The 2024 Player's Handbook has changed the order you move through while crafting your characters. Think of it as stepping backward in time through your character’s history. You start with where your character is at the beginning of your game, your class, then look at the road that led them to this heroic point, your background, and finally, look at how you began your life with your species.
Today we’re going to look at how backgrounds have changed in the 2024 Player's Handbook to create a connected narrative between your origin and the beginning of your adventuring career. When it all comes together, the new core rules make it much easier to imagine your new, fully fleshed-out character.
- How Do the New Backgrounds Work?
- The 16 Backgrounds in the 2024 Player’s Handbook
- Origin Feats: Start Your Journey With a Boost
- Choosing a Background for Your Character
The 2024 Player’s Handbook is Now Available!
Buy the 2024 Player's Handbook today and dive into revised rules, enhanced character options, and exciting gameplay innovations.
Get your copy on the D&D Beyond marketplace and seamlessly integrate your new content with D&D Beyond's library of digital tools built to make D&D easier, so you can focus on the fun!
How Do the New Backgrounds Work?

Your character’s background is the collection of characteristics that they picked up during the formative years of their life. These are the experiences and occupations your character engaged in separate from their upbringing and species, and prior to their life as an adventurer.
Mechanically, your background contains five aspects: ability scores, skill proficiencies, a tool proficiency, starting equipment, and an Origin feat specific to your background. While gaining a feat as part of your background is new to the core rules in the 2024 Player's Handbook, we have seen feats offered at character creation previously as part of optional custom lineage rules in Tasha’s Cauldron of Everything and in backgrounds featured in recent books like The Book of Many Things.
Parts of a Background
Let’s talk about what each of these different parts of your new background mean, and what you’ll do with them during the character creation process. We’ll use the Wayfarer background as an example, since it’s a brand new background introduced in the 2024 Player’s Handbook.
The Wayfarer shares some DNA with the Urchin background from the 2014 Player’s Handbook but represents a larger swath of characters who have fallen through the cracks of urban society. It could be the Artful Dodger, but it could also be Fagin. Edgin’s backstory in Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves has shades of the Wayfarer once he leaves the Harpers, and Mol and her gang of tiefling kids in Baldur’s Gate 3 certainly fit the bill.
- Ability Scores: Each background has a list of three ability scores to choose from. You can increase one by 2 and another by 1, or you can increase all three by 1. The Wayfarer offers you Dexterity, Wisdom, and Charisma.
- Origin Feat: Each background has a specific Origin feat that best represents a talent your character developed while living this portion of their life. The Wayfarer background grants you the Lucky feat.
- Skill Proficiencies: Your background grants you proficiency in two specified skills. For the Wayfarer, you gain proficiency in Insight and Stealth.
- Tool Proficiency: You gain proficiency in a specific tool that would have been commonly used in your background. For the Wayfarer, this proficiency is with Thieves’ Tools.
- Equipment: This is the equipment your character starts the game with, or you can choose to opt out of the starting equipment and start with 50 GP to spend on the equipment of your choice. The Wayfarer begins with two Daggers, a set of Thieves’ Tools, a Gaming Set of your choice, a Bedroll, two Pouches, a set of Traveler’s Clothes, and 16 GP.
The 16 Backgrounds in the 2024 Player’s Handbook
The Wayfarer is just one of the backgrounds you’ll find in the 2024 Player's Handbook. You’ll discover a few more new choices as well as several reworkings of some returning favorites. Let’s take a quick look at all 16 options available as part of the new core rules.
