Celtic came from behind to deny Rangers a third straight victory over their rivals as Adam Idah's second-half strike frustrated Barry Ferguson's home side in the Scottish Premiership.
Nicolas Raskin had an early header ruled out for offside before Cyriel Dessers netted his 25th goal of the season for Rangers just before half-time, only for Republic of Ireland international Idah to pounce and level.
The draw means Rangers have failed to win at Ibrox for the seventh straight fixture, an unwelcome run that has never happened before.
For Scottish champions Celtic, the point allows them to retain their 17-point margin over the second-top Ibrox side as they close out another successful league campaign unscathed.
With nothing at stake and the title decided, the idea this was meaningless remained fanciful.
After conceding three goals in each of their last three meetings with Rangers, and starting slowly in those, Celtic manager Brendan Rodgers emphasised to his team the need to begin strongly.
They didn't. Within a minute, Leon Balogun met a corner with a free header but clipped the crossbar to Rodgers' relief.
Being alert at set-pieces was something the Northern Irishman cited pre-match having seen that cost them in recent match-ups, but they struggled with that at times.
The visitors grew as the first half went on, though, and after Idah failed to play in James Forrest, Vaclav Cerny came close via a deflection, but visiting goalkeeper Viljami Sinisalo did superbly well to retreat and tip over.
It was frenetic. Another set-play looked to have undone the visitors when James Tavernier's deep cross was met by Raskin and his header crept home. Celebrations were curtailed by a VAR check that deemed him just offside.
It swung back and forth. Cameron Carter-Vickers had a header tipped on to the bar by Liam Kelly. Rangers' goalkeeper also did well to stay big when Idah got clean through.
Almost immediately, Rangers broke, Cerny dummied brilliantly and Dessers did the rest, holding off Liam Scales before finding the corner. Twenty-five goals for the season is not bad for someone who draws such a frequent high level of criticism.
Celtic had answers to find, as they have of late in these meetings, but they found the right one.
Daizen Maeda escaped down the left. The ball eventually fell to Idah, who turned brilliantly and slammed home via a deflection.
The drama continued as that was called offside, only to be overturned as Maeda was not interfering with Kelly's view as the ball hit the net, despite being offside.
Maeda uncharacteristically failed to capitalise on a late break, but Celtic were perhaps still the happier to leave Ibrox unscathed with the title already delivered.