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

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2 matches
Regular Season - 13
Regular Season - 13

Standings

Premier League · 2026

Current Premier League 2026 standings with 16 teams. Dinamo Minsk leads the table with 29 points after 12 matches, followed by ML Vitebsk on 25 points. The table shows wins, draws, losses, goals scored and conceded, goal difference, and recent form — essential for pre-match betting analysis.

TeamPlayedWonDrawnLostGoals For:Goals AgainstGoal DiffPointsForm
1Dinamo Minsk1292122:11+1129
WWWWD
2ML Vitebsk1274124:10+1425
DLWDW
3FC Isloch Minsk R.1264218:10+822
WWDWW
4FC Gomel1263318:11+721
WLWDL
5Torpedo Zhodino1255220:10+1020
WDWWD
6Neman1262415:11+420
LWLWL
7FC Minsk1253419:16+318
DLDLW
8Dinamo Brest1252516:12+417
WLLWD
9Arsenal1245316:17-117
WWLLL
10Slavia Mozyr1235410:13-314
LDWDW
11FC Vitebsk1234511:15-413
LWLLD
12Baranovichi1232712:24-1211
LWWLW
13Belshina1231812:21-910
LDLWL
14Bate Borisov121659:13-49
LDDDD
15FC Dnepr Mogilev121569:19-108
LLDLD
16Naftan121387:25-186
WLLLL

Results

Premier League · 50
Regular season – 1219/06/2026–21/06/2026
Sun 21/06
Match Details
Sun 21/06
Match Details
Sun 21/06
Match Details
Sat 20/06
Match Details
Sat 20/06
Match Details
Sat 20/06
Match Details
Sat 20/06
Match Details
Fri 19/06
Match Details
Regular season – 1112/06/2026–14/06/2026
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
Fri 12/06
Match Details
Fri 12/06
Match Details
Regular season – 1029/05/2026–31/05/2026
Sun 31/05
Match Details
Sun 31/05
Match Details
Sun 31/05
Match Details
Sat 30/05
Match Details
Sat 30/05
Match Details
Sat 30/05
Match Details
Fri 29/05
Match Details
Fri 29/05
Match Details
Regular season – 924/05/2026
Sun 24/05
Match Details

