
Many players mistakenly believe that en passant can be performed at any time after a pawn advances, but the rule is strictly time-sensitive.
No, according to the FIDE Official Rulebook, en passant is only legal on the move immediately following the two-square advance.
Chess Official Rules [edition not specified], Article 3.7.d
These rules correspond to the UK edition of Chess.
Official Rule Breakdown
According to Article 3.7.d of the FIDE Laws of Chess, a pawn attacking a square crossed by an opponent’s pawn which has advanced two squares in one move from its original square may capture this opponent’s pawn as though the latter had been moved only one square. This specific capture is only legal on the move following this advance and is designated as an ‘en passant’ capture.
Step-by-Step
- Step 1: An opponent moves a pawn two squares forward from its original position in a single move.
- Step 2: The capturing player must perform the en passant move on their very next turn.
- Step 3: The capturing pawn moves to the square the opponent's pawn 'skipped' over.
- Step 4: The opponent's pawn is removed from the board as part of the capture.
Example Play Situation
Alice moves her white pawn from e2 to e4. On the next turn, Bob moves his black pawn from d7 to d5. Alice can then immediately perform an en passant capture by moving her pawn to d3 and removing Bob's pawn.

Common Misconceptions
- Waiting several turns to perform en passant
- Thinking en passant works on pawns that have already moved once
- Attempting en passant when the pawn is not on its original square
Quick Reference
| You Can | You Cannot |
|---|---|
| Capture the pawn on the move immediately following the two-square advance | Attempt en passant after multiple moves have passed |
| Move the capturing pawn to the square the opponent's pawn passed over | Try to capture a pawn that has already moved one square or more |
Frequently Asked Questions
- What is the official rule for en passant in Chess?
- It is only legal on the move immediately following a two-square pawn advance.
- Can I perform en passant if my opponent moved their pawn two squares three turns ago?
- No, the opportunity to capture en passant expires after the very next move.
- Is it allowed to use en passant to capture a pawn that only moved one square?
- No, en passant only applies when a pawn advances two squares from its starting position.
- What happens if I miss the chance to capture en passant?
- The pawn is considered to have moved normally, and the en passant capture is no longer legal.






