| Date | R | Home vs Away | - |
|---|---|---|---|
| 05/04 08:45 | - |
Yu Qi Shi vs Hyeok Jin Jeon
|
2-0 |
| 05/03 09:50 | - |
Geonyeop Cho vs Alwi Farhan
|
1-2 |
| 05/03 02:20 | - |
Yu Qi Shi vs Kodai Naraoka
|
2-0 |
| 05/02 10:40 | - |
Anders Antonsen vs Hyeok Jin Jeon
|
2-1 |
| 05/02 10:40 | - |
Kunlavut Vitidsarn vs Jonatan Christie
|
0-2 |
| 05/02 02:30 | - |
Yu Qi Shi vs Jun Hao Leong
|
2-0 |
| 05/02 02:20 | - |
Koki Watanabe vs Tien Chen Chou
|
2-1 |
| 05/01 11:35 | - |
Arnaud Merkle vs Jack Yu
|
2-0 |
| 05/01 09:50 | - |
S.K. Karunakaran vs Harry Huang
|
2-1 |
| 05/01 02:55 | - |
Alwi Farhan vs Anders Antonsen
|
2-1 |
| 05/01 02:20 | - |
Kodai Naraoka vs Jun Hao Leong
|
1-2 |
| 04/30 10:35 | - |
Geonyeop Cho vs Chun-Yi Lin
|
0-2 |
Yuqi Shi
Tien Chen Chou
Zii Jia Lee
Anthony Sinisuka Ginting
Hyeok Jin Jeon
Kantaphon Wangcharoen
Jonatan Christie
Kwang Hee Heo
Kodai Naraoka
Viktor Axelsen
Dinuka Karunaratna
Ka Long Angus Ng
Anders Antonsen
Mark Caljouw
Vladimir Malkov
H.S. Prannoy
Misha Zilberman
Srikanth Kidambi
Brice Leverdez
Kenta Nishimoto
Johnnie Torjussen
Kai Schaefer
Christian Kirchmayr
Fabian Roth
Jun Hao Leong
Nhat Nguyen
Long Chen
Pang Fong Pui
Harry Huang
Arnaud Merkle
Sameer Verma
B.R. Sankeerth
Kalle Koljonen
Alexander Roovers
Toby Penty
Rasmus Gemke
Koki Watanabe
Howard Shu
Vinson Chiu
Jason Anthony Ho-Shue
Cheuk Yiu Lee
Yu Jen Chi
Kanta Tsuneyama
Thomas Rouxel
Sai Praneeth B.
Dong Keun Lee
Cao Cuong Pham
Toma Junior Popov
Tobias Kuenzi
Guangzu Lu
The Sudirman Cup is an international badminton mixed team competition contested by member countries of the Badminton World Federation, the sport's global governing body. The championship has been awarded every two years since the inaugural tournament in 1989. It used to be held at the same venue for the World Championships in the same year until the International Badminton Federation, now the BWF, decided to split the two tournaments starting from 2003. There are five matches in every Sudirman Cup tie which consists of men and women's singles, men and women's doubles, and mixed doubles. The cup is named after Sudirman (1922–1986), a former Indonesian badminton player. The current champion is China, which won its 14th title at the 2025 tournament in China.
There is no prize money in Sudirman Cup; players play for their respective countries and to earn BWF World Ranking points and national prestige.