Upcoming Fixtures

100 matches
Torpedo Zhodino
Bate Borisov
Regular Season - 13
ML Vitebsk
Naftan
Regular Season - 13
Dinamo Brest
FC Minsk
Regular Season - 13
Dinamo Minsk
FC Vitebsk
Regular Season - 13
FC Isloch Minsk R.
Belshina
Regular Season - 13
FC Dnepr Mogilev
Neman
Regular Season - 13
Bate Borisov
FC Gomel
Regular Season - 14
Slavia Mozyr
ML Vitebsk
Regular Season - 14
FC Minsk
Dinamo Minsk
Regular Season - 14
Naftan
Dinamo Brest
Regular Season - 14
FC Vitebsk
FC Dnepr Mogilev
Regular Season - 14
Neman
Arsenal
Regular Season - 14
Belshina
Baranovichi
Regular Season - 14
Torpedo Zhodino
FC Isloch Minsk R.
Regular Season - 14
FC Dnepr Mogilev
FC Minsk
Regular Season - 15
Baranovichi
Torpedo Zhodino
Regular Season - 15
Dinamo Minsk
Naftan
Regular Season - 15
FC Isloch Minsk R.
Bate Borisov
Regular Season - 15
ML Vitebsk
Belshina
Regular Season - 15
Dinamo Brest
Slavia Mozyr
Regular Season - 15
FC Gomel
Neman
Regular Season - 15
Arsenal
FC Vitebsk
Regular Season - 15
Arsenal
FC Minsk
Regular Season - 16
Baranovichi
FC Isloch Minsk R.
Regular Season - 16
Bate Borisov
Neman
Regular Season - 16
Dinamo Minsk
Slavia Mozyr
Regular Season - 16
FC Dnepr Mogilev
Naftan
Regular Season - 16
Dinamo Brest
Belshina
Regular Season - 16
FC Gomel
FC Vitebsk
Regular Season - 16
ML Vitebsk
Torpedo Zhodino
Regular Season - 16
Baranovichi
Bate Borisov
Regular Season - 17
Belshina
Dinamo Minsk
Regular Season - 17
FC Gomel
FC Minsk
Regular Season - 17
FC Isloch Minsk R.
ML Vitebsk
Regular Season - 17
Naftan
Arsenal
Regular Season - 17
Slavia Mozyr
FC Dnepr Mogilev
Regular Season - 17
FC Vitebsk
Neman
Regular Season - 17
Torpedo Zhodino
Dinamo Brest
Regular Season - 17
Arsenal
Slavia Mozyr
Regular Season - 18
Bate Borisov
FC Vitebsk
Regular Season - 18
Dinamo Minsk
Torpedo Zhodino
Regular Season - 18
FC Dnepr Mogilev
Belshina
Regular Season - 18
Dinamo Brest
FC Isloch Minsk R.
Regular Season - 18
FC Gomel
Naftan
Regular Season - 18
ML Vitebsk
Baranovichi
Regular Season - 18
Neman
FC Minsk
Regular Season - 18
Baranovichi
Dinamo Brest
Regular Season - 19
Belshina
Arsenal
Regular Season - 19
FC Minsk
FC Vitebsk
Regular Season - 19
FC Isloch Minsk R.
Dinamo Minsk
Regular Season - 19
ML Vitebsk
Bate Borisov
Regular Season - 19
Naftan
Neman
Regular Season - 19
Slavia Mozyr
FC Gomel
Regular Season - 19
Torpedo Zhodino
FC Dnepr Mogilev
Regular Season - 19
Arsenal
Torpedo Zhodino
Regular Season - 20
Bate Borisov
FC Minsk
Regular Season - 20
Dinamo Minsk
Baranovichi
Regular Season - 20
FC Dnepr Mogilev
FC Isloch Minsk R.
Regular Season - 20
Dinamo Brest
ML Vitebsk
Regular Season - 20
FC Gomel
Belshina
Regular Season - 20
Neman
Slavia Mozyr
Regular Season - 20
FC Vitebsk
Naftan
Regular Season - 20
Baranovichi
FC Dnepr Mogilev
Regular Season - 21
Belshina
Neman
Regular Season - 21
Dinamo Brest
Bate Borisov
Regular Season - 21
FC Isloch Minsk R.
Arsenal
Regular Season - 21
ML Vitebsk
Dinamo Minsk
Regular Season - 21
Naftan
FC Minsk
Regular Season - 21
Slavia Mozyr
FC Vitebsk
Regular Season - 21
Torpedo Zhodino
FC Gomel
Regular Season - 21
Arsenal
Baranovichi
Regular Season - 22
Bate Borisov
Naftan
Regular Season - 22
Dinamo Minsk
Dinamo Brest
Regular Season - 22
FC Dnepr Mogilev
ML Vitebsk
Regular Season - 22
FC Gomel
FC Isloch Minsk R.
Regular Season - 22
FC Minsk
Slavia Mozyr
Regular Season - 22
Neman
Torpedo Zhodino
Regular Season - 22
FC Vitebsk
Belshina
Regular Season - 22
Baranovichi
FC Gomel
Regular Season - 23
Belshina
FC Minsk
Regular Season - 23
Dinamo Minsk
Bate Borisov
Regular Season - 23
Dinamo Brest
FC Dnepr Mogilev
Regular Season - 23
FC Isloch Minsk R.
Neman
Regular Season - 23
ML Vitebsk
Arsenal
Regular Season - 23
Slavia Mozyr
Naftan
Regular Season - 23
Torpedo Zhodino
FC Vitebsk
Regular Season - 23
Arsenal
Dinamo Brest
Regular Season - 24
Bate Borisov
Slavia Mozyr
Regular Season - 24
FC Dnepr Mogilev
Dinamo Minsk
Regular Season - 24
FC Gomel
ML Vitebsk
Regular Season - 24
FC Minsk
Torpedo Zhodino
Regular Season - 24
Naftan
Belshina
Regular Season - 24
Neman
Baranovichi
Regular Season - 24
FC Vitebsk
FC Isloch Minsk R.
Regular Season - 24
Baranovichi
FC Vitebsk
Regular Season - 25
Belshina
Slavia Mozyr
Regular Season - 25
Dinamo Minsk
Arsenal
Regular Season - 25
FC Dnepr Mogilev
Bate Borisov
Regular Season - 25
Dinamo Brest
FC Gomel
Regular Season - 25
FC Isloch Minsk R.
FC Minsk
Regular Season - 25

