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Physical and tournament chess rules: the 10 that change everything

Playing chess on a physical board is a different thing compared to playing online. There are rules that the screen handles for you and that here depend on you: touching a piece, claiming a draw, pressing the clock… Let’s go through them one by one so your first game at a club or tournament doesn’t get complicated.

1. Touching a piece forces you to move it

This is the most famous rule of physical chess and even your grandmother knows it: touch-move.

If you touch one of your pieces, you’re required to move it, as long as a legal move exists with it. And if you touch an opponent’s piece, you’re required to capture it, if you can.

And what if you just want to adjust a piece that’s poorly placed? Before touching it, you must say “I adjust” (or “j’adoube” in its classic French form). That way you let your opponent know it isn’t a move and avoid misunderstandings.

2. Announcing check and checkmate

In casual games people say “check” or “checkmate” out loud. In tournaments it isn’t mandatory.

So why does it still get said among friends? Because it helps. Especially if you’re a beginner, announcing check keeps your opponent from carelessly ignoring the threat and making a mistake. Learn the typical checkmate patterns and you’ll soon see that some announce themselves.

3. The chess clock

In rated games you play with a chess clock, that two-faced device that controls each side’s time.

After making your move, you press the clock with the same hand that moved the piece. That stops your time and starts your opponent’s. If you get distracted and don’t press it, you keep using up your own time even though you’ve already played.

And if you run out of time? You lose the game automatically, unless your opponent doesn’t have enough material to checkmate you (for example, a lone king). In that case, the game is a draw.

4. Claiming a draw

In physical chess there are three common ways to ask for a draw, and you almost always have to claim it yourself:

  • Threefold repetition of the position. If the same position appears three times (not necessarily in a row), you can claim a draw.
  • The 50-move rule. If in the last 50 moves no pawn has moved and nothing has been captured, you can also claim a draw.
  • Mutual agreement. You can offer a draw during your turn, before pressing the clock. The opponent accepts or declines.

If no one claims anything, the game continues.

5. Illegal moves

If you make an illegal move in a tournament (moving the king to an attacked square, leaving your king in check, moving two pieces at once…), your opponent can claim the error.

The arbiter usually penalizes by adding time to the opponent’s clock and, in case of repeat offenses, can declare the game lost. If the error is detected later, the game is rolled back to the position before the illegal move.

Learn the basic rules of chess well so this doesn’t happen to you.

6. Ambiguous positions

Sometimes, in the rush, a piece ends up between two squares or slightly displaced. Is it on e4 or e5? In physical chess this can cause a lot of confusion.

The solution is straightforward: agree with each other. In tournaments, if there’s no agreement, you call the arbiter. That’s why it’s worth placing pieces carefully in the center of each square.

7. Interactions with your opponent

Chess is a game of mutual respect, and there are a couple of unwritten rules worth following:

  • Offering a draw, only during your turn and before pressing the clock. The opponent decides and the game continues without further comment.
  • Avoiding distractions. Talking too much, gesturing, banging pieces, tapping your foot loudly… all of that is bad manners and, in a tournament, punishable.

8. Claiming a win (or a draw by stalemate)

Is your opponent stalemated? That is, they have no legal moves but their king isn’t in check. That’s a draw, not a win. And you’re the one who has to claim it.

If instead you delivered checkmate and no one noticed, the game can continue until it’s officially declared. That’s why it’s worth always checking that your move really was the mate you thought it was.

9. A fallen or misplaced piece

Did a piece fall while you were making your move? Pick it up, place it correctly, and then press the clock. If you press it with the piece out of its square, it’s considered an illegal move in a tournament.

The same applies if you’ve moved but the piece ended up between two squares: finish placing it properly before touching the clock.

10. Stopping the game

In a tournament, you can stop the clock to call the arbiter if there’s a dispute, a rules question, or an obvious mistake by your opponent.

That said: you can’t stop the clock because you feel like a coffee or want to check your phone. That will get you straight to losing the game.

And behavior? That counts too

Rules are one thing, but behavior at the board is another. If you’re about to play your first tournament, don’t miss the guide on how to behave in chess and its traditions: it’ll save you more than one awkward moment.


Related reading: Basic chess rules · Board and square names · Algebraic notation · Typical checkmate patterns · How to behave in chess

Preguntas frecuentes

What is the touch-move rule?

If you touch one of your pieces on the board, you're required to move it (as long as a legal move is possible). If you touch an opponent's piece, you must capture it if you can. To adjust a piece without moving it, you must announce it by saying 'I adjust' before touching it.

Is it mandatory to say check in a tournament?

No. In official games there's no requirement to verbally announce 'check' or 'checkmate.' In casual games it's common to say it, especially among beginners, to avoid mistakes.

When can I claim a draw in a physical game?

You can claim a draw if the same position has appeared three times on the board (threefold repetition), or if in the last 50 moves no pawn has moved and no piece has been captured (the 50-move rule). If you don't claim it, the game continues.

What happens if I make an illegal move in a tournament?

Your opponent can claim it. In a tournament, the arbiter usually adds time to the opponent's clock and, if it happens again, can declare the game lost. If the illegal move is detected later, the game must be rolled back to the position before the error.