Maximum break


A maximum break is the highest possible in snooker in normal circumstances and is a special type of. A player compiles a maximum break by potting all 15 with 15 for 120 points, followed by all six for a further 27 points. Compiling a maximum break is regarded as a highly significant achievement in the game of snooker and may be compared to a ninedart finish in darts, a holeinone in golf or a 300 game in tenpin bowling.
Joe Davis made the first officially recognised maximum break in a 1955 exhibition match in London. At the Classic in January 1982, Steve Davis achieved the first recognised maximum in professional competition, which was also the first in a televised match. The following year, Cliff Thorburn became the first player to make a maximum at the 1983 [World Snooker Championship|World Snooker Championship]. As of August 2025, over 200 officially recognised maximum breaks have been made in professional tournament play. Ronnie O'Sullivan holds the record for the most maximum breaks in professional competition, with 17, and also the Guinness World Record for the fastest competitive maximum break, which he made at the 1997 World Championship in a time of 5 minutes and 8 seconds. At the 2017 Championship League, Mark Davis became the first player to make two official maximums at the same event. In the 2025 World Snooker Championship qualifiers, Jackson Page became the first player to make two official maximums in the same match. In the 2025 Saudi Arabia Snooker Masters semi-finals, O'Sullivan became the first to make two official maximums in a one-session match or on the same day.
Maximum breaks have become more frequent in professional snooker. Only eight recognised maximums were achieved in professional competition in the 1980s, but 26 occurred in the 1990s, 35 in the 2000s and 86 in the 2010s. As of the 2026 German Masters, 84 officially recognised professional maximums have been made thus far in the 2020s. Since the 1980s, there have been various prizes awarded for maximum breaks. In addition to the 147 bonuses on offer at some tournaments, since the 202324 season the World Snooker Tour has offered a £147,000 prize to a player who makes two maximum breaks during a season's Triple Crown events as well as the Saudi Arabia Snooker Masters. This prize can be won up to three times per season, including multiple times by the same player.

History

Joe Davis compiled the first officially recognised maximum break on 22 January 1955, in a match against Willie Smith at Leicester Square Hall, London. The Billiards Association and Control Council initially refused to accept the break since the match was not played under their rules. At the time, the professional game used a rule whereby after a foul a player could compel the offender to play the next stroke. It was not until a meeting on 20 March 1957 that the break was officially recognised and Davis was presented with a certificate to commemorate his achievement. The match between Davis and Smith was played as part of a series of events marking the closure of Leicester Square Hall; known as Thurston's Hall until 1947, the venue had hosted many important billiards and snooker matches since its opening in 1901, including twelve World Snooker Championship finals. John Spencer compiled a maximum break in the 1979 Holsten Lager International, but it did not count as an official maximum, however, as the break was made on a nontemplated table used during the event. The first official maximum break in professional competition was compiled by Steve Davis in the 1982 Classic at the Queen Elizabeth Hall in Oldham, against John Spencer. This was also the first televised maximum break. For his achievement, Davis won a Lada car provided by the event's sponsors. The following year, Cliff Thorburn became the first player to make a maximum at the World Championship in the fourth frame of his second round match against Terry Griffiths.
Before the 199495 season, the maximum break remained a rare feat, with only 15 official maximums compiled altogether. However, beginning in the 199495 season, at least one maximum break has been achieved every season thereafter. There were 13 maximums scored in each of the 201617, 202223 and 202324 seasons. This was the highest number until the 202425 season, during which there were 15 maximums made. The record was broken again the following season; as of the 2026 German Masters, the 202526 season has already produced 22 maximums.
Mark Selby made the 100th officially recognised maximum break in professional competition on 7 December 2013 in the seventh frame of his semifinal match against Ricky Walden at the UK Championship., 239 official maximum breaks have been recorded in professional competition, with the 200th being made by Joe O'Connor at the Championship League (invitational)|2024 Championship League]. Ronnie O'Sullivan has compiled 17 official competitive maximum breaks, the most achieved by any professional player. Following him are John Higgins with 13, Stephen Hendry with 11, Shaun Murphy with 10, Stuart Bingham and Judd Trump with 9 and Ding Junhui with 7.
On 30 April 2023, Selby made a maximum break in the 16th frame during the 2023 World Championship final against Luca Brecel, the first achieved in a World Championship final. On 7 December 2023, Murphy made a maximum break in his firstround match against Bulcsú Révész in the 2023 Shoot Out, the first ever compiled at the Shoot Out, which is played under a variation of snooker rules, with a shot clock and fouls awarding. On 5 October 2024, in his winning run in event 3, Zhao Xintong made the first ever maximum break on the Q Tour, the secondary snooker tour that serves as a qualification route to the main professional tour, in his 41 win over Shaun Liu.
At least nine players have missed the final black on a score of 140: Robin Hull, Ken Doherty, Barry Pinches, Mark Selby, Michael White, Thepchaiya Un-Nooh, Liang Wenbo in a qualifying match at the 2018 World Championship, after he had already made a maximum earlier in the same match, and both Joe O'Connor and Jack Lisowski at the 2025 Championship League. Breaks above 147 are possible when an opponent fouls and leaves a with all 15 reds still remaining on the table. A break greater than 147 has happened only once in professional competition, when Jamie Burnett made a break of 148 at the qualifying stage of the 2004 UK Championship. Jamie Cope compiled a break of 155 points, the highest possible freeball break, during practice in 2005. Alex Higgins is said by some players to have attained the same feat.

