavade
Mary Ann Gomes
Padmini Rout
‹See Tfd›Bronze 2018 Hamadan Harika Dronavalli
Vaishali Rameshbabu
Eesha Karavade
Padmini Rout
Aakanksha Hagawane
Medal Event Player Category
‹See Tfd›Silver 1999 Shenyang Subbaraman Vijayalakshmi Board 2
‹See Tfd›Silver Swati Ghate Board 3
‹See Tfd›Silver Shahnaz Safira Board 4
‹See Tfd›Bronze 2003 Jodhpur Subbaraman Meenakshi Board 1
‹See Tfd›Silver Swati Ghate Board 2
‹See Tfd›Silver Anupama Gokhale Board 3
‹See Tfd›Gold Harika Dronavalli Board 4
‹See Tfd›Bronze Sai Meera Ravi Board 4
‹See Tfd›Silver 2005 Esfahan Nisha Mohota Board 1
‹See Tfd›Silver Mary Ann Gomes Board 2
‹See Tfd›Gold Swati Ghate Board 3
‹See Tfd›Silver 2008 Visakhapatnam Harika Dronavalli Board 1
‹See Tfd›Silver Nisha Mohota Board 2
‹See Tfd›Silver Tania Sachdev Board 3
‹See Tfd›Gold Aarthie Ramaswamy Board 4
‹See Tfd›Bronze Tejaswi Kanuri Board 4
‹See Tfd›Gold 2009 Kolkata Harika Dronavalli Board 1
‹See Tfd›Silver Tania Sachdev Board 3
‹See Tfd›Bronze Padmini Rout Board 3
‹See Tfd›Bronze Bhakti Kulkarni Board 4
‹See Tfd›Silver Kruttika Nadig Board 5
‹See Tfd›Bronze 2012 Zaozhuang Tania Sachdev Board 3
‹See Tfd›Silver Padmini Rout Board 5
‹See Tfd›Gold 2014 Tabriz Harika Dronavalli Board 1
‹See Tfd›Silver Tania Sachdev Board 2
‹See Tfd›Bronze Mary Ann Gomes Board 4
‹See Tfd›Silver Padmini Rout Board 5
‹See Tfd›Silver 2016 Abu Dhabi Harika Dronavalli Board 2
‹See Tfd›Gold Soumya Swaminathan Board 4
‹See Tfd›Silver 2018 Hamadan Harika Dronavalli Board 1
‹See Tfd›Bronze Eesha Karavade Board 3
‹See Tfd›Bronze Padmini Rout Board 4
‹See Tfd›Bronze Aakanksha Hagawane Board 5

World Cup

edit

Asian Games

edit

Asian Indoor and Martial Arts Games

edit

Men's individual standard

edit

Women's individual standard

edit

Mixed team standard

edit

Men's individual rapid

edit

Men's team rapid U-23

edit

Women's individual rapid

edit

Women's team rapid

edit

Mixed team rapid

edit

Men's individual blitz

edit

Men's team blitz

edit

Men's team blitz U-23

edit

Women's individual blitz

edit

Mixed team blitz

edit

National award recipients

edit
Year Recipient Award Gender
1991–1992 Viswanathan Anand Khel Ratna AwardMale
1961 Manuel Aaron Arjuna AwardMale
1980–1981 Rohini Khadilkar Arjuna AwardFemale
1983 Dibyendu Barua Arjuna AwardMale
1984 Pravin Thipsay Arjuna AwardMale
1985 Viswanathan Anand Arjuna AwardMale
1986 Raghunandan Vasant Gokhle Dronacharya AwardMale
1987 Devaki Prasad Arjuna AwardMale
1987 Bhagyashree Thipsay Arjuna AwardFemale
1990 Anupama Gokhale Arjuna AwardFemale
2000 Subbaraman Vijayalakshmi Arjuna AwardFemale
2002 Krishnan Sasikiran Arjuna AwardMale
2003 Koneru Humpy Arjuna AwardFemale
2005 Surya Shekhar Ganguly Arjuna AwardMale
2006 Pentala Harikrishna Arjuna AwardMale
2006 Koneru Ashok Dronacharya AwardMale
2007 Harika Dronavalli Arjuna AwardFemale
2009 Tania Sachdev Arjuna AwardFemale
2010 Parimarjan Negi Arjuna AwardMale
2013 Abhijeet Gupta Arjuna AwardMale
2022 Bhakti Kulkarni Arjuna AwardFemale
2022 R Praggnanandhaa Arjuna AwardMale
2023 R Vaishali Arjuna AwardFemale
2021 Abhijit Kunte Dhyan Chand AwardMale
2023 RB Ramesh Dronacharya AwardMale
2024 Gukesh Dommaraju Khel Ratna AwardMale
2024 Vantika Agrawal Arjuna AwardFemale

See also

edit

References

edit
  1. 1 2 3 "A Game of Thrones - How Chess Conquered the World". Google Arts & Culture. Retrieved 8 February 2025.
  2. "Top Chess Federations FIDE Open>". ratings.fide.com. Retrieved 8 February 2025.
  3. "India's dominant Chess Olympiad win reminds Viswanathan Anand of Soviet teams". India Today. 23 September 2024. Retrieved 8 February 2025.
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 "68 years in the making: Olympiad golds mark milestones in Indian chess history". ESPN. 22 September 2024. Retrieved 8 February 2025.
  5. "Gukesh Dommaraju: How the Indian teenager became youngest world chess champion". 13 December 2024.
  6. 1 2 Alfarsi, Haroun (23 May 2024). "History and Origins of Chess: From India to Persia and Europe". Profolus. Retrieved 8 February 2025.
  7. https://web.archive.org/web/20201118095131/https://www.espn.com/chess/story/_/id/30265331/gender-trenders-queens-gambit-how-india-women-chess-pioneers-fought-patriarchal-system-won
  8. https://web.archive.org/web/20240803195020/https://www.localsamosa.com/people-culture/chess-grandmasters-of-india-6264939
  9. "Humpy emerges winner at Elekes". The Times of India. 29 May 2002. Retrieved 7 September 2023.
  10. "World Chess Championship: Viswanathan Anand's glittering legacy that shaped India's golden generation". Firstpost. 21 November 2024. Retrieved 8 February 2025.
  11. "World Chess Championship 2024 recap: Gukesh Dommaraju becomes youngest ever undisputed world champion - The Mancunion". mancunion.com. 5 February 2025. Retrieved 8 February 2025.
  12. "FIDE Ratings and Statistics". ratings.fide.com. Retrieved 8 February 2025.
  13. "Gukesh Dommaraju: How the Indian teenager became youngest world chess champion". www.bbc.com. 13 December 2024. Retrieved 8 February 2025.
  14. "D Gukesh, Arjun Erigaisi lead the way as the golden generation of Indian chess finally comes of age in 2024". Firstpost. 16 December 2024. Retrieved 8 February 2025.
  15. "Chess Rankings India Open". ratings.fide.com. World Chess Federation (FIDE).
  16. "Chess Rankings India Female". ratings.fide.com. World Chess Federation (FIDE).
edit