Scorekeeping

How to keep score in flag football

Keeping score in flag football is simple once you know what each play is worth and how downs move the ball. This guide covers the point values, how a possession works, who keeps score, and how to track it cleanly — whether you're using a scoresheet or an app.

Updated June 16, 2026 · ~5 min read

Key takeaways
  • A touchdown is worth 6 points in most rule sets, including NFL FLAG.
  • The extra-point try is usually 1 point from a shorter line or 2 from a longer line.
  • A safety is worth 2 points and gives the ball back to the scoring team.
  • Track score, the current down, and the clock together — that's where paper gets hard.
  • Your league's rulebook is the final word; point values and try distances vary.

What each play is worth

Most flag football leagues, including NFL FLAG, use these values. Always confirm against your own rulebook, since youth, 7v7, and adult leagues sometimes adjust them.

PlayPointsNotes
Touchdown6Carry or catch the ball into the end zone.
Extra point (short)1Played from a closer line — often the 5-yard line.
Extra point (long)2Played from a farther line — often the 10-yard line.
Safety2Ball-carrier's flag pulled in their own end zone; scoring team gets the ball back.
Defensive try return2In some rule sets, the defense can return an intercepted extra-point try.

How a possession works

Scoring follows possession, so it helps to know how the ball moves. Most leagues give the offense a set number of downs to reach the next line to gain — commonly four downs to cross midfield, then a fresh set of four to score. Cross the line and you keep the ball; come up short and it turns over. See our flag football rules explained guide for downs, no-run zones, and rushing in detail.

Who keeps score

In rec games, the referee often keeps score along with the clock and downs. Larger games add a dedicated scorekeeper or a second official so no one person is tracking everything at once. Decide this before kickoff, and make sure both teams can see the running score to avoid disputes.

Paper vs. an app

A paper scoresheet — team names, a running total, and the period — is enough to record the final score. What paper can't do well is keep the down, the clock, the timeouts, and a play-by-play in sync at game speed. That's where mistakes and arguments creep in.

A purpose-built flag football scoreboard app handles all of it together: tap to score, the play log records what happened, and you can undo a mis-tap instantly. With ReadyRef, the running score is also shareable, so parents and fans can follow the game live from anywhere.

Common scorekeeping mistakes

  • Forgetting the extra-point choice. A 1- and 2-point try aren't the same — log which one was attempted.
  • Losing track of the down. The score is easy; the down is what gets missed mid-drive.
  • No record to settle disputes. Without a play log, a contested score becomes one person's memory against another's.

Frequently asked questions

How many points is a touchdown in flag football?

A touchdown is worth 6 points in most flag football rule sets, including NFL FLAG. After it, the scoring team attempts an extra point.

How do extra points work in flag football?

In NFL FLAG, you choose your try: 1 point from the 5-yard line or 2 points from the 10-yard line. A defense that intercepts the try can return it for 2 points. Exact distances vary by league, so check the rulebook.

Can you keep score on paper in flag football?

Yes. A simple scoresheet with each team, the running total, and the period works fine. The hard part is tracking downs, the clock, and a play-by-play at the same time, which is why many referees use a scoreboard app.

Let the scoreboard do the math

ReadyRef keeps the score, clock, downs, and play log in sync — with one-tap undo and a live, shareable scoreboard for everyone watching.