Records

First maximums

The first known maximum break in practice was made by Murt O'Donoghue at Griffith, Australian Capital Territory, Australia, on 26 September 1934. Joe Davis compiled the first official 147 against Willie Smith in an exhibition match on 22 January 1955 at Leicester Square Hall, London. Rex Williams made the first maximum break in a competitive match against Manuel Francisco, Professionals v. Amateurs, on 23 December 1965 in Cape Town.
John Spencer made the first maximum compiled in professional competition on 13 January 1979 at the Holsten Lager Tournament against Cliff Thorburn, but it was not officially ratified due to oversized pockets. The break was not caught on video as the television crew were away on a tea break. The first official maximum break in professional competition was made by Steve Davis in the 1982 Lada Classic against Spencer. This was also the first televised 147. Thorburn became the first player to make a maximum break at the World Snooker Championship, achieved in 1983 during his second-round match against Terry Griffiths.
Thorburn made a second competitive maximum break in March 1989, becoming the first player to make two maximum breaks in competition. In November 1995, Hendry made his second televised maximum break, becoming the first player to have made two 147s on television. In March 2019, Mink Nutcharut made a 147 during a practice match at the Hi-End Snooker Club in Thailand. She is believed to be the only woman to have made a maximum break, either in practice or in competition.

World Snooker Championship maximums

There have been 15 maximums made at the main stage of the World Championship—staged at the Crucible Theatre in Sheffield, England—by 11 different players. Thorburn made the first, followed by Jimmy White, Stephen Hendry, Ronnie O'Sullivan, Mark Williams, Ali Carter, John Higgins, Neil Robertson, Kyren Wilson, Mark Selby and Mark Allen. Another eight maximums have been made during World Championship qualifying matches, by six players: Robert Milkins, Gary Wilson, Liang Wenbo, Graeme Dott, Noppon Saengkham and Jackson Page.

