A typical high school football game lasts about 2 to 2.5 hours in real time, though it can stretch close to 3 hours in some cases.

Official game clock

  • Regulation time is 48 minutes of play.
  • The game is split into four 12‑minute quarters.
  • Many JV or freshman games may use slightly shorter quarters, so those can finish a bit quicker (around 90 minutes to 2 hours total).

Why it actually takes 2–3 hours

Even though the clock says 48 minutes, lots of stoppages add up.

  • Clock stops for incomplete passes, players going out of bounds, penalties, changes of possession, and measurements.
  • Each team usually has 3 timeouts per half , which pause the game.
  • There are short breaks between quarters.
  • Officials need time to spot the ball, reset the play clock, and handle penalties.

An example: a 12‑minute quarter with many passes, penalties, and timeouts can easily last 25–30 minutes of real time.

Halftime and breaks

  • Halftime is usually around 15–20 minutes , and at some schools it can be extended to 25–30 minutes for bands or special events.
  • Add in team warmups before kickoff and post‑game handshakes or ceremonies, and your night at the stadium often runs well over two hours.

Overtime and special rules

  • If the game is tied, many states use a “Kansas‑style” overtime: each team gets the ball at a set yard line (often the 10 or 25) until one team leads after equal possessions.
  • Overtime can add anywhere from a few extra minutes to another 20+ minutes, depending on how many overtime periods are needed.
  • Some leagues use a running clock (for example, during blowouts or “mercy rule” situations), which keeps the game shorter, closer to the low end of the 2‑hour range.

Quick Scoop (TL;DR)

  • Game clock: 48 minutes (4 × 12‑minute quarters).
  • Typical real‑time length: about 2–2.5 hours.
  • Can be as short as: ~1 hour 45 minutes with few stoppages or a running clock.
  • Can be as long as: close to 3 hours with lots of passing, penalties, delays, or overtime.

If you’re planning your evening, assume you’ll be at a high school football game for around 2.5 hours from kickoff to final whistle.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.