Checks and Balances how the branches limit each other.
The Constitution sets up three branches and then gives each one specific tools to limit the others. This guide lists the six checks (3 branches × 2 directions) with the constitutional clause behind each one.
What is checks and balances?
Checks and balances is the principle that each of the three branches of government has explicit constitutional powers to limit the actions of the other two. The result is a slow, consensus-required system — by design.
Don’t confuse with separation of powers (the structural division of branches) — checks and balances is the active mechanism on top of that division.
The six checks
AP exam test
MCQs often present a scenario and ask which check is operating. FRQ 3 (SCOTUS comparison) sometimes turns on the clause that supports a check — Marbury for judicial review is the most commonly cited.
Frequently asked questions
Quick answers — written by humans, not a chatbot.
Is judicial review in the Constitution?
No — it was established by Marbury v. Madison (1803). The Constitution implies it (Supremacy Clause) but Marshall’s opinion is the formal source.
What’s the difference between checks and balances and separation of powers?
Separation = structural (three separate branches). Checks = each branch can limit the others through specific actions.