| Snooker Shoot-Out 2025 | 12/12 22:00 | 6 | Oliver Brown v Bai Yulu | 1-0 | |
| Snooker Shoot-Out 2025 | 12/11 16:15 | 7 | Ellise Scott v Bai Yulu | 0-1 | |
| UK Championship Qualifiers 2025 | 11/23 19:30 | 8 | Liu Hongyu v Bai Yulu | 6-2 | |
| UK Championship Qualifiers 2025 | 11/22 14:30 | 7 | Bai Yulu v Mostafa Dorgham | 6-1 | |
| Champion of Champions 2025 | 11/10 14:55 | 4 | Judd Trump v Bai Yulu | 4-1 | |
| International Championship 2025 | 11/02 01:30 | 7 | Bai Yulu v Wang Xinzhong | 4-6 | |
| Scottish Open Qualifiers 2025 | 10/17 09:00 | 8 | Robbie Williams v Bai Yulu | 4-0 | |
| Scottish Open Qualifiers 2025 | 10/16 09:00 | 7 | Bai Yulu v Kreishh Gurbaxani | 4-0 | |
| British Open 2025 | 09/23 09:00 | 6 | Zhang Anda v Bai Yulu | 4-3 | |
| English Open Qualifiers 2025 | 09/14 15:00 | 8 | Ricky Walden v Bai Yulu | 4-1 | |
| English Open Qualifers 2025 | 09/12 09:00 | 7 | Bai Yulu v Liu Wenwei | 4-3 | |
| Northern Ireland Open Qualifier 2025 | 09/04 18:00 | 7 | Bai Yulu v David Grace | 2-4 |
Bai Yulu (Chinese: 白雨露; born 10 July 2003) is a Chinese professional snooker player who competes both on the women's tour and the main World Snooker Tour. A former world junior champion, she is the reigning women's world champion, having won the 2024 and 2025 World Women's Snooker Championships. The first player from mainland China to win the women's world title, she received a two-year tour card to the main professional World Snooker Tour from the start of the 2024–25 snooker season. At the 2024 UK Championship, Bai became the first female player to win three matches at a professional ranking event.
Bai holds the record for the highest break by a female player in professional competition, having made a 145 at the 2025 International Championship.
At 15, Bai won the 2018 Asian Women's Snooker Invitational Championship in Hong Kong, defeating Ng On-yee in the final. Bai won the women's 2019 IBSF World Under-21 Snooker Championship in Qingdao with a 4–0 victory over Mink Nutcharut in the final. She celebrated her 16th birthday during the tournament. She reached the quarter-finals of the 2019 IBSF Women's World Snooker Championship, making the three highest of the event: 91, 81 and 78. Accompanied by her mother, as she was unable as a 16-year-old to travel alone, she competed in the 2019 Hong Kong World Women's Masters, where she lost 1–4 to Rebecca Kenna in the final.
In 2023, she made her World Women's Snooker Tour debut at the World Women's Snooker Championship in Bangkok, Thailand. She made a 127 break in her group match against Amee Kamani, the highest break in the tournament's history, surpassing Kelly Fisher's 125 at the 2003 event. She defeated 12-time champion Reanne Evans 5–3 in the semi-finals, but lost the final 3–6 to Baipat Siripaporn. She won her first women's ranking title at the British Women's Open, defeating Evans 4–3 in the final. She also captured the titles of Asian Women's Championship and IBSF World Women's Snooker Championship in the same year.
The 2024 World Women's Snooker Championship was the first edition of the tournament to be staged in China. After coming from 0–3 behind to defeat Evans 5–3 in the semi-finals, Bai secured her first women's world title with a 6–5 victory over Mink in the final. Her 122 break in the final was the highest of the tournament and the highest ever made in a women's world final. Winning the world women's title secured Bai a two-year tour card to the main professional World Snooker Tour from the start of the 2024–25 snooker season. She also won the concurrent 2024 World Women's Under-21 Snooker Championship, defeating Narucha Phoemphul 3–0 in the final.
Bai became the first woman since Kelly Fisher in 1999 to win back-to-back matches at a ranking event when she defeated Farakh Ajaib and then Jamie Jones in the qualifying rounds for the 2024 UK Championship. She then became the first female player to register three wins at a ranking event by beating Scott Donaldson in the next round in a match which went to a final frame decider. Bai lost in the fourth round to Jack Lisowski 6–1, falling just short of making the televised stages.
At the 2025 World Women's Snooker Championship, Bai won her second consecutive world title. She defeated Mink 6–4 in the final, and became the seventh woman to win multiple world titles. In August, Bai competed at the World Games in the women's six red event rather than entering the 2025 Saudi Arabia Snooker Masters. She won the event by defeating Narucha Phoemphul of Thailand 2–0 in the final.