Chess Rating System - Elo Rating System

Elo Rating System

The Elo system was invented by Arpad Elo and is the most common system. It is used by FIDE and other organizations.

FIDE classifies tournaments into categories according to the average rating of the players. Each category is 25 rating points wide. Category 1 is for an average rating of 2251 to 2275, category 2 is 2276 to 2300, etc. For women's tournaments, the categories are 200 rating points lower, so a Category 1 is an average rating of 2051 to 2075, etc.

Elo scales, 1978
Rating range Category
2600+ World Championship contenders
2400–2600 most Grandmasters (GM) and International Masters (IM)
2300–2400 FIDE Masters (FM)
2200–2300 FIDE Candidate Masters (CM), most national masters
2000–2200 candidate masters, experts (USA)
1800–2000 Class A, category 1
1600–1800 Class B, category 2
1400–1600 Class C, category 3
1200–1400 Class D, category 4
below 1200 novices

The USCF uses a modification of the Elo system, where the K factor varies and there are bonus points for superior performance in a tournament. The USCF classifies players according to their rating (Just & Burg 2003:259–73). USCF ratings are generally 50 to 100 points higher than the FIDE equivalents (Just & Burg 2003:112).

USCF rating categories
Category Rating range
Senior master 2400 and up
National master 2200–2399
Expert 2000–2199
Class A 1800–1999
Class B 1600–1799
Class C 1400–1599
Class D 1200–1399
Class E 1000–1199
Class F 800–999
Class G 600–799
Class H 400–599
Class I 200–399
Class J 100–199

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