2025 World Grand Prix
| Tournament information | |
|---|---|
| Dates | 4–9 March 2025 | 
| Venue | Kai Tak Arena | 
| City | Kowloon City | 
| Country | Hong Kong | 
| Organisation | World Snooker Tour | 
| Format | Ranking event | 
| Total prize fund | £700,000 | 
| Winner's share | £180,000 | 
| Highest break | Judd Trump (ENG) (146) | 
| Final | |
| Champion | Neil Robertson (AUS) | 
| Runner-up | Stuart Bingham (ENG) | 
| Score | 10–0 | 
| ← 2024  | |
The 2025 World Grand Prix was a professional snooker tournament that took place from 4 to 9 March 2025 at the Kai Tak Arena, Hong Kong. The 15th ranking event of the 2024–25 season, it followed the 2025 World Open and preceded the 2025 Players Championship. It was the first of three events in the Players Series, preceding the 2025 Players Championship and the 2025 Tour Championship. The event was broadcast by Now TV, ViuTV and ViuTVsix domestically and by other broadcasters worldwide. The winner received £180,000 from a total prize fund of £700,000. Staged in Hong Kong for the first time in its history, the tournament was the first professional ranking snooker tournament held in the territory since the 1989 Hong Kong Open.
The event featured the top 32 players on the one-year ranking list as it stood after the 2025 Welsh Open. Ronnie O'Sullivan, who had defeated Judd Trump 10–7 in the 2024 final, withdrew prior to the tournament on medical grounds. Hossein Vafaei, who was ranked 33rd on the one-year list after the Welsh Open, replaced O'Sullivan in the draw.
Neil Robertson won the tournament, defeating Stuart Bingham 10–0 in the final to secure his second World Grand Prix title and the 25th ranking title of his career. It was the fourth time a player had won a two-session ranking final by a whitewash, and only the second time by a 10–0 scoreline, following the 1989 Grand Prix, where Steve Davis defeated Dean Reynolds. The other two-session ranking final whitewashes had occurred at the 2020 European Masters, where Robertson defeated Zhou Yuelong, and the 2022 German Masters, where Zhao Xintong defeated Yan Bingtao, both by 9–0 scorelines. A total of 42 century breaks were made during the event, the highest being a 146 by Trump.