Boxing ScoreΒ Calculator

Boxing Score Calculator | 10-Point Must System & Decision Predictor
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Boxing Score Calculator

Calculate final scores, rounds won, and predict the type of decision (unanimous, split, majority, or draw) using the official 10-point must scoring system for professional boxing.

πŸ₯Š 10-Point Must
πŸ“Š Scorecard
πŸ”” Rounds
βš–οΈ Decision

Fight Scorecard

Enter the judges’ scores for each round to calculate the final result

πŸ”” Fight Configuration

Select the scheduled number of rounds for the bout.

πŸ“Š Round-by-Round Scores
Round πŸ”΄ Fighter A πŸ”΅ Fighter B
πŸ’₯ Knockdowns & Deductions

Knockdowns and point deductions are already reflected in the round scores under the 10-point must system. Enter totals here for the full statistical breakdown.

Official Scorecard

Final result, decision type, and round breakdown

πŸ₯Š

Enter the round-by-round scores above and click Calculate Final Score to reveal the official decision and complete fight statistics.

Common Round Scores & Meanings

Understanding the 10-point must scoring system helps you interpret boxing scorecards accurately and predict fight outcomes.

Round Score Classification When Used Description
10-9Standard RoundMost commonWinner of the round receives 10, loser receives 9
10-8Dominant RoundKnockdownWinner dominates or opponent scored a knockdown
10-7Heavy Dominance2 knockdownsTwo knockdowns or extreme dominance in the round
10-6Extreme3 knockdownsThree knockdowns; some jurisdictions end the fight here
10-10Even RoundRareRound is perfectly even; rarely used in professional boxing

Boxing Scoring FAQ

Everything you need to know about the 10-point must system, decision types, and how professional boxing fights are officially scored.

The 10-point must system is the standard scoring method used in professional boxing worldwide. Under this system, the winner of each round must be awarded 10 points, and the loser typically receives 9 points (10-9). If a boxer is knocked down, they lose a point, resulting in a 10-8 round. The system ensures consistent, objective scoring across all bouts.

A 10-8 round indicates that one fighter dominated the round significantly, usually because they scored a knockdown. If a fighter is knocked down twice in the same round, the score often becomes 10-7. Three knockdowns in a single round can result in a 10-6 score in jurisdictions that allow it, though some organisations apply a three-knockdown rule that ends the fight.

In professional boxing, three judges each score every round independently. A unanimous decision means all three judges score the fight for the same fighter. A split decision means two judges score for one fighter and one for the other. A majority decision occurs when two judges pick one fighter and the third scores it a draw. If two or more judges score it even, the fight is a draw.

Point deductions are issued by the referee for fouls such as low blows, holding, hitting behind the head, or headbutting. A deduction removes one point (or sometimes more) from the offending fighter’s score in the round the foul occurred. Multiple deductions can occur throughout a fight and can significantly impact the final scorecard.

Championship fights (world title bouts) consist of 12 rounds of 3 minutes each. Non-title professional fights are typically scheduled for 4, 6, 8, or 10 rounds. Amateur boxing matches (including Olympic boxing) are shorter, usually 3 rounds of 3 minutes for men and 3 rounds of 2 minutes for women.

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