Background |
Description |
---|---|
Acolyte |
You were a devoted servant in a place of worship. You learned the rituals of your faith and how to channel divine power as part of your service. |
Charlatan |
You have learned to seek out a mark in taverns and pubs, and find the people most in search of less than honest goods, such as forgeries or sham magic items. |
Artisan |
You worked your way up from scrubbing floors to an apprenticeship creating your own crafts. You know how to schmooze a customer and have a keen eye for detail. |
Criminal |
Whether you were a member of a criminal crew or a solo thief who only looked out for yourself, you know the best ways to slice some purse strings or how to find alternative means to enter a locked shop. |
Entertainer |
You’ve spent your life on either a literal or proverbial stage, performing for willing audiences. You have learned how to channel your talent for creation into a crowd-pleasing art form. |
Guard |
You’ve put in your time standing watch over a city or location. You’ve had your head on a swivel, keeping a watchful eye on raiding enemies on one side of a wall or criminal elements on the other. |
Farmer |
You’ve tilled the soil or raised animals as livestock or to aid you in cultivating your fields. You’ve gained a healthy respect for nature, in both its bounty and its wrath. |
Guide |
Your life was mostly spent outdoors, exploring the natural wonders around you. In your travels, you learned the basics of how to channel the magic of the wild world around you. |
Hermit |
Whether alone in a hut or as part of a monastery, you’ve spent a considerable amount of time outside the trappings of society. You’ve grown comfortable pondering the wonders and mysteries of creation. |
Noble |
You grew up in the opulence and structure of wealth and societal privilege. You may have bristled against the restrictions and expectations of your role, but you learned a lot about courtly intrigue and the skills of leadership. |
Merchant |
As an apprentice to a trader or shopkeeper, you traveled either supplying artisans with the materials they needed or acquiring their goods to sell to your customers. You know how to make a deal and how to handle a long journey. |
Sage |
Your thirst for knowledge drew you to some of the greatest libraries and archives in the world. You’ve got a knack for research and perhaps a rudimentary knowledge of magic gleaned from a book or two. |
Sailor |
You called the open water your home, survived some of the sea’s harshest storms. You’ve swapped stories with the best of them, whether that’s on the barstool of a random port or the denizens of the world beneath the waves. |
Scribe |
The written word has been your domain, either copying tomes, crafting government documents, or producing your own texts. Your eye for detail and ability to catch errors and mistakes is finely honed. |
Soldier |
You can hardly remember a time when you didn’t wield a weapon. You’re well-versed in the ways of battle and war to protect the realm, and you have the muscle memory to prove it. |
Wayfarer |
An urchin or societal castoff, you learned to survive. Forging your own path on the streets and possibly turning to crime when needed, you’ve managed to keep your pride and hope that destiny has more for you yet. |
Using Old Backgrounds at Character Creation
Previous D&D books contain a plethora of backgrounds that are beloved by players. If you don’t see your favorite background listed, don’t despair! The scribes have scrawled some handy tips for converting a background from an older book to work with your new character using the 2024 Player’s Handbook. When using an older background, simply select the ability scores you want to add your 3 total points to, so adjusting one score by 2 and another by 1, or three scores by 1.
This comes in place of your species' Ability Score Improvements. So, if you also choose an older species that has an Ability Score Improvement, ignore it.
If the background you select does not already provide a feat, you gain the Origin feat of your choice.
Origin Feats: Start Your Journey With a Boost
There are different types of feats in the 2024 Player's Handbook: Origin, General, Fighting Style, and Epic Boons. General feats become available at level 4, and may carry other prerequisites, such as certain ability scores. Fighting Style feats are bestowed by features in your class, and Epic Boons are available to be chosen by characters at level 19.
Origin feats are similar to the features each background got in the 2014 Player’s Handbook but with mechanics that give them more utility in your adventurer’s day-to-day life. They represent the talents your character’s background will likely have led them to develop, but don’t offer boosts to ability scores like some General feats do. These are designed to be abilities that brand-new adventurers might possess versus skills that more veteran heroes might have gained on the road.
Origin Feat |
Benefit |
---|---|
Alert |
Add your Proficiency Bonus when you roll Initiative. Can also swap your Initiative with a willing ally in the same combat. |
Crafter |
Gain proficiency with three different sets of Artisan’s Tools. Gain a 20 percent discount on nonmagical items. Can craft an item from a Fast Crafting table, which lasts until you finish another Long Rest. |
Healer |
When you Utilize a Healer’s Kit as an action, a creature can expend one of its Hit Point Dice to heal. Your Proficiency Bonus is added to the roll. When you roll to determine Hit Points when healing with this feature or a spell, you can reroll the dice if it rolls a 1. You must use the new roll. |
Lucky |
After finishing a Long Rest, you have a number of Luck Points equal to your Proficiency Bonus. You can expend one when you make a D20 Test to give yourself Advantage. You can also expend one to impose Disadvantage when a creature rolls a d20 to make an attack roll against you. |
Magic Initiate |
You gain two cantrips and one level 1 spell from the Cleric, Druid, or Wizard spell list, and can replace them with another spell of the same level from the same list when you gain a level. You choose Wisdom, Intelligence, or Charisma as your spellcasting modifier for these spells when you take this feat. You can cast these spells once per Long Rest without expending a spell slot, and can cast them again using spell slots. This feat can be taken more than once, but you must choose a different spell list each time. |
Musician |
You gain proficiency with three musical instruments of your choice. At the end of a Short or Long Rest, you may play the instrument and grant Heroic Inspiration to a number of allies equal to your Proficiency Bonus. |
Savage Attacker |
Once per turn, when you hit a target with a weapon attack, you can roll the weapon damage dice twice and use either roll against the target. |
Skilled |
You gain proficiency in any combination of three skills or tools of your choice. You can take this feat more than once. |
Tavern Brawler |
When you hit with an Unarmed Strike and deal damage, you can deal 1d4 + your Strength modifier. If the damage dice for your Unarmed Strikes roll is a 1, you can reroll it and must use the new roll. You have proficiency with improvised weapons. Once per turn, when you hit a creature with an Unarmed Strike as part of the Attack action, in addition to dealing damage, you can push the target 5 feet away from you. |
Tough |
When you first gain this Origin feat, your Hit Point maximum increases by twice your character level. Thereafter, your Hit Point maximum increases by 2 each time you level up. |
Gaining Origin Feats in Other Ways
You automatically gain one specific Origin feat as a part of your background, but you can add more to your repertoire in other ways. For example, if you play a Human character, one of your species’ features is to gain an extra Origin feat of your choice. You can also select an Origin feat if you choose when you reach a class level that allows you to pick a new feat.
