The position test
A player may be in an offside position if their head, body, or feet are in the opponents' half and nearer to the goal line than both the ball and the second-last opponent. Hands and arms do not count.
Offside
A step-by-step beginner explanation of offside in soccer, including timing, position, and active play.
A player may be in an offside position if their head, body, or feet are in the opponents' half and nearer to the goal line than both the ball and the second-last opponent. Hands and arms do not count.
The player is only penalized if they interfere with play, interfere with an opponent, or gain an advantage from that position.
A player cannot be offside directly from a goal kick, corner kick, or throw-in.
Visual path
Based on FIFA tournament information for World Cup pages and the IFAB Laws of the Game for rules pages. Football Buddy keeps explanations short for casual fans.
Feedback
Mark anything confusing, missing, inaccurate, or hard to read.
FAQ
No. The player must become involved in active play.
No. Hands and arms are not counted for offside position.