Every great soccer player started somewhere, and for most, that “somewhere” was their home. Even modern prodigies like Thiago Messi get countless touches in during their early years at home.
As a soccer player, the best way to improve is to be in a team environment because that way you can train, play in matches, and gain experience. You also have to be consistent with your overall training and recovery.
However, sometimes team training isn’t enough, which is why it is important to also play pickup games, small-sided games, and do individual training sessions throughout the week. When it comes to solo training, the best scenario is having access to a high-quality field with a regulation goal, but these facilities aren’t always available.
Sometimes you lack transportation to reach a field, or weather conditions make outdoor practice impossible. This is where at-home soccer drills come in because they allow you to build fundamental skills with just a ball and whatever space you have available.
In this guide, I’ll cover seven of the best home soccer drills you can perform anytime if you’re just beginning your soccer journey.
What are the best at-home soccer drills for beginners?
Based on different factors like available space, the playing surface (grass, turf, or pavement), your gear and equipment, and whether you’re practicing indoors, like in a garage or outdoors in your backyard, each drill can be adapted to work in practically any setting. All you really need is a soccer ball, your feet, and time.
For these drills, you can practice for either a set duration or specific repetitions. You can also perform these exercises barefoot to gain additional benefits and make sure to spend time on both feet.
Also, even though these drills can build stamina, they’re mainly designed to develop technical ability, coordination, and confidence with the ball, since you might have limited space when training at home.
Juggling
By far, one of the best drills for all beginner players is juggling, which is also one of the simplest drills. Juggling improves ball control, your touch with different parts of your body, and builds coordination that transfers to other soccer skills.
Begin by dropping the ball and hitting it back up with your foot, then advance to keeping it airborne using your feet, thighs, chest, and head. Focus on keeping your body loose, your eyes on the ball, alternating between different body parts, and especially making sure to use both feet.
Wall Passing Variations
For passing exercises, a wall or rebounder becomes the best training partner because it’s one that never tires, never skips practice, and matches your energy every single session. Use this setup to work on ground passes, driven balls, aerial passes, one-touch returns, and two-touch combinations.
The secret here is variety and intensity: switch between your left and right foot, control returns with different surfaces (inside, outside, laces), take different directional touches left and right, and vary your passing speed and power. If you have access to two or more walls, position yourself in a corner to practice passing at different angles and develop different combination patterns.
Wall Passing with Turns
Once you’re confident with stationary wall passing, introduce the element that makes this exercise game-realistic: turning with the ball. Pass against the wall multiple times, then receive the soccer ball and immediately perform a turn as if a defender is approaching you, before accelerating into space with controlled dribbling.
If you’re practicing without a wall, you can kick the ball forward, chase it down at full speed, execute your turn, and drive forward past your initial position.
Wall Passing With Turns + Dribbling
You can also advance the previous drill one step further by incorporating dribbling after your turn. After passing against the wall and performing your turn, you can do any of the cone dribbling or shadow dribbling exercises in the next two sections.
You can also practice running at pace towards cones, or other objects, and executing a skill move such as a body feint, step over, or scissors.
Cone Dribbling
As a beginner, it’s important to work on cone dribbling drills with both feet to build close ball control, improve your change of direction, and develop the muscle memory of common moves you’ll use during matches. If you don’t have cones, you can use virtually any other object.
Some of the best dribbling drills you can do at home include:
Straight line weave – Weave through a set number of cones (5-10), alternating feet or one foot only
Zig-zag cuts – Sharp directional changes through staggered cones, spread the cones out from a straight line weave
Figure-eight – Loop around two cones for tight turns
Speed dribbling – Sprint between widely-spaced cones at pace
Box pattern – Dribble around a square with four cones
Shadow Dribbling Drill
Once you’ve mastered the structured patterns of cone dribbling above, shadow dribbling takes your skills to the next level by eliminating the cones and challenging you to react to imaginary defenders in open space. Dribble at game speed around your training area while visualizing opponents pressuring you from various angles, then use skill moves, cuts, and changes of pace to evade them.
Make this drill as realistic as possible by working at high intensity.
Shadow Dribbling to Passing or Shooting
Depending on the space and equipment you have available space you can add another dimension to shadow dribbling by striking the ball at a target, whether that’s a regulation goal, a mini goal, a marked spot on a wall, or cones arranged as goalposts. This progression simulates the complete attacking sequence: beating defenders, creating space, and executing a pass or shot under pressure.
You can also add passing to a wall or rebounder before you turn, dribble, and pass or shoot.
