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XbotGo Falcon

XbotGo Falcon All-in-One 4K Camera — just power on and play. Powered by XbotVision 3.0, it delivers high-speed, precise auto-tracking for soccer, basketball, hockey, and 10+ sports. The all-in-one app lets you stream live for free, edit with AI, and share highlights instantly. No subscriptions.
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XbotGo Falcon AI Sports Camera

How Many Substitutions Can Be Made in Soccer?

In professional soccer, each team gets 5 substitutions per match. But here’s the part most fans miss: those 5 subs can only be made across 3 stoppages in play. Halftime is a free extra window — it doesn’t count against that limit.

That’s the short answer to how many substitutions in soccer. Below is everything else worth knowing — including why there’s a 3-window cap, how the rules differ by league, and what happens in situations like a concussion or a player who refuses to come off.

The 5-Sub Rule, Step by Step

Under IFAB’s Law 3 — the official rulebook that governs soccer worldwide — professional substitutions work like this:

  • 5 substitutions allowed per team, per match
  • 3 windows maximum during regular time (stoppages in play)
  • Halftime is a free extra window — doesn’t count against your 3
  • If both teams substitute at the same stoppage, it counts as one used window for each
  • Subbed-off players cannot return to the field

A team can use 2 subs in one window and 3 in another. The only limit is how many times they stop play to make changes.

If the match goes to extra time, each team gets one additional substitution — bringing the theoretical maximum to 6. Substitutions made between full time and extra time, or at halftime of extra time, don’t count against the window limit.

Why Only 3 Windows?

When IFAB approved the 5-sub rule in May 2020 — originally as a COVID-19 pandemic measure to protect players during compressed fixture schedules — they added the window restriction deliberately.

Without the cap, teams could stop play five separate times. That means more interruptions, more time-wasting, and a choppier match. The 3-window rule lets teams rotate players freely while keeping the game’s rhythm intact. It’s a design choice almost no article bothers to explain. But understanding it helps make sense of why managers bundle substitutions together — it’s not inefficiency, it’s maximizing limited windows.

Substitution Rules by League and Level

The 5-sub standard is now global for professional soccer, but the details vary by competition.

Competition

Subs Allowed

Notes

Premier League

5

Adopted 2022-23 season

Champions League

5

+1 allowed in extra time

MLS (2025)

5

Concussion sub also available

FIFA World Cup 2026

5

+1 in extra time; new 10-sec exit rule

NCAA college soccer

Unlimited

Re-entry restrictions apply by half

Youth / recreational

Often unlimited

Rolling subs; full re-entry allowed

The Premier League was the last major European league to adopt 5 subs. La Liga, Serie A, and the Bundesliga switched during 2020-21. The Premier League held out until 2022-23, with smaller clubs worried that wealthier teams with deeper squads would gain an even bigger advantage.

As Pep Guardiola put it at the time: “All around the world it’s five substitutions but here we believe we’re more special. We don’t protect the players.” Eventually they came around — the five-sub rule became permanent worldwide after IFAB made the temporary COVID measure official in October 2021.


The 2026 World Cup adds something new. FIFA introduced a 10-second exit rule to crack down on time-wasting: when a substitution is called, the player coming off has 10 seconds to leave the field. Drag it out, and your team plays with 10 men for 60 seconds before the substitute can enter. It’s the most direct anti-time-wasting rule soccer has ever applied to substitutions.

College soccer runs differently from anything in professional play. NCAA teams can make unlimited substitutions, but re-entry restrictions apply — a player who comes off in the first half typically can’t return that same half. It’s a development-first philosophy with no equivalent in professional rules.

Youth and recreational leagues often go further. Rolling substitutions with full re-entry are common — a player can come off and come back on in the same game. IFAB explicitly permits this for youth, veterans, and grassroots soccer, making it one of the clearest structural differences between the youth and professional games.

Special Situations Worth Knowing

Concussion substitutions sit outside the normal 5. IFAB formally adopted a permanent concussion protocol in 2024: each team gets one additional substitution if a player suffers or is suspected of suffering a concussion. That sub doesn’t count against the normal limit. To keep things balanced, the opposing team also gets an additional substitute when a concussion sub is used.

What if all 5 subs are used and another player gets injured? The team plays on short-handed. There’s no emergency backup for non-concussion injuries once the limit is reached. IFAB law only requires 7 players on the field to continue a match — so it’s technically possible to finish a game seriously undermanned. It’s part of why congested fixture schedules push managers to use substitutions proactively, rather than waiting.

Can a player refuse to be substituted? Yes. IFAB rules say if the player being replaced refuses to leave, the referee simply lets play continue. This became famous during the 2019 Carabao Cup Final, when Chelsea goalkeeper Kepa Arrizabalaga stayed on the pitch despite manager Maurizio Sarri signaling for him to come off. Kepa stayed. Sarri was furious. Chelsea still won the penalty shootout.

Docify_c0c3e150-9e7a-42cd-9fe1-e84258192dcb

When Coaches Actually Pull the Trigger

Professional managers follow a rough pattern: one sub at halftime, then staggered changes around the 55th, 65th, and 75th minutes. That spacing gives each new player time to settle into the match.

The first positions subbed are usually wingers, fullbacks, and forwards — roles that cover the most ground and deplete fastest. Central defenders and goalkeepers almost never come off unless there’s an injury. Defensive stability matters most in the final third of a match, and the goalkeeper is too central to team organization to rotate mid-game.

The “super-sub” role is real and proven. Mario Götze came off the bench to score the 2014 World Cup winning goal in extra time. Gareth Bale scored a bicycle kick as a substitute in the 2018 Champions League Final. A fresh player entering at the 65th minute often has a physical edge over defenders who’ve been running for over an hour — and smart managers design their substitution timing around exactly that.

If you coach or film youth games, substitutions are some of the most instructive moments on tape — they reveal tactical adjustments, game-state decisions, and which players hit the ground running when fresh. The XbotGo Falcon tracks play automatically with a wide-angle 4K lens, so every substitution and what happens in the minutes after gets captured without a dedicated camera operator. For coaches trying to review which subs paid off, having full-match footage makes that analysis possible.

Soccer’s substitution rules have evolved from zero before 1970 to the 5-sub, 3-window standard that now governs professional play worldwide. Whether you’re coaching youth players, following MLS, or watching the 2026 World Cup this summer, the basics are the same: five chances to change a game, limited windows to use them, and every decision counts.

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