Multiple maximums

More than one official maximum break has been compiled in the same event on more than twenty occasions. The first tournament with more than one maximum break was the 1992 Matchroom League, in which John Parrott and Stephen Hendry each made a 147 break. The first time that two maximum breaks were made in the same ranking tournament was at the 1999 British Open, where Jason Prince made one during qualifying and Graeme Dott at the main event. This was repeated at the 2000 Scottish Open, with Stephen Maguire in qualifying and Ronnie O'Sullivan at the main event. The 2008 World Snooker Championship was the first event where two maximum breaks were televised. Two maximum breaks were also televised at the 2019 Welsh Open.
Three official maximums at the same professional tournament have been achieved six times. The first was at the 2012 UK Championship, when Andy Hicks and Jack Lisowski both compiled one each in qualifying and John Higgins compiled one in the televised stages. The second time was at the 2017 German Masters, where Ali Carter and Ross Muir both compiled one each during qualifying and Tom Ford during the televised stages. The third time was at the 2024 Championship League by Kyren Wilson in Group 3, by John Higgins in Group 5, and by Joe O'Connor in Group 7. The fourth time was at the 2025 Championship League by Jak Jones in Group 2, by David Gilbert in Group 7, and by Mark Selby in the Winners' Group. The fifth time was at the 2025 Saudi Arabia Snooker Masters, with Thepchaiya Un-Nooh compiling one in his third-round match, and O'Sullivan making a brace in the semi-final. The sixth time was at the 2025 Xi'an Grand Prix, where Zhou Yuelong made one in qualifying, and both Judd Trump and Aaron Hill made maximums at the main stage.
Five official maximums at the same event has been achieved once at the 2026 Championship League by Chris Wakelin, Matthew Selt, Xiao Guodong, Wu Yize, and Zhao Xintong.
The 2012 FFB Snooker Open, 2017 German Masters, 2018 Paul Hunter Classic, 2025 Saudi Arabia Snooker Masters, 2025 Xi'an Grand Prix, and 2026 Championship League are the only events where two maximums were made on the same day.
Mark Davis, Jackson Page and Ronnie O'Sullivan are the only players to make two official maximum breaks in professional competition at the same event. Mark Davis became the first player to do so, when he compiled two 147s at the 2017 Championship League. In the third round of the qualifying stage for the 2025 World Championship, Jackson Page made two maximums in his 102 win over Allan Taylor, with the first in the eighth frame on 13 April 2025 and the second in the twelfth frame the following day. This made him the first player to make two maximums in a professional competitive match. On 15 August 2025, in his 6–3 win over Chris Wakelin in the semi-finals of the 2025 Saudi Arabia Snooker Masters, Ronnie O'Sullivan made maximums in the first and seventh frames of the match, becoming the only player to make two maximums in a one-session match or on the same day.
There have been several noteworthy instances of multiple maximum breaks outside of sanctioned professional competition. Peter Ebdon compiled two maximum breaks during an 11frame exhibition match at Eastbourne Police Club on 15 April 1996, and in 2003 he also compiled two consecutive maximum breaks against Steve Davis in an exhibition match. In 2009 Jimmy White and Ronnie O'Sullivan compiled consecutive maximum breaks at an exhibition match in Ireland, and later in the same year Mark King and Joe Jogia replicated the feat at the Grove Open. The only known instance of more than two maximum breaks being compiled at a single event on the same day is during the Buckley's Bitter Challenge; three 147s were compiled on 8 February 1998, by Matthew Stevens, Ryan Day and Tony Chappel, but were not officially ratified. The only player known to have made more than two maximum breaks on a single occasion is Adrian Gunnell, who compiled three maximums in four frames at a club in Telford in 2003 while practising against Ian Duffy.
John Higgins, Ronnie O'Sullivan and Thepchaiya Un-Nooh are the only players to record maximum breaks in consecutive ranking events. Higgins made maximums at the LG Cup and the British Open in 2003, O'Sullivan at the Northern Ireland Trophy and another at the UK Championship in 2007, and Un-Nooh at the Saudi Arabia Snooker Masters and Wuhan Open in 2025.

Deciding frames and tournament finals

Only ten maximums have been made in. These are: Hendry's at the 1997 Charity Challenge, O'Sullivan's at the 2007 UK Championship, both of Mark Davis's at the 2017 Championship League, Martin Gould's at the 2018 Championship League, Ford's at the 2019 English Open, both Day's and John Higgins's at the 2020 Championship League, Marco Fu's at the 2022 Hong Kong Masters, and Shaun Murphy's at the 2023 Snooker Shoot Out.
Hendry, John Higgins, Bingham, O'Sullivan, Murphy, Robertson, Judd Trump, Selby and Zhang Anda have made maximums in finals of tournaments. Hendry has made three: the first at the 1997 Charity Challenge, the second at the 1999 British Open and the third at the 2001 Malta Grand Prix. Higgins at the 2003 LG Cup and at the 2012 Shanghai Masters, Bingham at the 2012 Wuxi Classic, O'Sullivan at the 2014 Welsh Open, Murphy at the 2014 Ruhr Open, Robertson at the 2015 UK Championship, Trump at the 2022 Turkish Masters and the 2022 Champion of Champions and Zhang at the 2023 International Championship. Selby made a maximum in the 2023 World Championship final, becoming the first player to do so at that stage of the tournament. Selby's and Robertson's maximums are the only ones compiled in the finals of Triple Crown events.