Choosing a Background for Your Character

So, how do you determine the “best” background for your character? Ultimately that comes down to how you want to build and play your character, but there are a few different approaches you can take that can be supported using the 2024 core rules.
First, for a purely mechanical approach, you can simply look at which abilities are the primary focus for your character class, and then select a background that gives you a boost for that score. The 2024 Player's Handbook has a helpful table for giving you an assortment of options for each ability score. The options can be pretty diverse as well. A Strength-based character with a Soldier or Guard background might seem obvious, but Farmer and Artisan are also in the mix for Strength.
Another possibility is to consider which background best ties into the flavor of your class and how your character got there. A Wizard, for example, is most likely to have come from a life of study as a Sage or Scribe. A Bard is likely to have worked as an Entertainer before learning to harness the Words of Creation, but having been a Charlatan or a Noble who shirked her responsibilities to run off and dance after a fateful summer isn’t too far out of left field either.
But while common wisdom might lead you to emphasize your most important stats, there can be a benefit to using your background to supplement skills you might not usually access with your class. Since a Sorcerer’s magic talent is more inherent to them, you might imagine your Sorcerer as a Wayfarer. Their inability to control their magic at a young age led them to a life on the streets where they picked up a few skills like lockpicking. Maybe you want your Cleric to have a honed Perception, so you imagine them having worked as a Guard until a chance encounter turned them into a devotee of Corellon.
Your First Furthest Steps From Home
The 2024 Player's Handbook is now available on the D&D Beyond marketplace, which means it's time to set out on new adventures with fresh or familiar characters!
Backgrounds have always played an important part in the story of how your character became who they are at the start of their adventuring career. With the changes to character creation in the 2024 Player's Handbook, this part of your origin has been boosted with some mechanical aspects that really emphasize that importance, allowing you to absorb it into your roleplaying. When you bring it all together with a class and species choice, your characters made with the 2024 core rulebooks will have fully triangulated into a fleshed-out hero ready to begin their journey!
We’re delighted to share with you the changes to fifth edition D&D that appear in the 2024 Player’s Handbook. Make sure to keep an eye out on D&D Beyond for more useful guides on using the wealth of new options, rules, and mechanics found in the 2024 Player's Handbook!

Riley Silverman (@rileyjsilverman) is a contributing writer to D&D Beyond, Nerdist, and SYFY Wire. She DMs the Theros-set Dice Ex Machina for the Saving Throw Show, and has been a player on the Wizards of the Coast-sponsored The Broken Pact. Riley also played as Braga in the official tabletop adaptation of the Rat Queens comic for HyperRPG, and currently plays as The Doctor on the Doctor Who RPG podcast The Game of Rassilon. She currently lives in Los Angeles.
This article was updated on August 13, 2024, to issue corrections or expand coverage for the following features:
- Savage Attacker: Clarified that you roll the weapon's damage twice and choose. You don't roll once, then reroll.
- Tavern Brawler: Specified you have to deal damage with your Unarmed Strike.
That only applies to the 1st level spell.
I like how everyone is saying savage attack is op. When no reads the rule as written. It says once per turn you can reroll. That is for one attack not multiple. You would be able to reroll one of your eldritch blast not all four.
For those complaining about the new rules to the background ASI, it seems the best thing to do is pick a background that hasn't been updated.
DM: "What do you mean you're ALL Folk Heroes??"
PCs: "Vigilantism was a popular hobby in our villages" 😀
So there's only about 4-5 combat-related feats? Doesn't seem to give much to pick from. First house rule: ignore the origin tag for feats.
Tavern brawler seems to do very little, but taking it just for rerolling all 1's on damage dice for unarmed attacks might make this a must-have for Monks.
