Here’s the latest on the away-goal rule in the Concacaf Champions Cup:
- The away-goal rule remains the primary tiebreaker in two-legged ties (round of 32, round of 16, quarterfinals, and semifinals) for the Concacaf Champions Cup as of 2026. If the aggregate score is tied after 180 minutes, the team with more away goals advances. This is the standard interpretation reported in early-2026 coverage of the competition rules.[1]
- The final is a single-match decider at a neutral venue, so there is no away-goal consideration in the final; if the final ends in a draw, it goes to extra time and penalties.[2][1]
- Some outlets have highlighted amendments or clarifications in 2025–2026 about how ties are resolved, including explicit notes that away goals do not carry added value during extra time, with penalties if still tied after extra time in two-legged rounds. This nuance aligns with ongoing explanations around the rule’s application to two-legged rounds but not the final.[1][2]
- There have been explanatory pieces and digests in 2025–2026 that emphasize the away-goal rule as a key strategic factor in knockouts, while also noting that if a tie reaches extra time, away goals do not influence the extra-time period, and penalties decide the outcome if still tied.[3][1]
Key points to remember in practice:
- Two-legged ties: aggregate goals first, away goals as tiebreaker.
- If still level after both legs and away goals are equal, extra time is played; away goals do not count during extra time.
- If still tied after extra time, penalties decide the winner.
- The final is a single match; no away goals rule applies to determine the champion.
Illustration example:
- Team A hosts leg 1 and wins 2-1; Team B hosts leg 2 and wins 1-0. Aggregate 2-2, away goals: Team A has 1 away goal, Team B has 0 away goals, so Team A advances.
If you’d like, I can pull the most current official CONCACAF wording or summarize specific club-by-club outcomes from recent knockout rounds to illustrate how the rule has been applied this season. I can also provide a concise comparison table showing how this rule differs from other major competitions. Please tell me which format you prefer.