Here’s the latest on Stanley Cup Playoffs overtime rules.
- Overtime in the playoffs is full 20-minute periods, 5-on-5, played until a goal ends the game. There is no shootout in the playoffs. This format continues through multiple overtime periods if needed.[3][8]
- If a goal is scored during overtime, the game ends immediately; if no goal is scored in the first overtime, a second overtime begins with the same rules, and so on until a goal occurs.[8][3]
- Penalties in overtime follow standard playoff rules: teams play 5-on-5, and if a penalty occurs, the advantage situation (e.g., 4-on-3 or 3-on-3) is applied only for the duration of the penalty, returning to even strength when it expires.[1]
- This playoff format (no shootouts, sudden death in overtime) has been in place for recent seasons and is consistent across Stanley Cup Final games and the broader playoffs.[3][8]
Illustration: If a game is tied after regulation, expect a 20-minute overtime period. If no goal is scored, you’ll get another 20-minute period, and so on, with the clock resetting and sides swapping after each period. The first goal in any overtime ends the game immediately.
If you’d like, I can pull the most recent specific game(s) and summarize the overtime outcomes or explain how a particular series applied these rules in a recent matchup.