Use our interactive boxing scorecard to score any fight round by round using the 10-point must system. Whether you are watching a world-title fight, a domestic dust-up or scoring along with friends, this boxing scorecard gives you a simple way to keep your own judge’s card in real time.

Tap each boxer to award a round, mark knockdowns, track the totals live and create a shareable scorecard as the fight unfolds.

Boxing Scorecard

Score the fight round by round and share your card.

Score the fight

Enter both boxers, tap the winner of each round, then choose the result.

Rounds
Round-by-round Tap a fighter for 10–9 · again for 10–8 · tap the round no. for even
Win by

How scoring works

  • Win a round 10–9 on the 10-point must system.
  • A knockdown usually makes it 10–8.
  • Even rounds are scored 10–10 (rare).
  • A stoppage (KO/TKO) ends the fight regardless of the cards.
Your scorecard to share

Updates live as you score.

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How to use the boxing scorecard

Type both boxers into the corners, then work through the fight one round at a time. Tap a boxer to award them the round 10–9. If a boxer scores a knockdown or wins a round overwhelmingly, tap them again to make it 10–8. Tap the round number at the top of a column to mark an even round at 10–10. Your totals update automatically, and the leader’s score turns red.

When the fight is over, choose how it ended under “Win by” — a decision, a stoppage, a draw or a no contest. For a stoppage you can set the winner, the round and the time. The card at the top of the page rebuilds itself as you go, ready to download, copy or post to X.

What is the 10-point must system?

Almost all professional boxing is scored on the 10-point must system. The judge “must” award 10 points to the boxer who wins the round, and the opponent gets 9 or fewer. A close, competitive round is 10–9. A round with a knockdown is normally 10–8, and two knockdowns in the same round can be 10–7. A genuinely even round is 10–10, though judges score those sparingly.

If the bout goes the full distance, each judge adds up their round scores and the boxer with the higher total wins on that card. With three judges at ringside, the combination of those three cards decides the official result.

Unanimous, majority and split decisions explained

When a fight goes to the scorecards, the result is named after how the three judges agreed.

Unanimous decision

All three judges score the fight in favour of the same boxer.

Majority decision

Two judges score it for one boxer and the third scores it a draw.

Split decision

Two judges favour one boxer and the third judge scores it for the opponent — the closest kind of points win, and the one this site is named after.

Draws

A bout can also be drawn: a unanimous draw, a majority draw (two cards level, one for a boxer) or a split draw (one card each way, one level).

How are knockdowns and point deductions scored?

A knockdown almost always swings the round to a 10–8. The referee, not the judges, decides whether a knockdown has occurred. Point deductions are also the referee’s call — for fouls such as low blows, holding or hitting after the bell — and a deducted point is subtracted from that boxer’s score for the round, so an otherwise even-looking round can end up 10–8 or 9–9 once a deduction is applied.

Stoppages end the fight before the cards matter. A knockout (KO) follows a ten-count, a technical knockout (TKO) is when the referee, ringside doctor or corner stops it, a corner retirement (RTD) happens between rounds, and a disqualification (DQ) ends it on fouls.

Boxing scoring FAQs

How do you score a boxing fight?

Boxing is scored on the 10-point must system. The judge gives the winner of each round 10 points and the other boxer 9 or fewer. If the fight goes the distance, the round scores are added up and the boxer with the higher total wins on that judge’s card.

What is a 10-8 round in boxing?

A 10–8 round is awarded when one boxer clearly dominates, most often after scoring a knockdown. Two knockdowns in the same round is usually scored 10–7.

What is the difference between a unanimous, majority and split decision?

In a unanimous decision all three judges score the fight for the same boxer. In a majority decision two judges favour one boxer and the third scores it a draw. In a split decision two judges score it for one boxer and the third scores it for the opponent.

Is this an official boxing scorecard?

No. This is your own card for following along and sharing. Official results are decided by the licensed judges at ringside.

How to Use the Interactive Boxing Scorecard

Use the scorecard above to record your own boxing score as each round finishes. Select the number of rounds, then tap the boxer you believe won each round. A standard winning round is usually scored 10-9, while a round with a knockdown is commonly scored 10-8.

You can also tap the round number if you want to mark a round even. As you score the fight, the totals update automatically, giving you a live view of your card before the final result.

At the end of the fight, choose whether the result should be a decision, stoppage, draw or other outcome, then use the shareable card to compare your score with other boxing fans.

How to Score a Boxing Fight at Home

When scoring a boxing fight at home, try to judge each round separately rather than letting one big moment influence your entire card.

A simple way to score each round is to ask:

Do not score based only on commentary, crowd noise or punch volume. A fighter can throw more shots and still lose the round if the other boxer lands cleaner, harder and more accurate punches.