Germany · Season 2026/27
Bundesliga
18 clubs · 34 matchweeks · Germany's top flight
Season starts 21 August 2026
The 2026/27 season kicks off on 21 August 2026.
Below: the opening matchweek schedule and the final 2025/26 table. Predictions resume as kick-off approaches.
Matchweek 21 — season opener
League table
Final table — 2025/26.
1Bayern München34+86WWDWW89
W 28 · D 5 · L 1 · Goals 122–36
2Borussia Dortmund34+36WWLWL73
W 22 · D 7 · L 5 · Goals 70–34
3RB Leipzig34+19LWLWW65
W 20 · D 5 · L 9 · Goals 66–47
4VfB Stuttgart34+22DWDDL62
W 18 · D 8 · L 8 · Goals 71–49
51899 Hoffenheim34+13LWDWW61
W 18 · D 7 · L 9 · Goals 65–52
6Bayer Leverkusen34+21DLWWL59
W 17 · D 8 · L 9 · Goals 68–47
7SC Freiburg34-6WLDLW47
W 13 · D 8 · L 13 · Goals 51–57
8Eintracht Frankfurt34-4DLLDL44
W 11 · D 11 · L 12 · Goals 61–65
9FC Augsburg34-16LWWDW43
W 12 · D 7 · L 15 · Goals 45–61
10FSV Mainz 0534-9WLWLD40
W 10 · D 10 · L 14 · Goals 44–53
11Union Berlin34-14WWDLL39
W 10 · D 9 · L 15 · Goals 44–58
12Borussia Mönchengladbach34-11WLWDD38
W 9 · D 11 · L 14 · Goals 42–53
13Hamburger SV34-14DWWLL38
W 9 · D 11 · L 14 · Goals 40–54
141. FC Köln34-14LLDLD32
W 7 · D 11 · L 16 · Goals 49–63
15Werder Bremen34-23LLLDW32
W 8 · D 8 · L 18 · Goals 37–60
16VfL Wolfsburg34-24LDWLD29
W 7 · D 8 · L 19 · Goals 45–69
171. FC Heidenheim34-31LWDWL26
W 6 · D 8 · L 20 · Goals 41–72
18FC St. Pauli34-31LLLLD26
W 6 · D 8 · L 20 · Goals 29–60
| # | Team | P | W | D | L | G | GD | Pts | Form |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Bayern München | 34 | 28 | 5 | 1 | 122:36 | +86 | 89 | WWDWW |
| 2 | Borussia Dortmund | 34 | 22 | 7 | 5 | 70:34 | +36 | 73 | WWLWL |
| 3 | RB Leipzig | 34 | 20 | 5 | 9 | 66:47 | +19 | 65 | LWLWW |
| 4 | VfB Stuttgart | 34 | 18 | 8 | 8 | 71:49 | +22 | 62 | DWDDL |
| 5 | 1899 Hoffenheim | 34 | 18 | 7 | 9 | 65:52 | +13 | 61 | LWDWW |
| 6 | Bayer Leverkusen | 34 | 17 | 8 | 9 | 68:47 | +21 | 59 | DLWWL |
| 7 | SC Freiburg | 34 | 13 | 8 | 13 | 51:57 | -6 | 47 | WLDLW |
| 8 | Eintracht Frankfurt | 34 | 11 | 11 | 12 | 61:65 | -4 | 44 | DLLDL |
| 9 | FC Augsburg | 34 | 12 | 7 | 15 | 45:61 | -16 | 43 | LWWDW |
| 10 | FSV Mainz 05 | 34 | 10 | 10 | 14 | 44:53 | -9 | 40 | WLWLD |
| 11 | Union Berlin | 34 | 10 | 9 | 15 | 44:58 | -14 | 39 | WWDLL |
| 12 | Borussia Mönchengladbach | 34 | 9 | 11 | 14 | 42:53 | -11 | 38 | WLWDD |
| 13 | Hamburger SV | 34 | 9 | 11 | 14 | 40:54 | -14 | 38 | DWWLL |
| 14 | 1. FC Köln | 34 | 7 | 11 | 16 | 49:63 | -14 | 32 | LLDLD |
| 15 | Werder Bremen | 34 | 8 | 8 | 18 | 37:60 | -23 | 32 | LLLDW |
| 16 | VfL Wolfsburg | 34 | 7 | 8 | 19 | 45:69 | -24 | 29 | LDWLD |
| 17 | 1. FC Heidenheim | 34 | 6 | 8 | 20 | 41:72 | -31 | 26 | LWDWL |
| 18 | FC St. Pauli | 34 | 6 | 8 | 20 | 29:60 | -31 | 26 | LLLLD |
Season leaders — 2025/26
Predictions
All Bundesliga predictions →Clubs
Club pages are coming in a later phase.
Bundesliga history
2025
Bayern Munich
Reclaimed the title from Bayer Leverkusen in Vincent Kompany's first season in charge, taking Bayern's overall haul to a record 33 Bundesliga titles.
2024
Bayer Leverkusen
Went the entire 34-game season unbeaten (finishing on 90 points) to win their first-ever Bundesliga title, ending Bayern Munich's 11-year run of championships.
2023
Bayern Munich
Snatched an 11th straight title on the final matchday, finishing level on 71 points with Borussia Dortmund but ahead on goal difference.
2022
Bayern Munich
A 10th consecutive title, extending their own all-time record streak, with Robert Lewandowski again topping the scoring charts.
2021
Bayern Munich
Ninth straight title; Robert Lewandowski broke Gerd Müller's 49-year-old single-season scoring record by netting 41 league goals.
2020
Bayern Munich
Eighth straight title, won largely in empty stadiums after the season was paused and restarted behind closed doors due to COVID-19, en route to a continental treble.
Most points in a season
Bayern Munich set the Bundesliga record with 91 points in 2012-13 (28 wins, 7 draws, 3 losses from 34 games), a total no club has matched since.
Most goals scored in a season
Bayern Munich's 1971-72 side, led by Gerd Müller, scored 101 goals in 34 matches, still the record for a single Bundesliga season.
Longest unbeaten run
Bayern Munich went 53 consecutive Bundesliga matches unbeaten between 2012 and 2014, a run that was a European record at the time.
Only 18 clubs, not 20
The Bundesliga has 18 teams playing 34 matches each (17 home, 17 away), fewer clubs and games than England's Premier League or Spain's La Liga.
A relegation playoff exists
The bottom two teams (17th and 18th) are relegated automatically, but the 16th-placed side survives via a two-legged promotion/relegation playoff against the third-placed club from 2. Bundesliga.
The 50+1 ownership rule
Most Bundesliga clubs must keep majority voting control in members' hands rather than a single investor's, a rule meant to preserve fan influence; historic exceptions like Bayer Leverkusen (Bayer AG) and VfL Wolfsburg (Volkswagen) predate the regulation.
European qualification isn't fixed at four
Depending on Germany's UEFA coefficient, the Bundesliga can send four or five teams into the Champions League, with the next-best finishers dropping into the Europa League or Conference League, and the DFB-Pokal winner also claiming a European slot that passes down the table if they've already qualified via the league.
No title sponsor in the name
Unlike leagues that sell naming rights, the competition is run by the DFL (Deutsche Fußball Liga, separate from the national federation) and marketed simply as 'Bundesliga' without a sponsor's name attached.
Season-by-season archives: 2025/26
Past seasons
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