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8-Team Double Elimination Bracket: Free Printable PDF (Blank, Fillable)

A 8-team double elimination bracket gives every team a second chance: you have to lose twice to be knocked out. Teams that lose in the winners bracket drop into a losers bracket, and the survivor of each side meets in the championship. Our free version prints on one landscape page with a winners bracket, a full losers bracket, and a championship box, plus a title you can delete in any PDF editor.

Quick Facts: 8-Team Double Elimination Bracket

Teams: 8

Winners bracket rounds: 3

Losers bracket rounds: 4, with drop-in slots

Total games: 14 (or 15 if a bracket reset is needed)

Out when: You lose twice

Format: Blind draw, print-at-home, no login

How Does a 8-Team Double Elimination Bracket Work?

8-Team Double Elimination Bracket printable PDF

In a double elimination tournament, one loss does not end your run. All 8 teams start in the winners bracket. Lose there and you move to the losers bracket. Lose a second time and you are eliminated. The last team standing in each bracket meets in the championship.

The Winners Bracket

The winners bracket works like a 8-team single elimination bracket, cutting the field in half each round over 3 rounds. Every team that loses drops down into the losers bracket instead of going home.

The Losers Bracket

The losers bracket runs over 4 rounds. It alternates between rounds where losers-bracket survivors play each other and rounds where a team just eliminated from the winners bracket drops in. On our printable, those drop-in spots are the gold lines. The last team standing earns the second championship spot.

The Championship (and Possible Reset)

The championship pits the winners-bracket champion against the losers-bracket champion. The winners-bracket team has not lost yet, while the losers-bracket team has one loss. If the losers-bracket team wins, both now have one loss, so they play one more deciding game, called a bracket reset. If the winners-bracket team wins, the tournament is over.

Number of Games

A 8-team double elimination tournament has 14 games (2 times 8, minus 2), or 15 if a bracket reset is needed. That is roughly double a single elimination event, the trade-off for giving everyone a second life.

Blind Draw vs Seeded

This template is a blind draw, with teams filled in randomly. You can also seed it. For a deeper explanation, see the double-elimination tournament overview on Wikipedia.

How to Use This Printable Bracket

Print the PDF in landscape, fill in the 8 teams on the left of the winners bracket, then track winners to the right and losers down into the losers bracket. The title at the top is a separate text element you can delete for a clean sheet. Need a different size or a single elimination version? See the full printable brackets hub.

Frequently Asked Questions

How many games are in a 8-team double elimination bracket?

14 games, or 15 if the championship needs a bracket reset. Double elimination roughly doubles the games of single elimination because every team can lose once and keep playing.

What is a bracket reset in double elimination?

It is a deciding final game. The winners-bracket team enters the championship unbeaten, so if the losers-bracket team beats them once, both have a single loss and they play one more game to decide the title.

What does the losers bracket do?

It keeps teams alive after their first loss. Teams eliminated from the winners bracket drop into the losers bracket and keep playing until they lose a second time.

How many rounds are in a 8-team double elimination tournament?

The winners bracket has 3 rounds and the losers bracket has 4, plus the championship and a possible reset game.

Can I delete the title on the printable PDF?

Yes. The title at the top is a separate text object, so you can remove it in any PDF editor for a blank, unbranded bracket.

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Will Lewis Editor, Author
Will Lewis has covered sports for over 18 years, specializing in bracketology, tournament predictions, and in-depth analysis across college hoops, NFL, NBA, NHL, MLB, and more. March Madness is his favorite season, fueling his quest for perfect brackets before diving into pro playoffs. A lifelong Kentucky Wildcats fan, Bengals supporter since the Joe Montana era, and now a Padres devotee, Will delivers reliable, fan-first insights at Sports Brackets. Connect on X or comment. He loves talking brackets and more.