Held at the INFINITUM resort in Spain, a 156-strong field started Final Stage last Friday with the six-round event finishing on Wednesday.
After 60 players made the cut after the opening four rounds – played across both the Lakes and Hills courses – it was left for the remaining hopefuls to vie to finish among the top 20 and ties and secure DP World Tour playing privileges.
This year, DP World Tour winners Eddie Pepperell, Shubhankar Sharma, Adri Arnaus and Matthew Baldwin are among those to do just that, while there are six players who have come through all three stages of Qualifying School to earn the right to compete on the Race to Dubai next season.
Among those to just fall short of securing Category 18 status on the DP World Tour were France's Alexander Levy and Scotland's Marc Warren, who have nine DP World Tour titles between them, with both eligible for membership of the HotelPlanner Tour in Category 9 for the 2026 season.
South Africa’s Zander Lombard won the six-round test of endurance on 36 under par – finishing a remarkable 13 shots clear of his nearest challengers – with an aggregate total of 18 under good enough to finish among the top 20.
Here, we breakdown the players who have secured their DP World Tour status for 2026…
Swift returns to Golf's Global Tour
Final Stage of Qualifying School began less than two weeks on from the culmination of the regular DP World Tour season, with several players who finished outside the top 115 on the Race to Dubai Rankings to lose their full playing privileges promptly regaining status at Final Stage.

Leading that charge was event winner Lombard, who had a delayed start to his 2025 season after an anterior cruciate ligament rupture and medial meniscus tear sustained playing padel in June 2024 forced him to be on the sidelines for seven months.
“It’s been a tough year and a half," he said.
"From knee surgery, learning how to walk again, to trying to find my game the last six months and then really starting to enjoy the game again the last two.
"It’s been trending and hopefully I can keep this form for the year to come.”

Aaron Cockerill finished 120th on the Rankings, but the Canadian, with his back to the wall can look forward to his starts again on the DP World Tour, as can India’s Sharma after he put a season of toil behind him – attributed to struggles with new equipment – by coming through Second Stage and then Final Stage as the pair finished in a T2
Nathan Kimsey, the HotelPlanner Tour’s Number One in 2022, is no stranger to Q-School having come through all three stages on his way to winning Final Stage in 2016. He has had his injury troubles over recent years and went without a top ten last season but is another who will be teeing it up during the early weeks of the new season after finishing solo fifth.
Fellow Englishman Baldwin won his maiden DP World Tour title in 2023 - on his 200th start - but lost his card last month, bouncing back quickly from that disappointment at Final Stage as he finished birdie-eagle to finish in the top ten.
Andreas Halvorsen of Norway is another who played on the DP World Tour last season and will be back on Golf’s Global Tour later this month and beyond, while Adri Arnaus is a well-known name who will hope to return to the form that saw him win in his homeland in 2022.
The headline maker
Already one of European golf’s best known players, Pepperell has only bolstered his legion of fans in the past couple of years through The Chipping Forecast, a podcast he co-hosts alongside broadcasters Andrew Cotter and Iain Carter.
On paper, he was the biggest name on the entry list at Final Stage and his success in securing playing privileges will be a source of great happiness for many from far and wide.
Having bogeyed the 12th in his final round, the Englishman was three outside the projected number to finish in the top 20 and ties but he closed with four consecutive birdies to finish at 19 under, in a share of 12th place.
Last year, he missed from seven feet for eagle at the last to miss out on status by one shot so it was no surprise that he was emotional after his stunning finish.
“I’m pretty proud of myself actually," he said. "That was a tough day [with] a great finish.
"I didn’t have too many goals coming into these two weeks.
"I was just looking forward to playing some golf to be quite honest and hoping that I would play well.
"This week felt like a bit of a struggle at times and never more so than today midway through the round, but I really hung in there. I am delighted."
The headline maker
Already one of European golf’s best known players, Pepperell has only bolstered his legion of fans in the past couple of years through The Chipping Forecast, a podcast he co-hosts alongside broadcasters Andrew Cotter and Iain Carter.
On paper, he was the biggest name on the entry list at Final Stage and his success in securing playing privileges will be a source of great happiness for many from far and wide.
Having bogeyed the 12th in his final round, the Englishman was three outside the projected number to finish in the top 20 and ties but he closed with four consecutive birdies to finish at -19 in a share of 12th place.
Last year, he missed from seven feet for eagle at the last to miss out on status by one shot so it was no surprise that he was emotional after his stunning finish.
“I’m pretty proud of myself actually," he said. "That was a tough day [with] a great finish.
"I didn’t have too many goals coming into these two weeks.
"I was just looking forward to playing some golf to be quite honest and hoping that I would play well.
"This week felt like a bit of a struggle at times and never more so than today midway through the round, but I really hung in there. I am delighted."
From First Stage to the DP World Tour
The gruelling six-day marathon that is Final Stage marked the climax of Qualifying School, which began earlier this year in late August.
Across First Stage and Second Stage there have been 14 events, with six players contesting at least 252 holes to secure career-changing DP World Tour status.
Among those is Brazil’s Frederico Biondi Figueiredo, who won over the opening weekend of First Stage, with fellow South American Andres German Gallegos of Argentina also a winner at First Stage.
Scottish-born Australian Connor McKinney, who led after a flawless 62 in the opening round at Final Stage, finished in a T2 at INFINITUM, with Portugal’s Daniel Rodrigues, whose only DP World Tour appearance came as an amateur on home soil in 2019, making the most of the platform that Q-School provides.
Joining them were American Hunter Logan and Mike Toorop of the Netherlands, who revealed he spent 15 minutes crying outside recorders thinking of his ten-month old son as he came to grips with swapping playing on the Germany-based Pro Golf Tour for the DP World Tour.
Meanwhile, Quentin Debove of France, England's Jack Hule and Thailand's Sadom Kaewkanjana secured their DP World Tour status by coming through Second and Final Stages.
Debove - ranked outside the world's top 1000 - will join a strong French contingent on the Race to Dubai next season, having played on the Alps Tour this year.
At 31, Hule has swapped the Clutch Pro Tour for the DP World Tour, while Kaewkanjana is a three-time winner on the Asian Tour.
Final Stage specialists
Describing them as specialists might be a bit of a stretch, but securing DP World Tour status over back-to-back years at Final Stage is no mean feat.
Having finished third last year, American Davis Bryant carded a 62 on day three to help him comfortably finish among the top 20 and he will hope to be better equipped for his second taste of the DP World Tour after a rookie season that saw him combine playing opportunities across both the DP World Tour and HotelPlanner Tour.
Gregorio de Leo made 17 starts on the DP World Tour in his rookie season after graduating from Q-School last year, registering two top tens as he finished 130th on the Race to Dubai Rankings.
The third and final member of this group is Benjamin Follet-Smith, with the Zimbabwean – a two-time winner on the HotelPlanner Tour – hoping to make a quick adjustment when the 2026 Race to Dubai begins after coming through two stages of qualifying.
Last season, he prioritised events on both the DP World Tour and HotelPlanner Tour that were co-sanctioned by the Sunshine Tour, before struggling for form as the Tour arrived in Europe.
europeantour.com
Bryan Angus (edit)