Hopefully, there's a longer list of origin feats. Doesn't seem to be a whole lot of real choices with just these options.
Based on the information presented here, I think these backgrounds do a good job of covering the basics of what you'd expect to find in a traditional/generic fantasy campaign setting. And before create-your-own was an option, we all mostly just picking a background and got on with it.
Do they cover everything, of course not but by the sound of it there'll be instructions for updating any of the already existing backgrounds in WotC's 5e back catalogue (and, you'd guess, all 3rd party material if that's your thing) and then, if those haven't got you covered, there's the option to create an infinite number of customised/create your own backgrounds in cooperation with the DM.
I think the create-your-own should be in the DMG, "controlled/monitored" (neither of those are quite the right word) by the DM because - much like the short-lived you-can-rename-any-spell Wizard feature from the UA - this could be open to misuse. Customising the Acolyte Background to an Acolyte of Mystra Background (giving you that much needed Arcana prof.) is going to enhance game flavour. Calling your background Disciple of the Cult of the Elven Nosepickers, not so much, even if it does include mods to the three ability scores needed for the character you've envisaged playing. And, no matter how cool it would be for your background to be Adeptus Custodes, what exactly is that 40K group doing in the Humblewood Campaign Setting???
(If you read, appreciate your time - Sláinte)
WoTC managed to make backstory meaningless for veteran players and misleading for new players. Everyone at the table I DM will be creating custom backgrounds, I have no doubt, and if I do have a new player, I'll have to take time to steer them clear of the official backgrounds, unless one happens to line up with the class they want to play AND is appealing to them. I'm not looking forward to explaining why their cleric should absolutely not choose Acolyte as a background. It's already tough enough for new players to sort through all of these choices. Creating traps like this just makes it worse.
Are you planning to grant half-feats in backgrounds? That's going to be pretty OP as those characters will be able to start the game with an 18 in their primary stat.
WoTC doesn't care about the average gamer, they are only interested in the power gamers. Just look at their list of Youtube channels they reached out to. The majority are focused on optimizing and exploiting rules. Only a couple even consider nonoptimizer content and those were the exceptions due to their popularity.
Sadly, Roleplayers are not as vocal about their interests because of the stigma associated with it. Just look at all of the jokes about rolling to seduce. The Rollplayers don't feel the same stigma, so they are more vocal and accepted to be the majority. Roleplayers don't care if the build is ideal, they work such things into the narrative. Rollplayers only care about their DPR and net rate of success vs loss. As such Rollplayers are more likely to argue on the forums about feats and stats and making everything ideal and balanced, because it wasn't the bad roll that cost them the W it was the badly designed feat/spell/weapon...
Alert is actually a huge buff. Being able to swap initiative with someone is huge, for both fast and slow characters. Need your Cleric to go first and cast bless on everyone? Done. Need your Rogue to go first to trigger their feature? Done.
Yes- is that really OP? It's possible in 5e today - even without half-feats, if you roll for your stats, you can even start with a 20 (18+2) at level 1.
Role playing doesn't need to be addressed in rules because it's just flavor. Not sure why you would complain about not getting a "feature" that the DM would just do automatically. If you need a feature to tell your DM to allow you to talk to clerics of the same faith as you with Advantage, you need a new DM, not a new rule
Welp, they stealth changed Savage Attacker from the original posted "when you hit a target with an attack" to "when you hit a target with a weapon attack".
That's interesting...
Leaving tavern brawler at 1d4 seems like a bad move, especially since it seems all natural weapons and monks martial arts are all 1d6 at level 1, but rerolling 1s is fun I guess.
So Alert no longer gives a flat +5 to initiative, it does your Proficiency Bonus? I don't like that. Alert was such a good feat before!
Also, the way the worded Lucky in this article - you can use it to give yourself advantage on a D20 test. Since Advantage doesn't stack, does that mean you can't use it if you already have advantage?? Does Lucky make disadvantage a flat roll now?
the entire game is and was always based on MATH, that why NERDs play the game so NERD UP.
Correct on both counts - Lucky is less powerful than before.
However, cancelling disadvantage - especially on a saving throw - is still pretty good.
Damn that sucks. Not a fan. I love feats, I think they add a lot of color to characters. I like the idea they had in adding origin feats to the backgrounds, but I wish they gave a choice of feats for each. It would have also been great if there was a better way to get "social" feats without sacrificing an ASI.
automatically, this is the same problem they claimed they solved but just moved from species to background. THEY EVEN ADMIT IN THE ARTICLE 'want to play a wizard pretty pick sage, yuck yuck'
also really annoyed that fighting styles were sectioned off as well.. And no fighting initiate. :(