Team Stats

Side-by-side performance comparison of all 16 teams in the Premier League. Dinamo Minsk leads with 9 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.

Teams

Premier League

All 16 teams competing in the Premier League 2026 season. Click any club to view their full squad, match history, and detailed statistics.

Past Seasons

Premier League

Browse 15 archived seasons of the Premier League, 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 15 Jan 2025

Founded1992

The Belarusian Premier League was established in 1992, immediately following the dissolution of the Soviet Union and Belarus's declaration of independence. The league replaced the Soviet Union's top-flight competition and was initially structured as the successor to the Belarusian SSR's football hierarchy. From its inception, the competition has been governed by the Belarusian Football Federation (ABFF) and has served as the country's premier professional football platform. The most transformative period came between 2006 and 2018, when BATE Borisov achieved an unprecedented run of 13 consecutive league titles, fundamentally reshaping the competitive landscape. In 2025, this dominance was finally broken when Maxline Vitebsk won their first-ever championship as a newly promoted side, signalling a potential shift in the league's competitive balance. The league has gradually increased its international profile, particularly during the COVID-19 pandemic when it gained significant overseas broadcast attention.

  • 1992 — Belarusian Premier League founded following Belarus's independence from the Soviet Union
  • 1999 — BATE Borisov wins their first championship
  • 2006 — BATE Borisov begins their unprecedented 13-consecutive-title run
  • 2018 — BATE Borisov's dominance ends after 13 consecutive championships (2006–2018)
  • 2020 — League gains significant international broadcast coverage during COVID-19 pandemic
  • 2025 — Maxline Vitebsk wins their first-ever title as a newly promoted side

Competition Format 15 Jan 2025

Teams16Relegation spots2European spots4

The Belarusian Premier League operates on a double round-robin format, with all 16 clubs playing each other twice (home and away) for a total of 30 matches per season. The champion is determined by the highest points total at the conclusion of the regular season, with three points awarded for a win and one point for a draw. The bottom two clubs are automatically relegated to the Belarusian First League. The top four finishing clubs qualify for European competition, typically competing in the UEFA Champions League and UEFA Europa League qualifying rounds. Tiebreaker rules follow standard UEFA conventions, prioritizing goal difference, then goals scored, then head-to-head results.

Analysis 15 Jan 2025

Current Season Analysis

Maxline Vitebsk has emerged as the dominant force in the 2024/25 Belarusian Premier League season, claiming their first-ever championship title with 68 points from 30 matches. The club finished with an impressive record of 21 wins, 5 draws, and only 4 losses, demonstrating remarkable consistency throughout the campaign. Their attacking prowess was evident with 53 goals scored—the joint-highest in the league—while maintaining a strong defensive record with just 18 goals conceded, resulting in a commanding +35 goal difference. This unprecedented championship run for Vitebsk, coming as a newly promoted side, represents a seismic shift in the competitive landscape of Belarusian football after years of BATE Borisov's dominance.

