A positional advantage in chess refers to a situation where one player holds a structural or qualitative superiority on the board, without necessarily having more material than the opponent.
Unlike a material advantage (having more pieces or pawns), a positional advantage is built on less visible but equally decisive factors: piece mobility, control of key squares, pawn structure quality, or king activity in the endgame. For instance, a player whose knight is firmly placed on a strong central outpost, while the opponent’s bishop is blocked by its own pawns, holds a clear positional advantage — even if the piece count on both sides is identical.
In practice, a positional advantage is built move by move: improving your pieces, restricting the opponent’s, creating a weak pawn in the enemy camp, or seizing an open file with a rook. Once the advantage becomes significant enough, the goal is to convert it into a material gain or checkmate.
