Back

MLB Approves ABS Challenge System for 2026 Season

At a glance

  • MLB approved the ABS Challenge System for 2026 use
  • Players can challenge ball and strike calls by tapping their helmet or cap
  • Each team starts with two challenges per game

Major League Baseball’s Joint Competition Committee voted in September 2025 to implement the Automated Ball-Strike (ABS) Challenge System for the 2026 season. This system introduces a new process for reviewing ball and strike calls during MLB games.

Starting on Opening Night in 2026, players will be able to challenge umpire decisions on balls and strikes by tapping their helmet or cap. When a challenge is initiated, the ABS review will be shown on stadium videoboards for all attendees to see.

Only the batter, pitcher, or catcher is permitted to initiate a challenge, and dugout assistance is not allowed under the new rules. Each team will begin every game with two challenges, and if a challenge results in an overturned call, the team retains that challenge for later use in the game.

If a game reaches extra innings and a team has no remaining challenges, the team will receive one additional challenge for each extra inning played. These procedures are designed to structure the use of challenges throughout the game and maintain a consistent review process.

What the numbers show

  • During the first 10 days of 2026 spring training, teams averaged 2.3 ABS challenges per game
  • Overall challenge success rate was 51.3%, with the Athletics at 69.2%
  • Challenges in 2025 spring training averaged 13.8 seconds to resolve

The ABS system has undergone several years of testing before its approval for MLB games. It was first used in Minor League Baseball in 2019, expanded to Triple-A in 2022, and later applied during MLB spring training in 2025. The system was also used in the 2025 MLB All-Star Game.

Data collected from the initial 10 days of 2026 spring training showed that teams used an average of 2.3 ABS challenges per game. The overall success rate for challenges during this period was 51.3%, and the Oakland Athletics achieved the highest rate at 69.2%.

Resolution times for challenges have also been measured. During spring training in 2025, the average time to resolve an ABS challenge was 13.8 seconds, indicating a relatively quick review process for disputed calls.

The introduction of the ABS Challenge System marks a procedural change in how ball and strike calls are reviewed in Major League Baseball. The system’s implementation follows multiple years of testing and evaluation at different levels of professional baseball.

* This article is based on publicly available information at the time of writing.

Sources and further reading

Note: This section is not provided in the feeds.

Related Articles

  1. Updates for Pantheon’s itemization and economy include a player market and mail system set for 2026, according to the developers' roadmap.

  2. HPE raised its fiscal 2026 EPS guidance to $2.25–$2.45 and projects networking revenue growth of 65–70%, according to company statements.

  3. A filing describes the delay of CISA's cyber incident reporting rule to May 2026, affecting over 300,000 entities, according to the agency.

  4. FPV drones, AI tools, and cloud broadcasting will enhance the viewer experience at the 2026 Winter Olympics, according to reports.

  5. SpaceX has postponed its Mars mission planned for late 2026, shifting focus to lunar projects and AI infrastructure, according to company statements.

More on Technology

  1. Sony will raise PlayStation 5 prices in the UK on April 2, 2026, with the disc version increasing to £569.99, according to company statements.

  2. A new AI Task Force was launched in June 2025 to address governance issues, according to the Council on Criminal Justice.

  3. Current AI lacks consciousness, generating text through statistical predictions, creating an illusion of sentience, according to expert consensus.

  4. Artemis II is set for an April 2026 launch, marking the first crewed lunar flyby since Apollo 17, according to reports.

  5. A mission in December 1968 resulted in the first color photograph of Earth from lunar orbit, according to NASA records.