---
title: "How to organize a football tournament: the ultimate guide for coaches and youth leaders"
description: "⚽ Organising your first football tournament: step-by-step checklist for 6-10 teams, a ready-made 8-team schedule and 12-week preparation plan."
datePublished: 2026-04-15
tags:
  - planning
  - indoor-tournament
  - youth-football
  - checklist
---

## The problem: the tournament is Saturday and you don't know where to start

<KapitelZusammenfassung label="Chapter at a glance">A concrete setting: 8 teams, 3 hours of hall, a fair winner at the end. This article is the compact checklist plus a ready-made schedule — the full 12-week timeline lives in the football tournament checklist.</KapitelZusammenfassung>

You're a youth coach, the club asked whether you could take over the indoor tournament next Saturday, and now you're sitting at the kitchen table on Sunday night with no idea where to start. Eight teams are coming, the hall is booked for three hours, and somehow there has to be a fair winner at the end.

This article is exactly for that. No theory, just a concrete checklist with a ready-made schedule for 8 teams in 3 hours of hall time. If you're looking for the general planning checklist for indoor and outdoor tournaments with a 12-week timeline, budget, equipment list, and match-day roles, see the [football tournament checklist](https://areacopa.com/en/blog/football-tournament-checklist).

<DownloadChecklist position="top" />

## The 6 decisions you have to make first

<KapitelZusammenfassung label="Chapter at a glance">Six questions before the first schedule line: how many teams (sweet spot 8), how much net hall time, how long a match (8 to 12 minutes), group stage or full round-robin, who referees, and what the entry fee is.</KapitelZusammenfassung>

Before you write a single line of schedule, these six questions must be answered. Without them you'll start over three times.

<EntscheidungsKarten
  subtitle="The three answers that carry the tournament — teams, match length, format."
  card1Title="8 teams"
  card1Body="Two groups of 4, clear semi-final structure, fits into 3 hours of hall time. Six feels sparse, ten gets tight on time."
  card2Title="10 min, no half-time"
  card2Body="Standard for youth indoor tournaments. Shorter gets hectic, longer breaks the budget with 8 teams. Plus 2-minute breaks."
  card3Title="Groups + knockout"
  card3Body="Two groups of four, then semi-finals and final. A full round-robin (28 matches) busts every budget and gets boring."
  source="DFB booklet 09/2024 (Wettbewerbsformen im Kinderfußball) confirms 10 minutes as the playing-time window from F/E-Jugend on; groups + knockout is the standard indoor-tournament format."
/>

### 1. How many teams?

Six, eight or ten. Anything else is a special case that you, as a first-time organizer, should avoid. **Eight teams** is the sweet spot: two clean groups of four, a clear semi-final structure, fits into three hours of hall time. Six is simpler but feels sparse quickly. Ten gets tight on time.

### 2. How long do you have the hall?

Write down the booked time, the **net time** in which you can actually play. Subtract 15 minutes for setup at the start and 15 for teardown at the end. What's left is your time budget.

### 3. How long should a match be?

For youth tournaments, **a single period of 8–12 minutes** per match has become the norm. Shorter gets hectic, longer blows up the schedule with eight teams. If in doubt: 10 minutes, no half-time, rolling substitutions.

### 4. Group stage or round-robin?

With eight teams: **two groups of four, then semi-finals and final.** Each team plays three group matches plus one or two knockout matches. A full round-robin (28 matches!) busts every time budget and gets boring in the last third anyway, because the winner is already decided.

### 5. Who referees?

The honest answer: usually the coaches of the teams that aren't currently playing. That works fine for the youngest age groups as long as you communicate clear rules in advance. From around U13 upwards, a neutral referee per match is worth gold. Ask your district association whether someone will come for a small fee. For indoor tournaments with futsal rules (particularly sensible from U15 upwards) you ideally want two referees per match plus a timekeeper for accumulated fouls — the [practical guide to futsal for football coaches](https://areacopa.com/en/en/blog/futsal-for-football-coaches) shows the exact setup. For Under-7 festival days with FA FutureFit 3v3 (or Wein/DFB-style 3v3 on four mini-goals) the [FutureFit Coaching Guide: 3v3 Funino drills for Under-7s to Under-11s](https://areacopa.com/en/en/blog/futurefit-funino-coaching-guide) walks through the Pitch Facilitator setup, age-group bands and eight ready-to-run drill variants.

