How the Open-Ended Code of Points Revolutionized Gymnastics
By abolishing the Perfect 10, gymnastics created a scoring system that pushed human limits—and the new 2025-2028 rules are refining that balance to protect athletes.
By Factlen Editorial Team
- Difficulty Innovators
- Advocates for an open-ended system that rewards athletes for pushing the absolute limits of human physics.
- Athlete Health Advocates
- Experts and coaches focused on the physical toll of high-difficulty routines and the need for sustainable pacing.
- Inclusion Champions
- Voices pushing to expand gymnastics beyond elite scoring to accommodate athletes of all abilities.
What's not represented
- · Lower-resourced national federations struggling to keep up with the equipment and coaching demands of high-difficulty skills.
- · Traditionalist judges who believe the sport has lost its artistic and choreographic soul in favor of pure acrobatics.
Why this matters
Understanding how gymnastics is scored transforms the viewing experience from simply watching flips to appreciating a high-stakes mathematical strategy. The latest rule changes ensure the sport remains a showcase of human capability while actively protecting the long-term health of the athletes.
Key points
- Gymnastics abolished the Perfect 10 in 2006 in favor of an open-ended scoring system.
- The D-Score (Difficulty) allows athletes to earn higher marks by inventing and landing harder skills.
- Simone Biles has used this system to push human limits, securing five eponymous skills.
- The 2025-2028 Code of Points reduces men's counting skills from 10 to 8 to protect athlete health.
- A new 0.1 'stick bonus' has been introduced to reward flawless dismount landings.
- Adaptive gymnastics programs are expanding, allowing athletes with special needs to compete under official rules.
For decades, the pinnacle of athletic achievement was defined by a single, flawless number: the Perfect 10. When Nadia Comăneci first achieved it at the 1976 Montreal Olympics, the scoreboard famously lacked the digits to display it, flashing "1.00" instead.
But the Perfect 10 had a fatal flaw. It created an artificial ceiling. If two gymnasts both executed their routines flawlessly, but one performed a routine that defied the laws of physics while the other played it safe, the scoreboard could not mathematically tell them apart.
In 2006, following a series of judging controversies, the Fédération Internationale de Gymnastique (FIG) made a radical decision. They abolished the Perfect 10 and introduced the open-ended Code of Points, fundamentally altering the trajectory of the sport.[1]
This new system split the score into two distinct halves. The E-Score (Execution) still starts at 10.0, with judges deducting tenths of a point for bent knees, flexed feet, or steps on landing.

The revolution, however, lived in the D-Score (Difficulty). This score is open-ended, calculated by adding up the values of the hardest skills in a routine, plus connection bonuses and specific compositional requirements.[1][6]
Suddenly, the ceiling was shattered. Gymnasts were no longer just chasing perfection; they were chasing the impossible. The open-ended code incentivized athletes to invent new, mind-bending skills to drive their D-Scores higher.
No athlete has exploited this mathematical landscape more effectively than Simone Biles. By pushing the boundaries of human biomechanics, Biles has accumulated five eponymous skills—moves so difficult they are named after her because she was the first to land them in international competition.[2]
Her signature vault, the Biles II (a Yurchenko double pike), carries a staggering D-score of 6.4. Because her starting difficulty is so astronomically high, she can afford minor execution deductions and still outscore competitors who perform easier routines flawlessly.[2]

Her signature vault, the Biles II (a Yurchenko double pike), carries a staggering D-score of 6.4.
But the relentless pursuit of difficulty has sparked an ongoing debate about athlete safety and the aesthetic soul of the sport. As the difficulty values climbed, so did the physical toll on athletes' joints and ligaments.
In response to these concerns, the FIG regularly updates the Code of Points every four years—a period known as a quadrennium. As the sport enters the 2025-2028 cycle leading up to the Los Angeles Olympics, the pendulum is swinging back toward quality and sustainability.[1][7]
The most significant shift in the new 2025-2028 Code of Points affects Men's Artistic Gymnastics (MAG). For the first time in modern history, the number of "counting skills"—the elements that contribute to the D-Score—has been reduced from ten to eight.[3]
This reduction fundamentally alters routine construction. Previously, male gymnasts had to pack ten grueling skills into a single floor or high bar routine, often leading to exhaustion and dangerous falls by the dismount.[3]

By capping the counting skills at eight, the FIG is explicitly prioritizing athlete health. Gymnasts can now focus on executing fewer, higher-quality elements with better form, rather than treating routines as endurance marathons.[3][6]
The new code also introduces a 0.1 "stick bonus" for dismounts of C-value or higher across most apparatuses. This mathematical nudge is designed to reward the elusive perfect landing, ensuring that execution remains just as vital as the acrobatics preceding it.[3]
Beyond the elite scoring tables, the ethos of gymnastics is also expanding to become more inclusive. The sport is increasingly recognizing that pushing boundaries isn't just about triple-twisting double flips; it's about access.
In 2026, the Simone Biles International Invitational will formally incorporate the HUGS program, an adaptive gymnastics initiative. This allows athletes with special needs to compete under official USA Gymnastics rules, judged on their own execution and difficulty metrics.[4][5]

