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Belarus

1. Division

Today's Matches

Live scores, upcoming kick-offs, and finished results for today. Data refreshes automatically so you never miss a moment.

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4 matches
Regular Season - 13
Regular Season - 13
Regular Season - 13
Regular Season - 13

Standings

1. Division · 2026

Current 1. Division 2026 standings with 18 teams. FC Slutsk leads the table with 31 points after 12 matches, followed by FC Energetik-Bgu Minsk on 27 points. The table shows wins, draws, losses, goals scored and conceded, goal difference, and recent form — essential for pre-match betting analysis.

PlayoffsRelegation
TeamPlayedWonDrawnLostGoals For:Goals AgainstGoal DiffPointsForm
1FC Slutsk12101128:13+1531
WWWWW
2FC Energetik-Bgu Minsk1283128:9+1927
WWDWW
3Bumprom1272327:15+1223
WWDWW
4Slonim1272321:10+1123
LDLWW
5Shakhter Soligorsk1264228:14+1422
WLWWD
6Lida1262421:22-120
WWLDL
7Dinamo Minsk II1162326:16+1020
WLWDD
8Niva1262425:15+1020
WWDLW
9Volna1252518:19-117
WWWWL
10Molodechno-DYuSSh 41251614:25-1116
LLLDW
11Ostrovets FC1226415:18-312
LDDWL
12Orsha1132611:19-811
LLDLL
13Uni Minsk1232711:21-1011
LLLLL
14BATE II1225516:24-811
LWDLD
15Gomel II1224614:18-410
LLDLD
16Smorgon1224614:20-610
LWWDL
17Minsk II1231811:26-1510
LLDLW
18Osipovichy12111012:36-244
WLLLL

Results

1. Division · 49
Regular season – 1219/06/2026–21/06/2026
Sun 21/06
Match Details
Sun 21/06
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Sun 21/06
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Sat 20/06
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Sat 20/06
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Sat 20/06
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Fri 19/06
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Fri 19/06
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Fri 19/06
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Regular season – 1113/06/2026–14/06/2026
Sun 14/06
Match Details
Sun 14/06
Match Details
Sun 14/06
Match Details
Sat 13/06
Match Details
Sat 13/06
Match Details
Sat 13/06
Match Details
Sat 13/06
Match Details
Sat 13/06
Match Details
Regular season – 1006/06/2026–07/06/2026
Sun 07/06
Match Details
Sun 07/06
Match Details
Sun 07/06
Match Details
Sun 07/06
Match Details
Sat 06/06
Match Details
Sat 06/06
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Sat 06/06
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Upcoming Fixtures