### 6. What does it cost the clubs?

Hall, balls, certificates, maybe referees, maybe a trophy: add it all up, divide by the number of teams, and you have the **entry fee**. Usual range: 20–40 € per team. Communicate the amount in the invitation so there are no discussions on tournament day.

<StartgeldFormel
  title="Calculate the entry fee"
  subtitle="Fixed costs plus a small buffer, divided by the number of teams."
  resultLabel="Entry fee per team"
  numeratorLabel="Fixed costs + 10 % buffer"
  denominatorLabel="Number of teams"
  exampleHeading="Example: 8 teams at an indoor tournament"
  exampleResult="≈ 25 € per team"
  exampleNumerator="180 € hall + 25 € balls and certificates = 205 € + 10 % = 226 €"
  exampleDenominator="8 teams"
/>

> **Tip:** Rule of thumb: For 8 teams, 3 hours of net hall time is enough, with 10-minute
>   matches and 2-minute breaks in between. You don't need more.

## The concrete plan for 8 teams in 3 hours

<KapitelZusammenfassung label="Chapter at a glance">Two groups of 4, 12 group matches at 10 minutes each plus 2-minute breaks, then two semi-finals and a final. Start at 10:00, finish just after 13:00 with 30 to 45 minutes of buffer for the award ceremony and teardown.</KapitelZusammenfassung>

Here's the recipe. You can use it as-is.

### Two groups of four teams

Draw the teams into two groups. Each team plays three group matches. Group winner goes to the semi-final, runner-up too. Third and fourth play placement matches or go home after the group stage if time gets tight.

### Schedule with example times

Assume you start at 10:00. 10-minute matches, 2-minute breaks:

| Time  | Match                    |
| ----- | ------------------------ |
| 10:00 | Group A: Team 1 – Team 2 |
| 10:12 | Group B: Team 5 – Team 6 |
| 10:24 | Group A: Team 3 – Team 4 |
| 10:36 | Group B: Team 7 – Team 8 |
| 10:48 | Group A: Team 1 – Team 3 |
| 11:00 | Group B: Team 5 – Team 7 |
| 11:12 | Group A: Team 2 – Team 4 |
| 11:24 | Group B: Team 6 – Team 8 |
| 11:36 | Group A: Team 1 – Team 4 |
| 11:48 | Group B: Team 5 – Team 8 |
| 12:00 | Group A: Team 2 – Team 3 |
| 12:12 | Group B: Team 6 – Team 7 |

By 12:24 the group stage is done. Five minutes to sort the standings, then:

### Semi-finals and final

| Time  | Match                                |
| ----- | ------------------------------------ |
| 12:30 | Semi-final 1: Winner A – Runner-up B |
| 12:42 | Semi-final 2: Winner B – Runner-up A |
| 12:54 | Final: Winner SF1 – Winner SF2       |

<TurniertagAblaufChart
  title="3-hour indoor tournament at a glance"
  subtitle="Seven markers for the 8-team tournament: three match days through the group stage, then semi-finals and final."
  stepsJson='[{"time":"10:00","label":"Group stage kickoff (matches 1–4)"},{"time":"10:48","label":"Second match day (matches 5–8)"},{"time":"11:36","label":"Third match day (matches 9–12)"},{"time":"12:24","label":"Group stage done, sort standings"},{"time":"12:30","label":"Semi-finals 1 and 2"},{"time":"12:54","label":"Final","highlight":true},{"time":"13:06","label":"Award ceremony and teardown"}]'
/>

By just after 13:00 the tournament is over, and you have 30–45 minutes of buffer for the award ceremony and teardown. Exactly three hours, not a minute wasted.

## The 4 things first-time organizers forget

<KapitelZusammenfassung label="Chapter at a glance">Four forgotten classics: two-minute buffer between matches, water and first-aid kit, a single point of contact for questions, and visible standings on a flipchart or whiteboard.</KapitelZusammenfassung>

### Buffer time between matches

Two minutes sounds like very little, but it's essential. Without a buffer, every single delay (water break, lost ball, coach argument) turns into a domino effect that throws the whole tournament off beat.

