IHM Knowledge Center
What Is Goalie Interference in Ice Hockey and How Is It Judged?
When does contact with the goalie cancel a goal, and how do referees decide whether interference actually occurred?
Editor: Coach Mark • Updated: April 7, 2026
Short Answer
Goalie interference occurs when an attacking player impairs the goaltender’s ability to move freely or make a save, and goals scored during such interference are disallowed.
Full Explanation
Goalie interference is one of the most complex and situational rules in ice hockey because it depends on movement, timing, and responsibility rather than fixed positioning.
The core principle is simple: the goaltender must be allowed to perform their job without illegal restriction. Any contact that prevents the goalie from tracking, moving, or reacting to the puck can result in a disallowed goal.
However, not all contact is interference. Hockey allows incidental contact, especially when players are battling for position in the crease area.
Referees evaluate three primary factors:
- Who initiated the contact
- Whether the contact impaired the goalie’s ability to make a save
- Whether the attacking player made a reasonable effort to avoid contact
This rule is directly connected to concepts like “crease scramble rules”, “goal after contact goalie”, and “attacking player positioning in crease”.
Types of Goalie Interference Situations
There are several common categories of goalie interference:
- Direct contact initiated by the attacking player
- Screening the goalie without making contact
- Incidental contact caused by defensive players
- Rebounds and second-chance plays inside the crease
Screening is legal as long as the player does not restrict the goalie’s movement.
Contact becomes illegal when it removes the goalie’s ability to square to the puck or move laterally.
NHL vs IIHF Interpretation
In NHL games, the interpretation is highly nuanced and often influenced by context and replay analysis.
IIHF tends to apply a slightly stricter standard regarding crease protection and goalie contact.
NHL allows more physical engagement near the crease, especially if the defending player contributes to the contact.
IIHF officiating leans toward protecting the goalie earlier, especially in international tournaments.
Decision & Controversy Layer
Goalie interference is one of the most controversial calls because fans often focus only on visible contact rather than responsibility and timing.
From a fan perspective, any contact looks like interference. From a referee perspective, the key question is who caused the contact and whether it affected the play.
Two identical collisions can produce opposite rulings depending on whether the attacking player initiated the contact or was pushed by a defender.
Angle plays a critical role. A referee viewing from the side may see clear obstruction, while another angle shows the goalie had full vision and movement.
Timing also matters. Contact that occurs before the shot is treated differently than contact after the puck is already past the goalie.
This leads to constant debate in “goalie interference reviews”, “coach challenge goalie contact”, and “disallowed goal crease rules”.
Edge Case Layer: Defender Push vs Attacker Responsibility
One of the most difficult situations occurs when a defending player pushes an attacking player into the goalie.
If the attacking player makes no effort to avoid contact or uses the situation to create advantage, interference may still be called.
If the contact is clearly caused by the defender and the attacking player has no time or ability to react, the goal may be allowed.
These situations happen in less than a second and require referees to judge intent, balance, and body control in real time.
Another borderline case involves players standing in the crease without contact. Position alone is not illegal, but if it restricts the goalie’s movement path, it may still be ruled interference.
IHM Signal System
Signal: Movement Restriction vs Natural Play
The elite way to read goalie interference is to focus on whether the goalie’s movement path is altered.
- Can the goalie move laterally without obstruction?
- Is the goalie able to square to the puck?
- Is contact preventing a save attempt or just incidental?
- Does the attacking player hold position or actively create contact?
Trigger-level rule:
If the goalie’s ability to move or reset position is physically restricted before the shot, the call is almost always goalie interference.
If the goalie has full freedom of movement and the contact is incidental or post-shot, the goal is more likely to stand.
IHM Insight
The biggest misunderstanding is the belief that the crease is a protected no-contact zone.
In reality, the crease is a contested area where controlled physical presence is allowed.
What matters is not location but impact on the goalie’s ability to play the puck.
Another common mistake is ignoring timing. Contact after the puck has already passed the goalie rarely affects the outcome and is less likely to result in a disallowed goal.
Understanding this difference is critical when analyzing replay reviews and coach challenges.
Mini Q&A: Goalie Interference
- What defines goalie interference?
Any action that impairs the goalie’s ability to make a save. - Is contact with the goalie always a penalty?
No, incidental contact is allowed if it does not affect play. - Can a goal be overturned for goalie interference?
Yes, if interference impacted the goalie’s ability to make a save. - Does being in the crease automatically mean interference?
No, positioning alone is not illegal. - What if a defender pushes the attacker into the goalie?
The referee evaluates responsibility and intent before making a decision.
Why This Rule Exists
The rule ensures that goaltenders can perform their role while maintaining the physical and competitive nature of the game around the net.
Key Takeaways
- Goalie interference depends on impact, not just contact.
- Responsibility and timing determine the ruling.
- Crease presence is allowed but must not restrict movement.
- Referee interpretation is highly situational.