This inclusion marks a profound evolution in how the sport defines achievement. Whether an athlete is aiming for the Special Olympics or the Los Angeles 2028 podium, the underlying mechanism remains the same: mastering the body's movement through space.[4][7]
As the 2025-2028 quadrennium unfolds, the tension between the D-Score and the E-Score will continue to shape the sport. Coaches and athletes are currently in the laboratory, recalculating their routines to maximize the new rules.[6]
The open-ended Code of Points did more than just change the math of gymnastics; it changed the philosophy. It transformed a sport of rigid perfection into a dynamic, ever-expanding frontier of human capability.
How we got here
2006
The FIG abolishes the Perfect 10 and introduces the open-ended Code of Points.
2021
Simone Biles debuts the Yurchenko double pike (Biles II) in competition, fundamentally shifting the difficulty ceiling.
August 2024
The FIG finalizes the 2025-2028 Code of Points, introducing major changes to routine construction.
January 2025
The new Code of Points officially takes effect for the Los Angeles 2028 Olympic cycle.
January 2026
The Simone Biles International Invitational formally incorporates the HUGS adaptive gymnastics program.
Viewpoints in depth
Difficulty Innovators
Advocates for an open-ended system that rewards athletes for pushing the absolute limits of human physics.
This camp argues that the essence of elite sports is progression. By removing the artificial ceiling of the Perfect 10, the open-ended Code of Points allowed generational talents like Simone Biles to invent skills previously thought impossible. They believe the D-Score is the truest measure of athletic advancement, as it forces the sport to evolve rather than stagnate in a pursuit of mere aesthetic perfection.
Athlete Health Advocates
Experts and coaches focused on the physical toll of high-difficulty routines and the need for sustainable pacing.
For years, sports medicine professionals have warned that the relentless pursuit of higher D-Scores was breaking athletes' bodies. This perspective heavily influenced the 2025-2028 rule changes, particularly the reduction of counting skills in men's gymnastics from ten to eight. By requiring fewer skills, they argue, gymnasts can train more sustainably, reduce catastrophic joint injuries, and extend their careers well into their late twenties and thirties.
Inclusion Champions
Voices pushing to expand gymnastics beyond elite scoring to accommodate athletes of all abilities.
This viewpoint emphasizes that the benefits of gymnastics—spatial awareness, discipline, and physical health—should not be gatekept by elite scoring codes. Initiatives like the HUGS adaptive program demonstrate that the sport's infrastructure can be modified to evaluate athletes with special needs on their own terms. For this camp, the true evolution of gymnastics is measured not just by how high the top athletes fly, but by how wide the sport's doors are opened.
What we don't know
- Whether the reduction in counting skills for men will eventually be mirrored in the women's Code of Points.
- What the absolute biomechanical limit of the D-Score will be before human physiology prevents further progression.
Key terms
- Code of Points
- The official rulebook defining the scoring system and skill values for international gymnastics.
- D-Score
- The open-ended difficulty score calculated by adding up the values of the hardest skills in a routine.
- E-Score
- The execution score, starting at 10.0, which evaluates form, technique, and landing precision.
- Quadrennium
- The four-year Olympic cycle during which a specific version of the Code of Points is active.
- Eponymous Skill
- A unique gymnastics movement named after the athlete who first successfully competed it on the global stage.
Frequently asked
Can a gymnast still score a Perfect 10?
No. The execution score starts at 10.0, but the final score is the sum of the D-score and E-score, usually landing in the 13.0 to 15.0+ range.
Why did they change the scoring system?
To better differentiate between routines of varying difficulty and to encourage athletes to push the boundaries of the sport without an artificial ceiling.
What are the biggest changes for 2025-2028?
Men's gymnastics reduced the number of counting skills from 10 to 8 to prioritize health, while introducing new stick bonuses to reward perfect landings.
What is an eponymous skill?
A gymnastics skill named after the first athlete to successfully perform it at a major international competition, such as the World Championships or Olympics.
Sources
[1]Fédération Internationale de GymnastiqueAthlete Health Advocates
2025-2028 Code of Points
Read on Fédération Internationale de Gymnastique →[2]OlympicsDifficulty Innovators
Every Simone Biles eponymous gymnastics skill explained
Read on Olympics →[3]MAGnasticsAthlete Health Advocates
Changes in the 2025-28 Code of Points
Read on MAGnastics →[4]The IX SportsInclusion Champions
Adaptive gymnastics to be included at 2026 Simone Biles International Invitational
Read on The IX Sports →[5]USA GymnasticsInclusion Champions
USA Gymnastics Rules and Policies
Read on USA Gymnastics →[6]Factlen Editorial Team
Synthesis by Factlen editorial team
Read on Factlen Editorial Team →[7]Gymnastics NowDifficulty Innovators
Simone Biles reveals coach told her 'give me two years' as she weighs comeback for LA 2028
Read on Gymnastics Now →
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