### Water and first aid

A crate of water, a few cold packs in the freezer, band-aids and bandage material. Almost every first-time organizer forgets this, and almost every one of them ends up needing it.

### A single point of contact for questions

Designate **one person** (not you, if you're also going to referee) whom everybody can turn to with questions. Otherwise eight coaches will try to talk to you at the same time while you're trying to keep track of the schedule.

### Make results visible to everyone

A flipchart or whiteboard on the sideline does the job. Update after every match. Everybody sees the current standings, no arguments about "who plays whom next", no confusion before the semi-finals.

> **Warning:** Plan at least 2 minutes of buffer between matches. Without that buffer, every
>   small delay cascades and the schedule falls apart by halfway through.

## The last week before the tournament: what needs to happen when

<KapitelZusammenfassung label="Chapter at a glance">Week plan to match day: Mon final acceptances, Tue hall check, Wed schedule draft, Thu lock and send the schedule, Fri gather materials, Sat at the hall 30 minutes before kickoff.</KapitelZusammenfassung>

> **Info:** This week is the **final stretch after** the multi-week prep. Date, hall,
>   referees, and invitations should already be locked in 8–12 weeks ahead, with
>   the registration deadline 4 weeks before. The full timeline lives in the
>   [football tournament checklist](https://areacopa.com/en/blog/football-tournament-checklist).

- **Monday:** Final acceptances review. Backfill from the waiting list if cancellations came in.
- **Tuesday:** Hall check. Key picked up? Who locks up? All bookings confirmed in writing?
- **Wednesday:** Build the schedule draft. Have referees and coaches report any last adjustments.
- **Thursday:** Lock in the schedule and send it to every club. Ask them to forward it to parents.
- **Friday:** Gather materials. Balls, pinnies in two colors, whiteboard and markers, water, first-aid kit, certificates.
- **Saturday:** Be at the hall 30 minutes before kickoff.

## Time to get started

<KapitelZusammenfassung label="Chapter at a glance">Schedule, live table and live result tracking without Excel: AreaCopa sets up the tournament and generates the schedule plus standings automatically. For 5, 7 or 10 teams there are dedicated format presets.</KapitelZusammenfassung>

You now have everything: the decisions, the concrete plan for 8 teams, the pitfalls, and the week-by-week timeline. What's missing is the tool to manage the schedule cleanly, track results live, and sort the table with one click at the end, without Excel fiddling.

That's exactly what **AreaCopa** is for. You create your tournament, enter the teams, and get a schedule plus a live table automatically.

If you only need the schedule, the [schedule generator](https://areacopa.com/en/en/football-tournament-schedule-generator) builds it in 5 minutes; for indoor cup formats with ready-made presets, see the [indoor football tournament app](https://areacopa.com/en/en/indoor-football-tournament-app).

If you do not have 8 teams but 5, 7 or 10, you will find the matching formats with match counts and time budgets in the article [football schedule for 5, 7 or 10 teams](https://areacopa.com/en/blog/football-schedule-5-7-10-teams).

[Create your tournament now](https://areacopa.com/en/tournaments/new?utm_source=agent&utm_medium=markdown&utm_campaign=organize-football-tournament)

## Download the checklist

The full one-week prep plus a ready-made schedule for 8 teams in 3 hours of hall time as a printable PDF. Made for youth coaches running the indoor tournament on Saturday who haven't started yet on Monday.

<DownloadChecklist position="bottom" />

## Sources

- DFB: *Kinderfußball — Guidelines for implementing the new competition formats in age groups U6–U11*, version 09/2024. Binding playing-time windows per age group (festival mode with rounds of 5–12 min), festival format as the required competition mode for G/F/E-Jugend.
- DFB: *Jugendordnung*, booklet 08, version 16.07.2024. Age-group classification, eligibility rules, referee requirements from D-Jugend upwards (neutral referees in league-style competitions).
- DFB: *Indoor football — special rules*, appendix to the playing regulations. 10-minute playing time without a half-time interval as the standard recommendation for youth indoor tournaments.

---
Source: https://areacopa.com/en/blog/organize-football-tournament-quick-guide