100 matches
Volna
Bumprom
Regular Season - 13
Smorgon
Shakhter Soligorsk
Regular Season - 13
Slonim
FC Slutsk
Regular Season - 13
Gomel II
Osipovichy
Regular Season - 13
Molodechno-DYuSSh 4
Lida
Regular Season - 13
Uni Minsk
Niva
Regular Season - 13
Orsha
Minsk II
Regular Season - 13
Ostrovets FC
Dinamo Minsk II
Regular Season - 13
BATE II
FC Energetik-Bgu Minsk
Regular Season - 13
Bumprom
Orsha
Regular Season - 14
Lida
Uni Minsk
Regular Season - 14
Minsk II
Gomel II
Regular Season - 14
Niva
BATE II
Regular Season - 14
Osipovichy
Molodechno-DYuSSh 4
Regular Season - 14
FC Energetik-Bgu Minsk
Slonim
Regular Season - 14
FC Slutsk
Ostrovets FC
Regular Season - 14
Smorgon
Volna
Regular Season - 14
Shakhter Soligorsk
Dinamo Minsk II
Regular Season - 14
BATE II
Lida
Regular Season - 15
Dinamo Minsk II
FC Slutsk
Regular Season - 15
Gomel II
Bumprom
Regular Season - 15
Slonim
Niva
Regular Season - 15
Molodechno-DYuSSh 4
Minsk II
Regular Season - 15
Orsha
Smorgon
Regular Season - 15
Ostrovets FC
FC Energetik-Bgu Minsk
Regular Season - 15
Uni Minsk
Osipovichy
Regular Season - 15
Volna
Shakhter Soligorsk
Regular Season - 15
Bumprom
Molodechno-DYuSSh 4
Regular Season - 16
Lida
Slonim
Regular Season - 16
Minsk II
Uni Minsk
Regular Season - 16
Niva
Ostrovets FC
Regular Season - 16
Osipovichy
BATE II
Regular Season - 16
FC Energetik-Bgu Minsk
Dinamo Minsk II
Regular Season - 16
Smorgon
Gomel II
Regular Season - 16
Volna
Orsha
Regular Season - 16
Shakhter Soligorsk
FC Slutsk
Regular Season - 16
BATE II
Minsk II
Regular Season - 17
Dinamo Minsk II
Niva
Regular Season - 17
Gomel II
Volna
Regular Season - 17
Slonim
Osipovichy
Regular Season - 17
Molodechno-DYuSSh 4
Smorgon
Regular Season - 17
Ostrovets FC
Lida
Regular Season - 17
FC Slutsk
FC Energetik-Bgu Minsk
Regular Season - 17
Uni Minsk
Bumprom
Regular Season - 17
Orsha
Shakhter Soligorsk
Regular Season - 17
BATE II
Bumprom
Regular Season - 18
Dinamo Minsk II
Lida
Regular Season - 18
Orsha
Gomel II
Regular Season - 18
Slonim
Minsk II
Regular Season - 18
Molodechno-DYuSSh 4
Volna
Regular Season - 18
Ostrovets FC
Osipovichy
Regular Season - 18
Niva
FC Slutsk
Regular Season - 18
Uni Minsk
Smorgon
Regular Season - 18
Shakhter Soligorsk
FC Energetik-Bgu Minsk
Regular Season - 18
Bumprom
Slonim
Regular Season - 19
Lida
FC Slutsk
Regular Season - 19
Minsk II
Ostrovets FC
Regular Season - 19
Niva
FC Energetik-Bgu Minsk
Regular Season - 19
Orsha
Molodechno-DYuSSh 4
Regular Season - 19
Osipovichy
Dinamo Minsk II
Regular Season - 19
Smorgon
BATE II
Regular Season - 19
Volna
Uni Minsk
Regular Season - 19
Gomel II
Shakhter Soligorsk
Regular Season - 19
BATE II
Volna
Regular Season - 20
Dinamo Minsk II
Minsk II
Regular Season - 20
Slonim
Smorgon
Regular Season - 20
Molodechno-DYuSSh 4
Gomel II
Regular Season - 20
Ostrovets FC
Bumprom
Regular Season - 20
FC Energetik-Bgu Minsk
Lida
Regular Season - 20
FC Slutsk
Osipovichy
Regular Season - 20
Uni Minsk
Orsha
Regular Season - 20
Shakhter Soligorsk
Niva
Regular Season - 20
Bumprom
Dinamo Minsk II
Regular Season - 21
Gomel II
Uni Minsk
Regular Season - 21
Lida
Niva
Regular Season - 21
Minsk II
FC Slutsk
Regular Season - 21
Orsha
BATE II
Regular Season - 21
Osipovichy
FC Energetik-Bgu Minsk
Regular Season - 21
Smorgon
Ostrovets FC
Regular Season - 21
Volna
Slonim
Regular Season - 21
Molodechno-DYuSSh 4
Shakhter Soligorsk
Regular Season - 21
BATE II
Gomel II
Regular Season - 22
Dinamo Minsk II
Smorgon
Regular Season - 22
Slonim
Orsha
Regular Season - 22
Niva
Osipovichy
Regular Season - 22
Ostrovets FC
Volna
Regular Season - 22
FC Energetik-Bgu Minsk
Minsk II
Regular Season - 22
FC Slutsk
Bumprom
Regular Season - 22
Uni Minsk
Molodechno-DYuSSh 4
Regular Season - 22
Shakhter Soligorsk
Lida
Regular Season - 22
Bumprom
FC Energetik-Bgu Minsk
Regular Season - 23
Gomel II
Slonim
Regular Season - 23
Minsk II
Niva
Regular Season - 23
Molodechno-DYuSSh 4
BATE II
Regular Season - 23
Orsha
Ostrovets FC
Regular Season - 23
Osipovichy
Lida
Regular Season - 23
Smorgon
FC Slutsk
Regular Season - 23
Volna
Dinamo Minsk II
Regular Season - 23
Uni Minsk
Shakhter Soligorsk
Regular Season - 23
BATE II
Uni Minsk
Regular Season - 24

Team Stats

Side-by-side performance comparison of all 18 teams in the 1. Division. FC Slutsk leads with 10 wins this season. The colour-coded heatmap highlights wins, losses, draws, goals scored and conceded, goal difference, and win percentage — making it easy to spot the strongest and weakest teams at a glance for betting analysis.

