What Happens If a Goalkeeper Gets a Red Card?

Every red card costs a team a player. A red card to the goalkeeper costs them two problems at once, because soccer’s laws are non-negotiable on one point: there must always be a goalkeeper on the pitch. When the keeper walks, someone else has to pull on the gloves, and the manager faces an instant, ugly choice: sacrifice an outfield player to bring on the backup keeper, or, if the substitutions are gone, hand the gloves to a defender and pray.

It’s the rarest of all sending-offs, keepers are booked and dismissed far less than outfield players, but when it happens it produces some of the sport’s most chaotic moments: penalty kicks faced by cold substitute keepers, midfielders in oversized jerseys guarding a Champions League goal, and, in one famous case, a legend’s European career ending with a scream at the referee.

The chart below covers exactly what happens when a goalkeeper is sent off: the step-by-step process, the manager’s two options, why keepers see red in the first place, the special situations, and the most famous keeper send-offs ever. Take a look, then we’ll break it all down.

Goalkeeper Red Cards
What happens when the keeper is sent off
1
keeper required, always
10
men left behind
2
manager options
1-3
match ban
What happens, step by step
1. The keeper leaves Off the pitch and its surroundings, like any red card
2. Someone must take the gloves A team cannot play a second without a goalkeeper
3. The team stays at 10 No free replacement; a keeper swap costs an outfielder
4. Any penalty stands The new keeper faces the kick immediately
5. The ban begins Same tariff as outfield players: 1 to 3 matches by offense
The stand-in keeper must wear a goalkeeper jersey to be distinguishable from teammates, which is why every squad travels with a spare set, and why emergency keepers always look like they borrowed someone else’s shirt. They did.
The manager’s dilemma
Option How it works The cost
Bring on the backup keeper Substitute keeper enters; an outfielder comes off Burns a sub + loses an attacker/defender
Outfield player in goal A player already on the pitch takes the gloves An amateur between the posts
No subs remaining? Option 2 is mandatory See: Kyle Walker, 2019
Managers almost always choose the real keeper, typically sacrificing a forward. The exception is deep in stoppage time, when burning a substitution for two minutes of play isn’t worth it.
Why goalkeepers see red
Scenario The ruling
Rushing out & fouling the last attacker DOGSO: the classic keeper red
Handling outside the box, denying a goal DOGSO by handball: red
Handling outside the box, no clear chance Just a free kick, possibly a yellow; NOT automatic red
In-box DOGSO foul, playing the ball Yellow + penalty (the double-jeopardy rule)
Violent conduct or dissent Same as any player: straight red
The biggest fan misconception: a keeper handling outside his area is not automatically a red card. It’s only red when the handball denies an obvious goal-scoring opportunity, judged on the same four factors as any DOGSO.
Special situations
Red during a penalty shootout No new sub allowed; an outfield player who finished the match takes over
Both keepers unavailable An outfielder plays keeper; there is no other option
The stand-in keeper’s powers Full goalkeeper rights: hands in the box, the works
The suspension after The backup keeper starts the next match; the ban can’t be served by proxy
Once an outfield player becomes the goalkeeper, he is the goalkeeper in every legal sense, including being the one who faces any penalty and the only player allowed to handle the ball.
Famous goalkeeper send-offs
Gianluigi Buffon, 2018 Red for raging at the ref over a stoppage-time penalty vs. Real Madrid; his final Champions League match
Claudio Bravo, 2019 Sub keeper sent off with City’s subs used; Kyle Walker finished in goal
The recurring classic Keeper races out, wipes out the striker: a DOGSO red every season
The Bravo night was the perfect storm: Ederson injured at halftime, Bravo on as the sub, then sent off for a last-man foul, leaving right-back Kyle Walker in gloves for a Champions League finish.
Rules per the IFAB Laws of the Game (Laws 3 and 12) and FA disciplinary regulations. Ban lengths follow the standard red-card tariff and apply to the goalkeeper personally. Current as of July 2026.

The one position that must be filled

When a goalkeeper gets a red card, the sending-off itself works like any other: he leaves the field and its surroundings, his team plays the rest of the match with ten, and a suspension follows on the standard tariff, one match for a DOGSO, up to three for violent conduct. What makes it different is Law 3’s iron requirement that every team have a goalkeeper on the pitch at all times. An outfield red leaves a hole in the formation; a keeper red creates a vacancy that must be filled before play restarts, and filling it always costs something extra.

The dilemma: burn a sub or fake a keeper

The manager gets two options and about sixty seconds to choose. Option one, the near-universal pick: bring on the substitute goalkeeper, which requires removing an outfield player, usually a forward, since the team must absorb going a man down somewhere. It costs a substitution and reshapes the game plan, but it puts a professional between the posts. Option two: hand the gloves and the spare jersey to an outfield player already on the pitch. That’s the forced move when all substitutions are used, and occasionally the pragmatic one in deep stoppage time. Either way, the replacement inherits the full job immediately, including, if the red came from a foul in the box, facing the penalty kick cold.

How keepers get themselves sent off

The signature goalkeeper red is the DOGSO: keeper charges off his line to beat a through-ball, arrives second, and takes down the last attacker. Because a keeper is almost always the final defender, the four DOGSO factors align against him more easily than against anyone else on the pitch. The related myth needs killing, though: handling the ball outside the penalty area is not an automatic red card. It’s a foul, and it only becomes a sending-off when the handball denies an obvious goal-scoring opportunity. And keepers benefit from the same 2016 double-jeopardy softening as everyone else; a genuine attempt to play the ball that concedes an in-box DOGSO penalty is a yellow, not a red. The rest of the keeper red-card catalog matches any player’s: violent conduct, serious foul play, and, as one legend proved, dissent.

The famous ones

Gianluigi Buffon’s 2018 dismissal is the most operatic keeper red ever shown: a stoppage-time penalty awarded against Juventus at the Bernabeu, the 40-year-old captain erupting at referee Michael Oliver, and a straight red for dissent in what proved the final Champions League match of his career. For pure chaos, nothing beats Manchester City’s 2019 trip to Atalanta: Ederson injured at halftime, backup Claudio Bravo on in relief, Bravo then sent off for a last-man foul with all substitutions spent, and right-back Kyle Walker pulling on the jersey to see out a Champions League match in goal. He kept a clean sheet for his ten minutes; most emergency keepers aren’t so lucky.

Final Word

What happens if a goalkeeper gets a red card: he’s off like any player and banned for one to three matches, but because a team must always field a goalkeeper, the manager must immediately either sacrifice an outfield player to bring on the backup keeper or hand the gloves to someone already on the pitch. The team plays on with ten, the new keeper faces any penalty the offense produced, and if the substitutions are already spent, a defender learns a new position on live television. It’s the red card with a casting problem, and soccer’s laws make sure the show goes on.

This is one corner of soccer’s disciplinary system. For the full picture, see our guide to yellow and red cards in soccer, our breakdown of what happens after a red card, and the rule behind most keeper send-offs, DOGSO explained.