
How To Make A Plan In Chess?
♟️ Many players want to know how to make a plan in chess, because this is one of the biggest problems after the opening.
You develop your pieces.
You castle.
You reach a normal middlegame.
And then suddenly you ask yourself:
“What should I do now?”
This is where many chess players struggle.
⚠️ They move pieces without purpose.
🔄 They repeat the same ideas.
😩 They attack without preparation.
♟️ They trade pieces randomly.
🧠 They do not understand what the position needs.
A good chess plan is not a random idea.
A good plan comes from the position.
Strong players do not ask, “What do I want to do?”
They ask, “What does this position require?”
🧠 1. Understand The Pawn Structure First
The pawn structure is the skeleton of the position.
Before making a plan, look at the pawns.
Ask yourself:
🔷 Is the center open or closed?
🔷 Are there weak pawns?
🔷 Are there passed pawns?
🔷 Which pawn breaks are possible?
🔷 Which files or diagonals can open?
🔷 Which squares are weak?
The pawn structure often tells you where to play.
If the center is closed, wing attacks become more possible.
If the center is open, piece activity and king safety become extremely important.
If your opponent has a weak pawn, your plan may be to attack it.
If you have a pawn majority, you may aim to create a passed pawn.
Many players ignore pawn structures and then wonder why they cannot find a plan.
But once you understand the structure, the plan becomes much clearer.
♟️ 2. Improve Your Worst Piece
One of the easiest ways to make a plan in chess is to find your worst piece.
A bad piece is a piece that has no activity, no future, or no clear role.
Ask:
🔷 Which piece is doing the least?
🔷 Which piece has no good squares?
🔷 Which piece is blocked by my own pawns?
🔷 Which piece can be improved with one or two moves?
Sometimes the best move is not a tactic.
Sometimes the best move is a simple piece improvement.
♟️ A knight can jump to a stronger outpost.
♟️ A bishop can move to a better diagonal.
♟️ A rook can come to an open file.
♟️ A queen can move closer to the action.
♟️ A king can improve in the endgame.
This is one of the most important ideas in Middlegame Planning, because many positions are solved by improving the worst piece step by step.
When you do not know what to do, improve your worst piece.
That simple rule already creates better plans.
🎯 3. Look For Weaknesses
A weakness is something your opponent cannot easily defend or move.
Common weaknesses include:
⚠️ isolated pawns
⚠️ backward pawns
⚠️ weak squares
⚠️ exposed king
⚠️ passive pieces
⚠️ weak back rank
⚠️ bad pawn structure
A good plan often means attacking a weakness.
But not every weakness can be attacked immediately.
Sometimes you need to improve your pieces first.
Sometimes you need to trade defenders.
Sometimes you need to open a file.
Sometimes you need to create a second weakness.
Strong players are patient.
They do not rush.
They slowly increase pressure until the opponent cannot defend everything.
This is why planning and strategy are deeply connected. If you want to understand weak squares, long-term pressure, exchanges, and positional decisions better, Master Chess Strategy is one of the most natural courses to study.
🔄 4. Choose The Right Exchanges
Many players trade pieces automatically.
But exchanges are one of the most important parts of planning.
Before trading, ask:
🔷 Does this trade help my plan?
🔷 Am I exchanging my bad piece or my good piece?
🔷 Am I removing an important defender?
🔷 Am I helping my opponent develop?
🔷 Does the endgame favor me?
A good exchange can make your position easier.
A bad exchange can destroy your advantage.
For example:
♟️ If your opponent has a dangerous attacking bishop, trading it may reduce their attack.
♟️ If you have a bad bishop, exchanging it can improve your structure.
♟️ If your opponent has a weak square, trading the defender can make that square yours.
♟️ If you are attacking, trading queens may be wrong.
♟️ If you are winning an endgame, trading pieces may be useful — but only if the resulting endgame is actually winning.
Good planning means knowing which pieces to keep and which pieces to exchange.
