The Offside Rule in Soccer, Explained

The offside rule is famously the most confusing rule in soccer, the one that sparks the most arguments and the one new fans struggle with the most. It is also one of the most important, shaping how teams attack and defend on every play. The good news is that once you separate two ideas that often get tangled together, the rule becomes much simpler than it seems. So what is the offside rule, when does it apply, and why does standing in an offside position not always mean a whistle?

With the 2026 World Cup putting soccer in front of a huge new audience, plenty of people are trying to make sense of offside for the first time. Here is a clear, complete breakdown of how it actually works.

The chart below explains the offside rule: the conditions, the key distinction, the exceptions, and the common myths. Take a look, then we’ll walk through each part.

The Offside Rule, Explained
Soccer’s most misunderstood rule, made simple

The Rule
Law 11
IFAB Laws

Judged At
The Pass
not the catch

Penalty
Free Kick
indirect, no card

Exceptions
3
set-piece restarts

The two-part test for an offside offense
Both must be true for the referee to call offside
PART 1
Position
In an offside position.
At the moment a teammate plays the ball, the player is in the opponents’ half AND nearer to the goal line than both the ball and the second-to-last defender.

PART 2
Involvement
Becoming involved in active play.
The player then touches the ball, interferes with an opponent, or gains an advantage from the position.

This is the key to the whole rule: being in an offside position is not an offense by itself. The player must also get involved in the play. Part 1 without Part 2 is perfectly legal.

Offside or not? Common situations
Situation Call Why
Ahead of the last defender, receives a through ball Offside Offside position and touched the ball
Ahead of the last defender but never touches the ball Onside Not involved in active play
Level with the second-to-last defender Onside Level is not “nearer to goal”
Receives the ball in their own half Onside Must be in the opponents’ half
Receives directly from a corner, throw-in, or goal kick Onside Set-piece exception
Receives a pass played backward by a teammate Onside Behind the ball, not ahead of it
Offside position, blocks the keeper’s view of a shot Offside Interfering with an opponent
Offside is judged at the moment the ball is played by the teammate, not the moment it is received. A player can time a run from an onside position and collect the ball well ahead of the defense, perfectly legally.

The three situations where offside never applies
1
Goal kicks: a player can receive the ball directly from a goal kick anywhere and never be offside
2
Corner kicks: there is no offside directly from a corner, which is why attackers crowd the goal
3
Throw-ins: a player can receive a throw-in in any position with no offside offense

Myths vs Facts
Clearing up the most common confusion

Common Belief The Reality
“Standing offside is always a foul” False. Only an offense if the player gets involved in play
“Offside is a yellow card” False. It is just an indirect free kick, never a card
“It is judged when the ball arrives” False. It is judged the instant the pass is played
“Your arm can put you offside” False. Arms and hands are not counted for anyone
“You can be offside in your own half” False. You must be in the opponents’ half
For offside, only the head, body, and feet count, the parts a player can legally score with. Arms and hands are excluded for all players, including the goalkeeper.

Why the rule exists
Offside prevents “goal-hanging,” where an attacker simply waits next to the goal for a long pass. It forces teams to break down a defense and keeps the game spread out and fair.

The second-to-last defender
The reference point is the second-to-last opponent. Usually the goalkeeper is the last, so in practice the line is set by the last outfield defender.

How VAR checks it
Video review draws precise lines at the moment of the pass to judge tight calls, which has made offside more accurate but also more controversial on marginal, inches-close decisions.

What Is the Offside Rule?

The offside rule, written as Law 11 in the official Laws of the Game, is designed to stop attackers from gaining an unfair advantage by lurking near the opponent’s goal. In simple terms, an attacking player cannot be ahead of the ball and the defense when a teammate passes to them. The rule keeps the game spread out and forces teams to create chances through skill and timing rather than just parking a player by the goal. It is judged at the precise moment a teammate plays the ball, which is one of the details that makes it tricky to follow in real time.

Offside Position vs Offside Offense

Here is the single most important thing to understand, and the source of nearly all the confusion: being in an offside position is not against the rules. A player is in an offside position if, at the moment a teammate plays the ball, any part of their head, body, or feet is in the opponents’ half and is nearer to the opponents’ goal line than both the ball and the second-to-last defender. But that position only becomes an offense if the player then becomes involved in active play. In other words, a player can stand in an offside position all day, and as long as they do not get involved, there is no foul. The whistle only comes when both halves of the test are met.

What Counts as “Getting Involved”

A player in an offside position is penalized only when they become involved in active play in one of three ways. The first is interfering with play, meaning they touch or play a ball passed by a teammate. The second is interfering with an opponent, such as blocking the goalkeeper’s line of sight or challenging them for the ball. The third is gaining an advantage by playing a ball that rebounds off the goalpost, the crossbar, an opponent, or a match official. If a player in an offside position does none of these things, they are not penalized, which is why you will sometimes see an attacker standing in an offside position while play continues around them.

When the Offside Rule Does Not Apply

There are several situations where offside simply cannot be called, and knowing them clears up a lot of confusion. First, a player can never be offside if they receive the ball directly from a goal kick, a corner kick, or a throw-in. This is why you see attackers crowding the goal at a corner with no flag raised. Second, a player is never offside in their own half of the field; they must be in the opponents’ half. And third, a ball passed backward to a teammate cannot create an offside offense, since the receiving player is behind the ball, not ahead of it. These exceptions explain many of the moments that look like they should be offside but are not.

The Timing and the Body Parts That Count

Two technical details often trip people up. The first is timing: offside is judged at the exact instant the ball is played by the passing teammate, not when the ball arrives at the receiver. This means a fast attacker can start level with the defense, time their run, and collect the ball far ahead of the defenders, completely legally, because they were onside at the moment of the pass. The second detail is which body parts count. Only the head, body, and feet are used to judge offside, the parts a player could legally score a goal with. The arms and hands are never counted, for any player including the goalkeeper, which is why a protruding shoulder can decide a call but an outstretched arm cannot.

Why the Rule Exists and How VAR Changed It

The purpose of offside is to prevent “goal-hanging,” the tactic of leaving an attacker camped next to the opposing goal waiting for a long ball. Without the rule, soccer would devolve into hopeful long passes rather than the build-up play that defines the sport. In modern soccer, video review (VAR) has changed how offside is enforced, using precise lines drawn at the moment of the pass to judge extremely tight calls. This has made offside decisions more accurate, but also more controversial, as goals are now sometimes ruled out for a margin of just inches. The core rule, however, remains exactly the same as it has always been. If you enjoy these rule breakdowns, see our explainer on yellow and red card rules in soccer.

The Bottom Line

The offside rule is far simpler than its reputation once you grasp the key distinction: being in an offside position is legal, but becoming involved in active play from that position is an offense. A player is offside if they are in the opponents’ half and ahead of both the ball and the second-to-last defender when a teammate plays the ball, and then they touch it or interfere with the play. With the exceptions for set pieces, own-half positioning, and backward passes, the rule keeps soccer fair and flowing. Master that one core idea and the most confusing rule in the sport finally clicks.