Top Scorers

1Pavel Alenchev · Slonim1
2Artem Sapego · Minsk II0

Top Assists

1Pavel Alenchev · Slonim0
2Artem Sapego · Minsk II0

Top Cards

Yellow Cards
1ASArtem Sapego · Minsk II0
2PAPavel Alenchev · Slonim0
Red Cards
1ASArtem Sapego · Minsk II0
2PAPavel Alenchev · Slonim0

Teams

1. Division

All 18 teams competing in the 1. Division 2026 season. Click any club to view their full squad, match history, and detailed statistics.

Past Seasons

1. Division

Browse 15 archived seasons of the 1. Division, from 2012 to 2026. Each season page includes full standings, top scorers, and match results — useful for comparing historical performance and identifying long-term betting patterns.

History 27 Nov 2025

Founded1992Preceded bySoviet Second League B

The Belarusian First League was created immediately following Belarus's independence in 1991, emerging from the Soviet Second League B structure. The league inherited teams from the regional Soviet competition and established itself as the official second tier under the newly formed Football Federation of Belarus. Throughout the 1990s, the league faced significant challenges from post-Soviet economic instability, with multiple team withdrawals and financial difficulties that required constant restructuring. Despite these obstacles, the First League solidified its role as a developmental competition, producing champions like FC Gomel (1997), FK Lida (1998), and Kommunal'nik Slonim (1999) who enriched the national pyramid. In recent decades, the league has evolved to include a mix of established clubs, reserve sides from Premier League teams (such as BATE Borisov II and Dinamo Minsk II), and regional outfits, fostering talent development across the country while maintaining competitive balance.

  • 1992 — Belarusian First League established as the second tier following independence
  • 1992 — Dinamo-2 Minsk wins inaugural championship and gains promotion to Premier League
  • 1997 — FC Gomel emerges as champions during period of economic transition
  • 2016 — Rukh Brest founded, beginning their rapid rise through the pyramid
  • 2019 — Rukh Brest wins First League title and gains promotion to Premier League via playoffs
  • 2025 — FC Baranovichi win first-ever championship title

Competition Format 27 Nov 2025

Teams18Relegation spots3

The Belarusian First League operates as a double round-robin competition where each of the 18 teams plays every opponent twice—once at home and once away—for a total of 34 matches per season. The season typically runs from March to November. The champions and runners-up secure automatic promotion to the Belarusian Premier League, while the third-placed team enters a playoff competition against lower-ranked Premier League clubs for an additional promotion spot. At the bottom of the table, the bottom three teams face automatic relegation to the Belarusian Second League. Three points are awarded for a win, one for a draw, and none for a loss. Tiebreakers are resolved using goal difference, then goals scored, then head-to-head records.

Analysis 27 Nov 2025

Current Season Analysis

FC Baranovichi have established themselves as the dominant force in the 2025 season, clinching the championship title with an exceptional 74 points from 34 matches. Their campaign has been marked by 23 wins, 5 draws, and just 6 defeats, accumulating an impressive +46 goal difference with 75 goals scored against 29 conceded. The club's 68% win rate underscores their consistency throughout the season. FC Dnepr Mogilev secured the second promotion spot with 67 points, maintaining a strong challenge to Baranovichi with 20 wins and a respectable +22 goal difference. Lokomotiv Gomel completed the automatic promotion places with 64 points, demonstrating the competitive depth of the league's upper tier.

The battle for third place and playoff qualification has been intense, with Belshina (63 points), Lida (59 points), and Bumprom (59 points) all within striking distance. Belshina, as a club with four First League titles to their name, represents the experienced establishment challenging for promotion, while Lida has showcased attacking prowess with 74 goals—the second-highest tally in the league. The relegation battle at the bottom has been equally consequential, with Slonim sitting precariously on 20 points, Osipovichy on 24 points, and Orsha on 25 points all facing the real prospect of demotion to the Second League.

BATE II and Niva represent the middle-table contingent, with BATE II contributing 70 goals—the third-highest in the league—despite their 53-point tally. This reflects the league's character as a development platform where reserve sides and youth-focused clubs compete alongside established regional outfits. Baranovichi's offensive firepower, coupled with their defensive solidity, has proven the winning formula, establishing them as a credible threat for sustained success in the Premier League following their promotion.

League Structure and Development Focus

The Belarusian First League operates as a critical developmental tier within Belarus's football pyramid, distinctly different from the top-flight Belarusian Premier League. The inclusion of reserve teams from Premier League clubs—such as BATE II and Dinamo Minsk II—creates a unique ecosystem where established youth academies compete alongside independent regional clubs. This structure serves dual purposes: it provides competitive experience for young players from elite academies while offering smaller regional clubs a genuine pathway to promotion and top-flight status.