Dinamo Minsk secured the runner-up position with 63 points, finishing five points behind the champions. The capital city club accumulated 19 wins, 6 draws, and 5 defeats, scoring 52 goals while conceding 27. Despite their strong second-place finish, Dinamo Minsk could not sustain the pressure from Vitebsk's relentless campaign. Slavia Mozyr completed the podium positions in third place with 57 points, achieved through 17 wins, 6 draws, and 7 losses. The trio of Dinamo Brest (51 points) and FC Minsk (51 points) occupied the fourth and fifth positions respectively, both securing European qualification spots.

The relegation battle proved highly competitive, with Molodechno-DYuSSh 4 finishing in the basement with just 11 points from 3 wins, 2 draws, and 25 losses—a catastrophic campaign that saw them concede 63 goals while scoring only 19. FC Slutsk and Smorgon joined them in the danger zone with 21 and 28 points respectively, though both clubs managed to avoid the automatic relegation places that claimed the bottom two teams. The significant gap between the champions and lower-placed clubs underscores the growing disparity in quality and resources across the Belarusian Premier League.

The most remarkable storyline of the 2024/25 season was undoubtedly Maxline Vitebsk's ascent, which saw a newly promoted club capture the championship in their first season at the elite level. This achievement represents one of the most surprising and significant upsets in recent Belarusian football history, comparable to Leicester City's 2015/16 Premier League triumph in terms of competitive upheaval. Vitebsk's success has fundamentally challenged the notion of BATE Borisov's permanent dominance and opened new possibilities for competitive balance in the league. The club secured the title with one round remaining after defeating FC Gomel 5-0 in their 29th match, demonstrating both their attacking quality and psychological dominance over rivals.

Competitive Transformation and Future Outlook

The 2024/25 season marks a watershed moment for the Belarusian Premier League, signifying the end of an era defined by BATE Borisov's 13-year stranglehold on the championship. For over a decade, from 2006 to 2018, BATE accumulated an unparalleled 13 consecutive titles, establishing themselves as the most successful club in the competition's history with 15 total championships. However, their gradual decline—finishing in 10th place with just 40 points in the 2024/25 season—reflects broader shifts in the league's competitive dynamics. Maxline Vitebsk's emergence as champions suggests that investment and organizational excellence can overcome historical hierarchies, potentially ushering in a more competitive era where multiple clubs can realistically compete for the title.

The league's structural format remains consistent with its traditional 16-team, double round-robin structure that has characterized it since its establishment. European qualification through the top four positions continues to provide incentive for competitive excellence, though the gap between continental contenders and relegation-battlers appears to be widening. The contrast between Vitebsk's 68 points and Molodechno's 11 points—a 57-point differential—illustrates the growing disparity in resources and organizational capability across the league. This gap presents both challenges for competitive balance and opportunities for emerging clubs to establish themselves as genuine title contenders.

Historical Context: BATE Borisov's Unprecedented Dominance

Understanding the significance of Maxline Vitebsk's 2024/25 championship requires appreciation of BATE Borisov's extraordinary historical dominance. Beginning with their first title in 1999/2000, BATE established themselves as a force in Belarusian football. However, their true period of supremacy commenced in 2006/07, when they initiated their remarkable 13-consecutive-championship run. This streak—extending from 2006 through 2018—remains one of the most dominant periods by any club in modern European football, surpassing even Celtic's nine-in-a-row achievement in Scottish football and rivalling Rangers' historical dominance. During this period, BATE not only won the domestic title with regularity but also established themselves as the primary Belarusian representative in European competitions, regularly qualifying for Champions League and Europa League stages.

