11. Stalemate & Draw
Learn when a chess game ends in a draw and the tricky stalemate rule.
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Lesson Content
Stalemate: it's Black's turn but the king has no legal moves—every square around it is either occupied or attacked. But the king is NOT in check. Result: the game is a draw!
Stalemate is a common accident when one side is winning. Here White has a queen and king vs. a lone king. White must be careful not to stalemate Black!
It's Black's turn. The king has no legal moves but is not in check. What is the result?
Other types of draws: (1) Agreement—both players agree to a draw. (2) Threefold repetition—the same position occurs three times. (3) 50-move rule—50 moves with no captures or pawn moves. (4) Insufficient material—neither side can checkmate.
King vs. King with no other pieces. What is the result?
What's the key difference between stalemate and checkmate?
Key Takeaways
- Stalemate: no legal moves + not in check = draw
- Stalemate is different from checkmate (draw vs. loss)
- It's a common mistake when one side has an overwhelming advantage
- Other draws: agreement, threefold repetition, 50-move rule, insufficient material
- King vs. King is always a draw