Fastest

O'Sullivan's 147 break in the firstround match against Mick Price at the 1997 World Championship holds the record for the fastest maximum in the history of the game. For many years Guinness World Records recorded the time of the break at 5 minutes and 20 seconds. However an investigation undertaken by Deadspin in 2017 revealed that the time recorded by Guinness was incorrect because the timer was started too early on the BBC footage. Breaks are not officially timed in snooker and the official rules of snooker do not specify how they should be timed, instead leaving the timing to the discretion of the broadcaster. The only timing methodology World Snooker sanctions in its events is the one employed in shot clock events where timing for a player's shot begins when the balls have come to rest from his opponent's previous shot. Under this convention the break would have been timed at 5 minutes and 15 seconds. World Snooker has since suggested that a break starts when the player strikes the cueball for the first time in a break which would result in a time of 5 minutes and 8 seconds; this is the time that both World Snooker and Guinness World Records now officially acknowledge.

Youngest and oldest

The youngest player to have made an officially recognised maximum break in professional competition is Thanawat Thirapongpaiboon, who compiled a 147 at the 2010 RheinMain Masters aged. Sean Maddocks is recognised by Guinness World Records as the youngest player to make a maximum break in any recognised competition. Maddocks was old when he achieved the feat at the LiteTask ProAm series in Leeds on 9 July 2017. Judd Trump is known to have made a 147 at the Potters Under16 Tournament in 2004 at the age of ; however, this break is not recognised by Guinness World Records. The youngest player to have made a televised maximum is Ding Junhui, who was aged when he achieved a 147 at the 2007 Masters.
The oldest player to have made a maximum in professional competition is Ronnie O'Sullivan, who made two 147 breaks in his 2025 Saudi Arabia Snooker Masters semi-final against Chris Wakelin, when he was aged 49 years and 253 days. Former professional Darren Morgan made a maximum break in an amateur Seniors event in 2023 at the age of ; this possibly makes him the oldest player to achieve a maximum break in competition.

Prize money

In professional tournaments there was usually a substantial prize awarded to any player achieving a 147 break. For example, Ronnie O'Sullivan's maximum at the 1997 World Championship earned him £165,000. Of this, £147,000 was for making the 147 break and £18,000 was for achieving the highest break of the tournament.
In the 201112 season World Snooker introduced a rollover system for the maximum break prize money, the "rolling 147 prize". A maximum break is worth £5,000 in the televised stages and £500 in qualifying stages of major ranking events. There is a £500 prize in the Players Tour Championship events from the last 128 onwards. If a maximum is not made then the prize rolls over to the next event until somebody wins it.
At the 2016 Welsh Open, Ronnie O'Sullivan defeated Barry Pinches 41 in the first round. In the fifth frame of the match, O'Sullivan declined the opportunity to make a maximum break, potting the pink off the penultimate red and completing a break of 146. He stated afterwards that the prize money of £10,000 was not worthy of a 147. World Snooker chairman Barry Hearn called the decision "unacceptable" and "disrespectful". Individual prizes for a maximum break in the vast majority of tournaments have generally been phased out, since the start of the 201920 season: during that season, a £1 million bonus was offered if 20 or more were made during the season. The prize would be split among all players who had made at least one qualifying break, with each player receiving an equal share for every break made. The bonus was not claimed, and as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic later that season, it was discontinued and has not since been re-offered. Despite maximum break prizes being phased out in most cases, they have been partially re-introduced at the World Snooker Championship, where £40,000 is now offered to those who compile one at the main stages of the tournament.
Beginning with the 202324 season, WST has started offering a £147,000 bonus to any player making two maximum breaks during the season's Triple Crown events. Since the 202425 season, the bonus has been extended to include any maximum breaks made at the Saudi Arabia Snooker Masters. As of 2025, this prize has been awarded twice: first when Jackson Page made two maximums in the same match during the 2025 World Snooker Championship qualifying; second when O'Sullivan made two maximums in the same match at the 2025 Saudi Arabia Snooker Masters.

