Yellow and red cards explained: football's discipline system
By KickoffHQ Editorial · 28 June 2026
The referee's cards are football's currency of justice. Here's what each one means and what happens next.
The yellow card
A yellow card is a caution — a formal warning. A player is booked for offences such as:
- A reckless foul
- Persistent fouling
- Dissent (arguing with the referee)
- Time-wasting
- Deliberately handling the ball to stop an attack
- Removing their shirt during a celebration
One yellow doesn't stop you playing — but it puts you on a knife-edge.
The red card
A red card means the player is sent off and must leave the pitch immediately. Their team plays the rest of the match a player short and cannot replace them. There are two routes to red:
- Two yellow cards in the same match (the referee shows a second yellow, then red).
- A straight red for a single serious offence.
What earns a straight red
The most serious offences skip the warning entirely:
- Serious foul play — a dangerous, out-of-control challenge
- Violent conduct — striking or trying to strike anyone
- Denying an obvious goal-scoring opportunity (DOGSO), e.g. a last-man foul or deliberate handball on the line
- Spitting at someone
- Offensive or threatening language
Suspensions
Cards carry consequences beyond the match. A red card brings an automatic suspension of one or more games, with longer bans for violent conduct. Yellow cards accumulate across a competition: reach a set number (often five in a league season, or two in the early rounds of a cup) and you're suspended for the next match — which is why managers fret about players "one booking away" from a ban before a big game.
Why it matters
A red card can swing a match in an instant, and a key player picking up a soft yellow can change how a team plays for an hour. Discipline isn't a side-show — it's part of the tactical battle.
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