Upcoming Competitions
Ready to compete? Use these official WCA resources and first-competition notes to find current events, check registration windows, and prepare before event day. Estimated read time: 8 minutes.
Official WCA competition calendar
- What to check
- Announced competitions, filters, and event pages
- Scope
- Worldwide
- Best next action
- Best next action: Search by country, date, and event
Individual competition pages
- What to check
- Venue, schedule, events, fees, and registration period
- Scope
- Each event
- Best next action
- Best next action: Read every tab before registering
WCA account and profile
- What to check
- Account access and WCA ID linking
- Scope
- Competitors
- Best next action
- Best next action: Sign in before registration opens
WCA FAQ and regulations
- What to check
- Eligibility, puzzle rules, and competition basics
- Scope
- All competitors
- Best next action
- Best next action: Review the rules before your first event
WCA Live
- What to check
- Schedules, groups, and live results on event day
- Scope
- Active competitions
- Best next action
- Best next action: Check the venue schedule and posted results
| Resource | What to check | Scope | Best next action |
|---|---|---|---|
| Official WCA competition calendar | Announced competitions, filters, and event pages | Worldwide | Search by country, date, and event |
| Individual competition pages | Venue, schedule, events, fees, and registration period | Each event | Read every tab before registering |
| WCA account and profile | Account access and WCA ID linking | Competitors | Sign in before registration opens |
| WCA FAQ and regulations | Eligibility, puzzle rules, and competition basics | All competitors | Review the rules before your first event |
| WCA Live | Schedules, groups, and live results on event day | Active competitions | Check the venue schedule and posted results |
First competition guide
A competition page is more than a date and location. It is the source for registration rules, events, time limits, fees, venue instructions, schedules, and contact details. Use the sections below to prepare before you register and before you arrive.
How to find your first WCA competition
Use the official WCA competition calendar and filter by country, region, date, and event. Open each event page instead of relying only on the calendar card, because registration limits, venue details, fees, schedules, and side events live on the individual page.
For a first competition, choose an event that gives you enough travel time and has events you can solve comfortably. You do not need to be fast. You only need to know the rules, bring legal puzzles, and be able to finish within any listed time limits.
How registration works
Most competitions require a WCA account and event-specific registration before the deadline. Some events fill quickly, so read the opening time, accepted payment methods, competitor limit, waitlist policy, and refund notes before registration opens.
After registering, watch your email and the event page for updates. Being on a registration list, waitlist, or accepted competitor list can mean different things depending on the organizer and payment status.
What to bring
Bring your main puzzles, backups if you have them, a valid ID if the organizer requests it, water, snacks if allowed, and anything you need for a long day at the venue. Label your cube bag or keep it with you because many competitors bring similar hardware.
Do not bring lubricants, tools, or accessories into the solving area unless staff allow them. Keep phones and smart devices away during official attempts unless the judge or delegate gives specific instructions.
What happens on competition day
Check in when you arrive, listen for announcements, and find your groups on the schedule or WCA Live if the event uses it. You may be asked to judge, scramble, or run cards when you are not solving, especially at smaller competitions.
During an attempt, your cube is scrambled out of sight, covered, and brought to the station. When the judge says inspection may begin, you have up to 15 seconds to inspect before starting the solve according to the regulations.
What inspection means
Inspection is planning time, not solving time. You can pick up the cube and look at it, but you cannot make turns that start solving the puzzle. The judge warns at 8 and 12 seconds, and starting too late can cause penalties.
Beginners should use inspection to find the first step, usually cross pieces or first-layer pieces. A simple plan is better than staring at the whole cube and rushing after the timer starts.
Common first-competition mistakes
The most common mistakes are arriving late, missing group calls, forgetting to stop the timer correctly, talking near active solving stations, and practicing with a cube while assigned to judge or scramble.
Read the competitor tutorial and ask staff when uncertain. WCA delegates and organizers expect first-timers, but they also need competitors to follow instructions so the event stays on schedule.
Parent and guardian notes for minors
Many competitors are students, and first competitions often include families. A parent or guardian should review the venue, travel plan, schedule length, food options, check-in instructions, and organizer contact information before the event.
If a minor is new to competitions, stay close enough to help them hear group calls and understand assignments, but let staff and judges run official attempts. Ask the organizer ahead of time about venue policies or accessibility needs.
Competition checklist
- Create or sign into a WCA account before registration opens.
- Read the competition page tabs, not only the calendar listing.
- Check events, time limits, fees, registration status, and waitlist rules.
- Practice with inspection and a stackmat-style start/stop routine.
- Bring legal puzzles and a backup cube if you have one.
- Arrive early enough to check in and find your first group.
- Review judging and scrambling expectations before event day.
FAQs & Pro Tips
Open the WCA competition calendar, choose an event, read the Register tab, and complete that event's instructions before its deadline.
Bring competition-legal puzzles, a valid ID if requested, registration or payment confirmation if applicable, and anything the venue allows for a long event day.
Yes. The WCA does not set a minimum age, but minors should have parent or guardian permission and follow any event-specific check-in requirements.
No. You only need to meet any listed time limits for the events you enter and follow the competition rules. Many competitors attend their first event while still averaging well over one minute.
A WCA ID is assigned after your first official competition results are posted. Before your first event, you register with a WCA account and receive an ID later.
Sometimes, but it depends on the organizer, registration deadline, competitor limit, and schedule. Read the Register tab and contact the organizer if the event page allows changes.
Tell staff immediately. Organizers may or may not be able to fit you into another group, so arrive early and listen for announcements.
Many events use WCA Live for groups, schedules, and results, but the event page and venue announcements are still the source to follow on competition day.