Breaks exceeding 147

A break higher than 147 can be achieved when an opponent before any reds are potted and leaves the incoming player on all 15 reds. The player can nominate one of the other as a red, known as a, which carries the same value as a red for just that shot. If the free ball is potted, the referee places this coloured ball back on its original location, de facto creating a setup as if there were 16 reds in total, thus creating a potential maximum break of 155 if a player starts from a free ball position.
In October 2004, during qualifying for the UK Championship, Jamie Burnett became the only player to record a break of more than 147 in tournament play, when he scored 148 against Leo Fernandez. He took the brown as the free ball, then potted the brown again followed by the 15 reds with 12 blacks, two pinks and a blue, then the six colours.
Some breaks exceeding 147 have been reported in nontournament settings:
  • A 151 is reported to have been compiled by Wally West against Butch Rogers in West London's Hounslow Luciana snooker club during a club match in 1976. After Rogers fouled, West took the green as his free ball followed by the brown. He then took 14 reds and blacks and a pink off the last red. He then cleared up to make the 151.
  • In April 1988 Steve Duggan made a 148 in a practice frame against Mark Rowing in Doncaster.
  • In 1993 Stephen Hendry made a 148 in a practice match against Alfie Burden.
  • In 1995 Tony Drago made a 149 in practice against Nick Manning in West Norwood, London, that was recorded by the Guinness Book of Records as the highest in this category. In that Drago nominated the as the free ball, to score one point. He then potted the brown again, for four more points, before potting the 15 reds with 13 blacks, a and a, then all the colours.
  • In 1997 Eddie Manning achieved a 149 break in a practice match against Kam Pandya at Willie Thorne's Snooker Club in Leicester. He potted brown, brown, 13 blacks, pink and blue.
  • In April 2003 Jamie Cope made a 151 break at The Reardon Snooker Club during a practice game with David FommWard. After a foul by his opponent, Cope was snookered behind the brown ball. He took the brown as the free ball and then potted the blue, 13 reds with blacks and two with pinks, then the six colours.
  • In 2005, Jamie Cope made snooker's first highest possible 155 break in a witnessed practice frame.
  • In November 2010 Sam Harvey made a 151 break in a practice match against Kyren Wilson at his home club in Bedford. Harvey potted the brown as the free ball and then the black, 12 reds with blacks, two with pinks and one with blue, then the six colours.
  • In August 2021, Thepchaiya Un-Nooh made a 155 break in a practice match against Hossein Vafaei. The feat was filmed by a security camera.
  • In March 2022, Marco Fu made a 149 break in a practice match against Noppon Saengkham at the Ding Junhui Snooker Academy.

