The Four Hills Tournament comprises four individual World Cup events and points gained in the Four Hills Tournament are added to points gained in other World Cup events throughout the season.
| Date | Image | Place | Hill Name | K-Point | Hill Size | Hill Record |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| December 30 | Oberstdorf, Germany | Schattenbergschanze | K-120 | HS 137 | 145.5 m (2008) Gregor Schlierenzauer, Austria | |
| January 1 | Garmisch-Partenkirchen, Germany | Große Olympiaschanze | K-125 | HS 140 | 141.0 m (2008) Gregor Schlierenzauer , Austria | |
| January 4 | Innsbruck, Austria | Bergiselschanze | K-120 | HS 130 | 136.0 m (2004) Adam Malysz, Poland | |
| January 6 | Bischofshofen, Austria | Paul-Ausserleitner-Schanze | K-125 | HS 140 | 145.0 m (2008) Gregor Schlierenzauer, Austria |
If qualification is postponed until the day of competition, knock-out system is not used, and competition follows regular world cup rules. Because of that in 2007/08 tournament, knock-out system was used only in Oberstdorf.
The fourth victory of Janne Ahonen in 2005/06 was also the first time the tournament victory was tied between two competitors, with Jakub Janda sharing the title by obtaining his first 4 Hills Tournament success.
Jens Weissflog and Bjørn Wirkola have both won ten individual competitions within the Four Hills Tournament. Janne Ahonen is next with 9 victories, followed by Matti Nykänen (FIN) who has seven.
During the 50th edition of the tournament (2001/2002), Sven Hannawald (GER) became first, and so far only, person to win all four competitions in a single year.
Germany has the most winners with 16 (11 of which were pre-1989), next comes Finland with 15 victories and then Norway with 10 wins and Austria with 9. Czechoslovakia and its successor Czech Republic have two wins altogether; the following countries all have a single victory: Japan, Slovenia, Poland and the USSR.