Macedonian Chess Championship
The Macedonian Chess Championship is organized by the Chess Federation of Macedonia. It was last held in 2011, although the Macedonian Open Chess Championship, which is also open to foreign players, continues to be organized annually.
Pre-independence history
The Socialist Republic of Macedonia held its first chess championship in 1946, which was won by Pavle Bidev, a four-time winner between 1946 and 1955.[1][2] Jovan Sofrevski won a record sixteen titles, and Risto Nicevski became the youngest winner at 20 years old when he won the 1966 championship; he won five titles in total.[3]
National championship winners

- Year - Champion[3] - 1992 - Zvonko Stanojoski - 1993 - Vlatko Bogdanovski - 1994 - Rolando Kutirov - 1995 - Vlatko Bogdanovski - 1996 - Dragoljub Jacimović - 1997 - Trajče Nedev - 1998 - Dragoljub Jacimovic - 1999 - Toni Kiroski - 2000 - Trajče Nedev - 2001 - Vanco Stamenkov - 2002 - Nikola Mitkov - 2003 - Zvonko Stanojoski - 2004 - Nikola Vasovski - 2005 - Zvonko Stanojoski - 2006 - Zvonko Stanojoski - 2007 - Vladimir Georgiev - 2008 - Riste Menkinoski - 2009 - Vlatko Bogdanovski - 2010 - Filip Pančevski - 2011 - Trajče Nedev[4] - 2024 - Toni Lazov[5] 
Women's championship winners
- No. - Year - Champion - 1 - 2008 - Gabriela Koskoska - 2 - 2011 - Gabriela Koskoska - 3 - 2024 - Gabriela Koskoska[5] 
References
- ^ "БИДЕВ, Павле". Macedonian Encyclopedia (in Macedonian). Skopje: Macedonian Academy of Sciences and Arts. 2009. Retrieved 31 January 2017.
- ^ Krstevski, Lazar (13 December 2012). "Има таленти и интерес за шахот". Dnevnik (in Macedonian). Retrieved 31 January 2017.
- ^ a b Dimitrievski, Robert (9 May 2011). "Шаховски шампионат со сите нишани". Utrinski vesnik (in Macedonian). Archived from the original on 3 February 2017. Retrieved 31 January 2017.
- ^ "Недев е шампион на Македонија за 2011" (in Macedonian). 19 May 2011. Archived from the original on 8 April 2018. Retrieved 31 January 2017.
- ^ a b "Gabriela Koskoska and Toni Lazov from Alkaloid are the new Macedonian chess champions".