🔥 5. Create A Pawn Break
A pawn break is one of the most powerful ways to change the position.
Sometimes you cannot improve anymore unless you open the position.
Common pawn breaks can:
⚡ open files
⚡ open diagonals
⚡ challenge the center
⚡ create weaknesses
⚡ activate pieces
⚡ start an attack
Before playing a pawn break, calculate carefully.
Ask:
🔷 What opens after this move?
🔷 Which pieces become active?
🔷 Does my opponent get counterplay?
🔷 Is my king safe?
🔷 Am I ready for the position to change?
Many players push pawns without preparation.
Strong players prepare pawn breaks.
They place pieces on good squares first, then open the position when they are ready.
A pawn break at the right moment can completely transform the game.
🧮 6. Connect Planning With Calculation
A plan is not enough on its own.
You must check if the plan works tactically.
Many players make a “strategic” move but miss a tactic.
That is why every plan must be connected with calculation.
Before starting a plan, ask:
🔷 What is my opponent’s best reply?
🔷 Do they have checks?
🔷 Do they have captures?
🔷 Do they have threats?
🔷 Can they create counterplay?
Planning tells you what you want.
Calculation tells you if it works.
This is why Calculation & Evaluation Technique connects naturally with planning. You may understand the correct strategic idea, but you still need accurate calculations to execute it.
A good chess player combines both:
🧠 strategy to find the plan
⚡ calculation to make it work
🏆 7. Convert The Advantage Step By Step
Sometimes your plan works and you get a better position.
But the game is not over.
Now you need to convert.
This is where many players fail.
They get a better position and then:
⚠️ rush the win
⚠️ allow counterplay
⚠️ trade incorrectly
⚠️ stop improving pieces
⚠️ Miss the final technical phase
A good plan should not only create an advantage.
It should help you increase the advantage.
If you are better, ask:
🔷 How can I stop counterplay?
🔷 Which piece should I improve next?
🔷 Can I create a second weakness?
🔷 Should I trade pieces?
🔷 Is there a winning endgame?
This is exactly why Advantage To Victory is important for practical players. Getting a better position is great, but converting it into a full point is a separate skill.
Strong players do not win because they rely on a single plan.
They win because they keep improving their position until the opponent collapses.
🧩 Simple Planning Method
When you do not know what to do, use this simple method:
🔷 Look at the pawn structure.
🔷 Find your worst piece.
🔷 Find your opponent’s weakness.
🔷 Decide which pieces to exchange.
🔷 Look for pawn breaks.
🔷 Check tactics and counterplay.
🔷 Improve step by step.
This method will not solve every position instantly, but it gives your thinking structure.
Instead of moving randomly, you will start making decisions with a clear purpose.
🚫 Common Planning Mistakes
Avoid these mistakes:
⚠️ making a plan without checking tactics
⚠️ attacking without enough pieces
⚠️ ignoring pawn structure
⚠️ trading pieces automatically
⚠️ moving the same piece too many times
⚠️ allowing easy counterplay
⚠️ choosing a plan that does not fit the position
A plan must match the position.
You cannot force an attack if the position demands defense.
You cannot play slowly if the position demands immediate action.
You cannot trade pieces if the trade helps your opponent.
Good planning is flexible.
🚀 Final Lesson
Learning how to make a plan in chess is one of the most important steps in improving at chess.
A good plan helps you:
♟️ avoid random moves
🧠 understand the position
🎯 improve your pieces
🔥 create pressure
🔄 choose better exchanges
⚡ Use pawn breaks correctly
🏆 convert advantages more confidently
The key is simple:
Do not ask, “What move do I want to play?”
Ask:
“What does the position need?”
📚 For more structured training, you can also explore our Middlegame Courses at Modern Chess Academy.
♟️ Once you learn how to make plans, your middlegames become clearer, calmer, and much more dangerous for your opponents.





