(in white) attempting a two-point conversion, via forward pass, in the
2022 Liberty Bowl College football College football has allowed for a
conversion kick since the beginnings of the game ( 1883), although it was originally worth multiple points. Since 1898, one point has been the value for a conversion kick ("extra point") in college football, and starting in 1922, a conversion could be accomplished in any one of three ways—"By a goal from infield [kick]; by completing a forward pass in the end zone, or by carrying the ball across the line."—each worth a single point. The two-point conversion rule was instituted in college football in
1958, in response to an overall decrease in scoring. Per current
overtime rules in college football, two-point attempts are mandatory starting with double overtime.
Major professional leagues The
American Football League (AFL) used the two-point conversion during its ten-season existence from
1960 to
1969. After the
AFL–NFL merger, the rule did not immediately carry over to the merged league, though they experimented in 1968 with a compromise rule (see
Variants below). Two-point conversions were adopted in Canadian amateur football and the
Canadian Football League (CFL) in
1975. Per current CFL rules, they are mandatory at any point in overtime. The original
United States Football League adopted the two-point conversion rule for its entire existence from 1983 to 1985. The
National Football League (NFL) adopted the two-point conversion rule in , 25 years after the merger.
Tom Tupa scored the first two-point conversion in NFL history, running in a faked one-point attempt for the
Cleveland Browns in a game against the
Cincinnati Bengals in the first week of the 1994 season. He scored a total of three such conversions that season, earning him the nickname "Two-Point Tupa". That same season, the first two-point conversion in
Super Bowl history came during
Super Bowl XXIX when
Mark Seay of the
San Diego Chargers caught a pass thrown by
Stan Humphries.
Other leagues The NFL's developmental league,
NFL Europe (and its former entity, the
World League of American Football), adopted the two-point conversion rule for its entire existence from 1991 through 2007. The
Arena Football League (AFL) has recognized the two-point conversion for its entire existence (in both its original 1987–2008 incarnation and its 2010–2019 revival), allowing for either a play from scrimmage or a
drop kick to be worth two points. A drop kick conversion being worth two points is unique to
arena football. In the
Alliance of American Football (AAF) (which played part of only one season, 2019), two-point conversion attempts were mandatory after touchdowns.
Six-man football reverses the extra point and the two-point conversion: because there is no
offensive line in that game variant, making kick protection more difficult, plays from scrimmage are worth one point but successful kicks are worth two. It is also reversed in many
high school football and youth football leagues, since there are not often skilled kickers at that level. A variant of this, especially at the youth level, is to allow one point for a running conversion, two points for a passing conversion, and two points for a successful kick.
Variants In 1968, leading up to the AFL–NFL merger, the leagues developed a radical "compromise" rule that reconciled the fact that the NFL did not use the two-point conversion but the AFL did: the relatively easy one-point kick would be eliminated and only a play from scrimmage could score one point called a "pressure point". The rule was used for the interleague matchups for that
preseason, and was not tried again. Both the
World Football League and the original
XFL revived this concept, making it a point not to institute a two-point conversion rule so as to eliminate the easy kick. What would constitute a two-point conversion in other leagues counted only one point in the AFL–NFL games, WFL, or the first XFL. The WFL called it the "action point", used after touchdowns, which the WFL counted as seven points. However, the first XFL later added a rule in the playoffs that allowed the scoring team to score two (or even three) points by successfully executing a play from a point farther from the opponent's end zone (two points if the team could score from the five-yard line and three points if they could score from the ten-yard line). This rule was revived along with the XFL in 2020 and has been carried over to the
United Football League.
Champions Indoor Football and the
2024 incarnation of the Arena Football League expanded upon the rule by offering a four-point conversion in addition to two-point and three-point options. The rule was eventually removed from the
Arena Football One rules.
Extra point adjustment During the summer of 2014, the conversion by place kick was reviewed by the NFL. The proposed format would have awarded seven points for a touchdown without an extra-point attempt, eight points with a successful conversion by running or passing, and six points with an unsuccessful attempt. This new format was proposed because of the almost certain probability of making a conversion by place kick (1,260 out of 1,265 for the 2013 season). This proposal was never considered at the league owners' meeting in the spring of 2014. Instead, the league used the first two weeks of its preseason for an experiment that moved one-point kick attempts back to the 20-yard line, while two-point conversions remained at the 2-yard line. The league adopted a slightly modified version of this rule starting with the 2015 season, with the line of scrimmage for one-point kick attempts at the 15-yard line instead of the 20. That same year, the CFL also moved back its line of scrimmage for one-point converts to the 25-yard line (while moving the scrimmage line for a two-point convert ahead two yards to the 3-yard line), thus making the length for a one-point attempt the same in both the NFL and CFL (taking into account the NFL's goalposts on the end line, and the CFL's on the goal line). In college football, the placement of the football remains the same for conversion attempts by any method. ==Defensive two-point conversion==