The 2025 season has 485 registered players with an average squad age of approximately 22.8 years, reflecting the league's emphasis on youth development and talent cultivation. With 40 foreign nationals competing across the 18 clubs, the league maintains a predominantly domestic character while incorporating international experience. The average player market value of €49,000 underscores the league's position as a developmental rather than commercially dominant competition within European football, yet it remains vital for producing players who contribute to Belarus's national team and club exports to European competitions.

Historical Context and Post-Independence Evolution

The Belarusian First League's establishment in 1992 coincided with Belarus's emergence as an independent nation, making it an integral symbol of the country's post-Soviet sporting reorganization. The league inherited structures from the Soviet Second League B, creating continuity while establishing new competitive frameworks. The early years proved tumultuous, with the 1990s economic transition forcing multiple team withdrawals and requiring constant structural adjustments to maintain viability. Despite these challenges, the league produced champions who would define Belarusian football's second tier: Dinamo-2 Minsk (1992), Shinnik Bobruisk (1992–93), Obuvshchik Lida (1993–94), MPKC Mozyr (1994–95), Naftan-Devon Navapolotsk (1995), FC Gomel (1997), FK Lida (1998), and Kommunal'nik Slonim (1999).

The league's resilience during this formative decade solidified its foundational role in Belarusian football, establishing a tradition of regional representation that continues to define the competition. Modern success stories, such as Rukh Brest's meteoric rise from a 2016 founding to First League champions in 2019 and subsequent Premier League promotion, demonstrate the league's continued ability to produce clubs capable of competing at the highest domestic level. This trajectory reflects the league's evolution from a post-Soviet necessity into a sophisticated developmental platform that balances competitive integrity with talent cultivation.

Competitive Dynamics and Promotion Pathways

The promotion structure of the Belarusian First League creates compelling competitive narratives. Automatic promotion for the top two teams provides clear incentives for excellence, while the third-place playoff competition against lower-ranked Premier League clubs introduces an additional layer of drama and opportunity. This system has proven effective in maintaining competitive balance while occasionally allowing unexpected challengers—such as Rukh Brest—to achieve rapid ascension through the pyramid. The playoff mechanism ensures that a single poor season in the Premier League does not guarantee demotion, while First League clubs with exceptional campaigns can still secure promotion despite not finishing in the top two.

Relegation from the First League carries significant consequences, as the bottom three teams drop to the Belarusian Second League, a substantially larger third-tier competition featuring 84 clubs. This creates a stark competitive gulf that emphasizes the importance of First League status. The regulation of teams like Slonim, Osipovichy, and Orsha would represent major setbacks for their organizational ambitions, particularly for clubs seeking to establish themselves as consistent Premier League competitors. The league's format—with 34 matches providing ample data for consistent performance measurement—ensures that final standings accurately reflect competitive quality over an extended season.

International Context and UEFA Considerations

While the Belarusian First League does not provide direct European competition access, it serves as the primary development pathway for clubs aspiring to compete in UEFA competitions through Premier League qualification. The league's emphasis on youth development and regional representation aligns with broader UEFA initiatives promoting grassroots football and competitive depth. Players developed through the First League frequently contribute to Belarus's national team efforts and provide export value to European clubs seeking emerging talent from Eastern European markets.

The average market value of €49,000 per player, while modest by Western European standards, reflects the league's position within a developing football economy. However, this valuation masks significant individual talent, with numerous First League players progressing to Premier League status and international recognition. The league's role in Belarus's football ecosystem extends beyond domestic competition, contributing to the country's broader sporting reputation and providing employment for hundreds of coaches, administrators, and support staff across the 18 clubs and their respective communities.

Frequently Asked Questions

How many teams compete in the Belarusian First League?

The Belarusian First League features 18 professional teams competing in the second tier of Belarusian football.

What is the promotion structure from the Belarusian First League?

The top two teams are automatically promoted to the Belarusian Premier League. The third-placed team enters a playoff against lower-ranked Premier League clubs for an additional promotion spot.

How many teams are relegated from the Belarusian First League?

The bottom three teams are automatically relegated to the Belarusian Second League at the end of each season.

Who has won the most Belarusian First League titles?

FC Belshina Bobruisk holds the record with 4 First League championships.

When was the Belarusian First League founded?

The Belarusian First League was established in 1992, immediately following Belarus's independence from the Soviet Union.

How long is a Belarusian First League season?

The season typically runs from March to November, with each team playing 34 matches in a double round-robin format (home and away against each opponent).

API data: 23 Jun 2026 · Content updated: 27 Nov 2025