The club's success was built upon consistent investment, institutional stability, and the ability to retain key players while recruiting talent from throughout the post-Soviet region. Their 15 total championships—more than any other club in Belarusian Premier League history—underscore their status as the competition's most successful franchise. However, the emergence of Maxline Vitebsk as champions in 2024/25 demonstrates that even the most entrenched dominance can be challenged by clubs with sufficient ambition and resources. BATE's decline to 10th place in 2025 represents not merely a competitive setback but potentially a fundamental realignment of power in Belarusian football.

League Records and Historical Achievements

The individual records within the Belarusian Premier League reflect the talent that has graced the competition since its establishment. Raman Vasilyuk holds the all-time goalscoring record with 218 goals across his career in the league, establishing himself as the most prolific striker in competition history. This extraordinary goal tally—accumulated across multiple seasons and clubs—demonstrates the quality of attacking talent the league has produced and attracted. Other notable goal-scorers in league history include V. Rodionov with 139 goals and M. Skavysh with 135 goals, though Vasilyuk's total remains unmatched.

The league's competitive records demonstrate the level of quality and intensity present in modern Belarusian football. The points records from various seasons reflect the evolution of attacking and defensive standards, with recent campaigns producing increasingly high-scoring affairs. The biggest victories in league history showcase the occasional disparities in quality between competing clubs, though comprehensive records of the largest winning margins are not consistently documented across all historical seasons. These records serve as benchmarks for future performances and highlight the achievements of clubs and players who have defined the competition.

European Competition and International Profile

The Belarusian Premier League's role within European football has evolved significantly since its inception. The top four clubs qualify for UEFA competitions, typically entering the Champions League and Europa League qualifying rounds depending on their league position. This European exposure provides both financial incentive and competitive development opportunities for participating clubs. Maxline Vitebsk's championship victory in 2024/25 guarantees them entry into the 2025/26 Champions League qualifying rounds, providing the newly crowned champions with the opportunity to test themselves against elite European opposition.

The league's international broadcast profile has expanded considerably, particularly since 2020 when the COVID-19 pandemic created a global appetite for live football content. The Belarusian Premier League capitalized on this opportunity, securing broadcast deals with multiple international territories including Russia, Ukraine, Israel, and India. These agreements have increased the league's visibility beyond its traditional regional audience and generated additional revenue streams for participating clubs. The exclusive domestic broadcast rights agreement with Beltelecom ensures consistent domestic coverage, while the international arrangements continue to grow the league's global footprint.

Conclusion

The 2024/25 Belarusian Premier League season represents a pivotal moment in the competition's history. Maxline Vitebsk's improbable championship triumph—achieved as a newly promoted side—has shattered the narrative of inevitable BATE Borisov dominance and opened the door to a more competitive era. With 68 points from 30 matches, Vitebsk demonstrated the quality and consistency required to compete at the elite level, while simultaneously establishing themselves as the new benchmark for excellence in Belarusian football. As the league continues to evolve, the question remains whether this championship represents the beginning of a new competitive paradigm or merely a temporary disruption to established hierarchies. Regardless, the 2024/25 season will be remembered as the season when Belarusian football's competitive landscape fundamentally shifted.

Frequently Asked Questions

How many teams are in the Belarusian Premier League?

The Belarusian Premier League consists of 16 teams competing in the top tier of professional football in Belarus.

Who has won the most Belarusian Premier League titles?

BATE Borisov has won the most titles with 15 championships, including a record 13 consecutive titles from 2006 to 2018.

How does relegation work in the Belarusian Premier League?

The bottom two clubs in the standings at the end of the season are automatically relegated to the Belarusian First League, the second tier of professional football.

Which clubs qualify for European competitions from the Belarusian Premier League?

The top four finishing clubs qualify for European competition, typically entering the UEFA Champions League and UEFA Europa League qualifying rounds.

When did the Belarusian Premier League start?

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

How many matches does each team play in the Belarusian Premier League?

Each team plays 30 matches in the regular season, facing all 15 opponents twice (home and away) in a double round-robin format.

API data: 23 Jun 2026 · Content updated: 15 Jan 2025