Soccer Warm-Up Drills: Get Match-Ready in 15 Minutes

Soccer Warm-Up Drills: Get Match-Ready in 15 Minutes

A good warm-up gets players physically and mentally ready to perform — and helps prevent injuries. The best soccer warm-up drills raise the heart rate, take the joints through a full range of motion with dynamic movements, and get players touching the ball. Here's a complete 15-minute routine you can run before any game or practice.

These are part of our complete soccer drills guide. Build and save your own warm-up with the free RenderFoot drill planner.

The 4 phases of a soccer warm-up

A proper warm-up builds in intensity through four phases:

  1. Pulse-raiser (3–4 min) — light jogging and movement to raise the heart rate.
  2. Dynamic stretches (3–4 min) — moving stretches through a full range of motion.
  3. Ball work (4–5 min) — passing and dribbling to wake up the touch.
  4. Activation (3–4 min) — sharp, game-speed movements and a few shots.

1. Pulse-raiser & dynamic stretches

Start with 2 minutes of easy jogging around the area, then dynamic stretches over about 20 yards:

  • High knees and heel flicks
  • Open and close the gate (hip rotations)
  • Walking lunges and leg swings
  • Side shuffles and carioca (cross-overs)

Avoid long static stretching before a game. Holding a stretch for 30+ seconds can temporarily reduce power and speed. Save static stretching for the cool-down — use dynamic movements to warm up.

2. Agility & footwork

Soccer agility shuttle drill: a player runs a weaving zig-zag path between five staggered cones
Press Play to follow the run through the cones.

Set up a short cone course and have players run through it with quick changes of direction. This primes the fast-twitch movements they'll use in the game.

  • Setup: 5 cones in a zig-zag, ~5 yards apart.
  • Coaching points: short, sharp steps; stay low through the turns; build to game pace.

3. Passing warm-up

Soccer passing square drill: four players at the corners of a square pass the ball around the circuit
Press Play to watch the ball move around the passing circuit.

Get the ball moving with a simple passing square — four players, a 10 × 10 yard box, pass and follow. It wakes up the first touch and gets players communicating.

  • Progression: two-touch → one-touch → add a second ball.

4. Rondo to finish

Soccer rondo drill: four players pass around a single defender in the middle
Press Play to watch the ball circulate around the defender.

End with a quick rondo (keep-away) to raise the intensity and sharpen decision-making under light pressure — a 4v1 or 5v2 in a small grid is perfect. Then a few shots on goal and the team is ready.

Warm-up drills for kids

Young players warm up best through games, not drills:

  • Tag and "stuck in the mud" with a ball
  • Follow-the-leader dribbling
  • Simple passing in pairs

Keep it short, fun, and full of touches — the goal is to get them moving and smiling before kick-off.

A 15-minute pre-game routine

| Time | Activity | |---|---| | 0–3 min | Jog + dynamic stretches | | 3–7 min | Agility / footwork course | | 7–11 min | Passing square | | 11–14 min | Rondo | | 14–15 min | A few shots + set position |

Frequently asked questions

What is a good soccer warm-up?

A good soccer warm-up builds in four phases: a light jog to raise the heart rate, dynamic stretches through a full range of motion, ball work (passing and dribbling), and sharp game-speed activation. It should last 10–15 minutes and finish at near match intensity — using dynamic movements, not long static stretches.

Should you stretch before playing soccer?

Use dynamic stretching (moving stretches like leg swings, lunges and high knees) before playing. Avoid long static stretches (holding a position for 30+ seconds) before a game, as they can temporarily reduce power and speed. Save static stretching for the cool-down afterward.

How long should a soccer warm-up be?

About 10–15 minutes is ideal — long enough to raise the heart rate, mobilise the joints and get touches on the ball, but not so long that players tire before kick-off. Build the intensity gradually so players finish the warm-up at close to game pace.

How do you warm up kids for soccer?

Use fun, game-based activities: dribbling tag, follow-the-leader, and simple pairs passing. Young players warm up best by moving and playing rather than doing structured drills — keep it short, high-energy and full of ball touches.

Build your warm-up

Design and save a pre-game routine with the free RenderFoot drill planner, and explore the full soccer drills guide — including passing drills and dribbling drills for the rest of your session.

#soccer drills#warm up#dynamic stretching#coaching#pre-game

Créez vos propres graphiques de composition

Utilisez notre créateur de compositions gratuit pour créer des graphiques de formation professionnels. Sans inscription.

Ouvrir le créateur de compositions