
Many players mistakenly believe they can wait several turns to perform an en passant capture, but the timing is strictly regulated.
According to the FIDE Laws of Chess Official Rulebook, en passant must be performed immediately after the double-square pawn move occurs.
Chess FIDE Laws of Chess, 2008 edition, [page not specified]
These rules correspond to the US edition of Chess.
Official Rule Breakdown
The rules regarding en passant specify that the capture can only occur immediately after the opponent's pawn moves two squares from its original position. If the capturing pawn does not execute the move immediately, the opportunity to capture via en passant is lost for that specific pawn advance. This is a specialized capture mechanism that relies on the immediate temporal window of the double-step move.
Step-by-Step
- Step 1: An opponent moves a pawn two squares forward in a single move from its starting rank.
- Step 2: The capturing player must identify the pawn that has bypassed the square adjacent to their own pawn.
- Step 3: The capturing player executes the move by placing their pawn on the square the opponent's pawn skipped.
- Step 4: The capturing player removes the opponent's pawn from the board as part of the capture.
Example Play Situation
Alice moves her white pawn from e2 to e4. Bob, playing black, moves his pawn from d7 to d5. On his very next turn, Alice captures the pawn by moving her pawn to d4 and removing Bob's pawn from the board.

Common Misconceptions
- Waiting several turns to capture via en passant
- Thinking en passant can be used on any pawn move
- Believing the capture can happen after the opponent has moved another piece
Quick Reference
| You Can | You Cannot |
|---|---|
| Capture immediately after the double-step move | Wait until a later turn to attempt the capture |
| Move the capturing pawn to the empty square behind the opponent's pawn | Attempt en passant if the opponent's pawn only moved one square |
Frequently Asked Questions
- What is the official rule for en passant in Chess?
- The capture must happen immediately after the double-step pawn move.
- Can I perform en passant if my opponent moves their pawn two squares and then I move a different piece?
- No, the opportunity is lost if you do not capture immediately.
- Does en passant work if the pawn only moves one square?
- No, it only applies to the double-step move from the starting rank.
- What happens if I forget to capture en passant on the next turn?
- The pawn is considered to have moved normally and cannot be captured via en passant later.






