T. S. Eliot Prize 2025 Shortlist – ‘great range, suggestiveness and power’ 

We’re delighted to announce the T. S. Eliot Prize 2025 Shortlist, which offers ‘something for everyone’ in collections of ‘great range, suggestiveness and power’.

Judges Michael Hofmann (Chair), Patience Agbabi and Niall Campbell chose the Shortlist from 177 poetry collections submitted by 64 British and Irish publishers. The diverse list comprises seasoned poets, two debuts, two second collections, four previously shortlisted poets and a former winner. Poets hail from the UK, Ireland, St Lucia, Canada and the USA, and publishers include both large, long-established and smaller independent presses.

Gillian Allnutt, Lode (Bloodaxe Books)

Isabelle Baafi, Chaotic Good (Faber & Faber)

Catherine-Esther Cowie, Heirloom (Carcanet Press)

Paul Farley, When it Rained for a Million Years (Picador Poetry)

Vona Groarke, Infinity Pool (The Gallery Press)

Sarah Howe, Foretokens (Chatto Poetry)

Nick Makoha, The New Carthaginians (Penguin Books)

Tom Paulin, Namanlagh (Faber & Faber)

Natalie Shapero, Stay Dead (Out-Spoken Press)

Karen Solie, Wellwater (Picador Poetry)

Michael Hofmann said:

We read over 10,000 pages of poetry, Niall, Patience and I, and are left with just ten titles on our shortlist. But those titles are of great range, suggestiveness and power; from Entebbe to Manitoba, from blocks of text to threads of voice, there is something here for everyone. And that’s the joy of poetry; while it exists things are never entirely hopeless.

For full details on this year’s shortlisted poets and their collections, visit the ‘Current Prize’ webpage.

The hugely popular T. S. Eliot Prize Shortlist Readings, led by MC Ian McMillan, will take place on Sunday 18 January 2026 at 7pm in the Southbank Centre’s Royal Festival Hall as part of its literature programme. This is the largest annual poetry event in the UK. Tickets for the Readings are now on sale. A live stream is also available.

The winner of the 2025 Prize will be announced at the Award Ceremony on Monday 19 January 2026. The shortlisted poets will each be presented with cheques for £1,500 and the winner will receive a cheque for £25,000 – the most valuable prize in British poetry.

The T. S. Eliot Prize, which celebrated its 30th anniversary last year, is run by The T. S. Eliot Foundation. It is the only major poetry prize that is judged purely by established poets. The judging panel is looking for the best new poetry collection written in English and published in the UK or Ireland.

To find out more about the shortlisted poets and their collections, visit our 2025 Prize webpage, where you will also find links to reviews, interviews and Readers’ Notes as we add them. Look out for specially commissioned videos of interviews and poems by all ten shortlisted poets, which will be available to view on the T. S. Eliot Prize YouTube channel, along with past films and recordings.

To be first to hear all the latest T. S. Eliot Prize news, sign up to our e-newsletter. Each week, we will focus on a shortlisted poet and feature free to access and share resources. For your weekly update, please subscribe.

Last year’s winner was Peter Gizzi for his collection Fierce Elegy (Penguin Poetry). Don’t miss a rare UK appearance by Peter Gizzi, who will be reading and in conversation with Ian McMillan, at this year’s Cheltenham Literature Festival on 17 October, from 4pm.

Related Works

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WINNER
2025
Picador Poetry
Faber & Faber
Chatto & Windus
Bloodaxe Books
Out-Spoken Press

Related Poets

Vona Groarke was born in the Irish Midlands in 1964. She attended Trinity College, Dublin and University College, Cork. She has been writer in residence...
Catherine-Esther Cowie was born in St Lucia to a Tobagonian father and a St Lucian mother. She migrated with her family to Canada and then...
Isabelle Baafi is a poet, editor and critic. Her pamphlet Ripe (ignitionpress) won the Somerset Maugham Award and was a Poetry Book Society Pamphlet Choice....
Natalie Shapero lives in Los Angeles and teaches writing at UC Irvine. Her writing has appeared in The New Yorker, The New York Times Magazine,...
Tom Paulin grew up in Belfast and now lives in Oxford, where he is Emeritus Fellow of Hertford College, University of Oxford. Namanlagh (Faber &...
Gillian Allnutt was born in London but spent half her childhood in Newcastle upon Tyne. Nantucket and the Angel (1997) and Lintel (2001) were shortlisted...
Dr. Nick Makoha is a Ugandan poet based in London. The New Carthaginians follows his debut collection Kingdom of Gravity (2017), which was shortlisted for...
Sarah Howe is a British poet, academic and editor. Born in Hong Kong to an English father and Chinese mother, she moved to England as...
Karen Solie grew up in southwest Saskatchewan. Wellwater (Picador Poetry), her sixth collection of poetry, is the joint winner of the Forward Prize for Best...
Paul Farley was born in Liverpool and studied at the Chelsea School of Art. He has published six collections of poetry with Picador, including: The...

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