List of official maximum breaks

Note: If the table is sorted by anything other than "", "Date", or "Season", then using the Table of Contents above could produce unexpected results.
DateSeasonPlayerAgeOpponentEvent
111 January 198281–82Classic
223 April 198382–83World Championship
328 January 198483–84Masters
417 November 198787–88UK Championship
520 February 198887–88 Matchroom League
624 September 198888–89European Open
718 February 198988–89 Scottish Championship
88 March 198988–89 Matchroom League
916 January 199190–91World Masters
105 June 199191–92Strachan Open
1125 February 199291–92 British Open
1222 April 199291–92 World Championship
139 May 199291–92 Matchroom League
1424 May 199291–92 Matchroom League
1514 November 199292–93 UK Championship
167 September 199494–95British Open
1727 April 199594–95 World Championship
1825 November 199595–96 UK Championship
195 January 199796–97 Charity Challenge
2021 April 199796–97 World Championship
2118 September 199797–98 China International
2223 May 199897–98 Premier League
2310 August 199898–99Thailand Masters
2413 August 199898–99 China International
2513 January 199998–99 British Open
2629 January 199998–99 Welsh Open
274 February 199998–99 UK Tour – Event 3
2822 March 199998–99 UK Tour – Event 4
296 April 199998–99 British Open
3019 September 199999–00 British Open
3121 September 199999–00 Welsh Open
3218 October 199999–00 Grand Prix (snooker)|Grand Prix]
334 November 199999–00 Masters
3422 November 199999–00 UK Championship
3521 January 200099–00 Nations Cup
3624 March 200099–00 Irish Masters
3728 March 200099–00 Scottish Open
385 April 200099–00 Scottish Open
3925 October 200000–01Scottish Masters
407 November 200000–01 Masters
4119 November 200000–01 UK Championship
4225 February 200100–01 Malta Grand Prix
4317 October 200101–02 LG Cup
4412 November 200101–02 Masters
4528 October 200202–03Masters
4622 April 200302–03 World Championship
4712 October 200303–04 LG Cup
4812 November 200303–04 British Open
494 October 200404–05 Grand Prix
5017 November 200404–05 UK Championship
5120 April 200504–05 World Championship
5222 November 200505–06 Masters
5314 March 200605–06 World Championship
5423 October 200606–07Grand Prix
5514 January 200706–07 Masters
5616 February 200706–07 Welsh Open
5719 September 200707–08Grand Prix
5814 October 200707–08 Grand Prix
598 November 200707–08 Northern Ireland Trophy
6015 December 200707–08 UK Championship
6129 March 200807–08 China Open
6228 April 200807–08 World Championship
6329 April 200807–08 World Championship
642 October 200808–09 Shanghai Masters
6529 October 200808–09 Bahrain Championship
668 November 200808–09 Bahrain Championship
6716 December 200808–09 UK Championship
6828 April 200908–09 World Championship
695 June 200909–10Jiangsu Classic
701 April 201009–10 China Open
7125 June 201010–11PTC – Event 1
726 August 201010–11 PTC – Event 3
7320 September 201010–11 World Open
7422 October 201010–11 Rhein–Main Masters
7523 October 201010–11 Rhein–Main Masters
7619 November 201010–11 Prague Classic
7717 February 201110–11 Welsh Open
7826 August 201111–12 Paul Hunter Classic
7922 November 201111–12 German Masters
8027 November 201111–12 PTC – Event 10
8129 November 201111–12 PTC – Event 10
8211–12 FFB Snooker Open
8311–12 FFB Snooker Open
8417 December 201111–12 PTC – Event 11
8518 December 201111–12 PTC – Event 11
8614 January 201211–12 World Open
8711 April 201211–12 World Championship
8821 April 201211–12 World Championship
891 July 201212–13 Wuxi Classic
9024 August 201212–13 Paul Hunter Classic
9123 September 201212–13 Shanghai Masters
9216 November 201212–13 Bulgarian Open
9321 November 201212–13 UK Championship
9422 November 201212–13 UK Championship
955 December 201212–13 UK Championship
9614 December 201212–13 Scottish Open
9716 March 201312–13 PTC – Grand Final
9828 May 201312–13 Wuxi Classic
9915 November 201313–14Antwerp Open
1007 December 201313–14 UK Championship
10111 December 201313–14 German Masters
10212 December 201313–14 German Masters
1038 January 201413–14 Championship League
1049 February 201413–14 Gdynia Open
1052 March 201413–14 Welsh Open
10622 August 201414–15Paul Hunter Classic
10723 October 201414–15 Haining Open
10823 November 201414–15 Ruhr Open
1094 December 201414–15 UK Championship
11012 December 201414–15 Lisbon Open
1115 January 201514–15 Championship League
11211 January 201514–15 Masters
1136 February 201514–15 German Masters
11410 February 201514–15 Championship League
1156 December 201515–16 UK Championship
11611 December 201515–16 Gibraltar Open
11719 February 201615–16 Welsh Open
11825 February 201615–16 Championship League
11927 August 201616–17Paul Hunter Classic
12020 September 201616–17 Shanghai Masters
12128 September 201616–17 European Masters
12211 October 201616–17 English Open
12316 November 201616–17 Northern Ireland Open
12427 November 201616–17 UK Championship
12516–17 German Masters
12616–17 German Masters
12710 January 201716–17 Championship League
1281 February 201716–17 German Masters
1292 March 201716–17 Championship League
13030 March 201716–17 China Open
1316 April 201716–17 World Championship
13218 October 201717–18 English Open
13331 October 201717–18 International Championship
13412 December 201717–18 Scottish Open
13526 January 201817–18 Championship League
13626 March 201817–18 Championship League
1373 April 201817–18 China Open
1384 April 201817–18 China Open
13912 April 201817–18 World Championship
14018–19Paul Hunter Classic
14118–19 Paul Hunter Classic
14216 October 201818–19 English Open
14317 October 201818–19 English Open
1448 November 201818–19 Champion of Champions
14512 December 201818–19 Scottish Open
14621 December 201818–19 German Masters
14722 January 201918–19 Championship League
14812 February 201918–19 Welsh Open
14914 February 201918–19 Welsh Open
15028 February 201918–19 Indian Open
1513 April 201918–19 China Open
15217 June 201919–20 International Championship
15317 October 201919–20 English Open
15412 November 201919–20 Northern Ireland Open
15527 November 201919–20 UK Championship
15611 February 202019–20 Welsh Open
1576 August 202019–20 World Championship
15813 September 202020–21 Championship League
15930 October 202020–21 Championship League
16010 November 202020–21 German Masters
16118 November 202020–21 Northern Ireland Open
16224 November 202020–21 UK Championship
16325 November 202020–21 UK Championship
1647 December 202020–21 Scottish Open
1654 January 202120–21 Championship League
16620 January 202120–21 WST Pro Series
16716 August 202121–22 British Open
16820 August 202121–22 British Open
16924 September 202121–22 Scottish Open
17010 October 202121–22 Northern Ireland Open
17122 October 202121–22 German Masters
17224 November 202121–22 UK Championship
17313 March 202221–22 Turkish Masters
17425 March 202221–22 Gibraltar Open
17511 April 202221–22 World Championship
17625 April 202221–22 World Championship
17716 July 202222–23European Masters
17817 July 202222–23 European Masters
17929 September 202222–23 British Open
1808 October 202222–23 Hong Kong Masters
1816 November 202222–23 Champion of Champions
18229 November 202222–23 Scottish Open
18316 December 202222–23 English Open
1843 February 202322–23 German Masters
18516 February 202322–23 Welsh Open
18620 March 202322–23 WST Classic
18730 March 202322–23 Tour Championship
18819 April 202322–23 World Championship
18930 April 202322–23 World Championship
19028 July 202323–24European Masters
19118 September 202323–24 International Championship
19212 November 202323–24 International Championship
19319 November 202323–24 UK Championship
1947 December 202323–24 Snooker Shoot Out
1958 January 202423–24 Masters
19612 January 202423–24 Masters
1976 February 202423–24 Championship League
19810 February 202423–24 Championship League
19917 February 202423–24 Welsh Open
20029 February 202423–24 Championship League
20118 March 202423–24 World Open
20215 April 202423–24 World Championship
2031 September 202424–25 Saudi Arabia Masters
20413 September 202424–25 English Open
20526 September 202424–25 British Open
20611 October 202424–25 Wuhan Open
2075 November 202424–25 International Championship
20826 November 202424–25 UK Championship
2097 January 202524–25 Championship League
21018 January 202524–25 Masters
21125 January 202524–25 Championship League
2125 February 202524–25 Championship League
2136 February 202524–25 Welsh Open
21424 February 202524–25 World Open
21513 April 202524–25 World Championship
21614 April 202524–25 World Championship
21725 April 202524–25 World Championship
21817 July 202525–26 Championship League
21929 July 202525–26 Shanghai Masters
22010 August 202525–26 Saudi Arabia Masters
22125–26 Saudi Arabia Masters
22225–26 Saudi Arabia Masters
22324 August 202525–26 Wuhan Open
22425 August 202525–26 Wuhan Open
2252 September 202525–26 Xi'an Grand Prix
22614 September 202525–26 English Open
22717 September 202525–26 English Open
2282 October 202525–26 International Championship
22925–26 Xi'an Grand Prix
23025–26 Xi'an Grand Prix
2314 November 202525–26 International Championship
23222 November 202525–26 UK Championship
23324 November 202525–26 UK Championship
2342 January 202625–26 Championship League
2358 January 202625–26 Championship League
23625–26 Championship League
23725–26 Championship League
23822 January 202625–26 Championship League
23928 January 202625–26 German Masters

Note: indicates maximums made during qualifying stages of events. indicates maximums made in tournament finals. indicates that the match was lost by the player who made the maximum.

List of players with five or more maximums

Below is a list of players who have made five or more maximum breaks, as of 2026.
No.PlayerNumberMost recent
11715 August 2025
21310 February 2024
31121 April 2012
41024 February 2025
5925 March 2022
597 October 2025
778 January 2024
865 February 2025
8625 August 2025
862 October 2025
11517 October 2019
11525 April 2022
1158 October 2022
1156 February 2024
11525 April 2025
11528 January 2026