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Meistriliiga

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

Finished Today

2 matches
Regular season – 19
Regular season – 19

Standings

Meistriliiga · 2026

Current Meistriliiga 2026 standings with 10 teams. FC Levadia Tallinn leads the table with 43 points after 17 matches, followed by Flora Tallinn on 30 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
1FC Levadia Tallinn17134045:13+3243
DWWWW
2Flora Tallinn16100633:18+1530
LWLWW
3Kalju Nomme1793529:14+1530
DLDLW
4Paide1784526:21+528
WWDDL
5Tammeka1672718:20-223
WWDLW
6Vaprus1772821:31-1023
WLDWL
7Nõmme United17611033:40-719
WLWLL
8Laagri17611021:30-919
LLLWL
9Kuressaare17521017:27-1017
LDWDW
10Trans Narva17311311:40-2910
LDLLW

Results

Meistriliiga · 50
Regular season – 1720/06/2026–26/06/2026
Fri 26/06
Match Details
Sun 21/06
Match Details
Sun 21/06
Match Details
Sat 20/06
Match Details
Sat 20/06
Match Details
Regular season – 1616/06/2026–17/06/2026
Wed 17/06
Match Details
Wed 17/06
Match Details
Wed 17/06
Match Details
Tue 16/06
Match Details
Tue 16/06
Match Details
Regular season – 1513/06/2026–14/06/2026
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
Regular season – 1429/05/2026–31/05/2026
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
Regular season – 1320/05/2026–24/05/2026
Sun 24/05
Match Details
Wed 20/05
Match Details
Wed 20/05
Match Details
Wed 20/05
Match Details
Regular season – 1217/05/2026
Sun 17/05
Match Details

Upcoming Fixtures

94 matches
Kuressaare
Flora Tallinn
Regular season – 18
Nõmme United
Kalju Nomme
Regular season – 18
Trans Narva
FC Levadia Tallinn
Regular season – 18
Paide
Vaprus
Regular season – 18
Tammeka
Laagri
Regular season – 18
Laagri
Trans Narva
Regular season – 19
Vaprus
Tammeka
Regular season – 19
Nõmme United
Kuressaare
Regular season – 19
Flora Tallinn
Nõmme United
Regular season – 20
Trans Narva
Vaprus
Regular season – 20
Kuressaare
Kalju Nomme
Regular season – 20
FC Levadia Tallinn
Tammeka
Regular season – 20
Laagri
Paide
Regular season – 20
Nõmme United
Trans Narva
Regular season – 21
Kalju Nomme
Tammeka
Regular season – 21
Paide
Kuressaare
Regular season – 21
Flora Tallinn
Laagri
Regular season – 21
Vaprus
FC Levadia Tallinn
Regular season – 21
Kuressaare
Laagri
Regular season – 22
Flora Tallinn
Tammeka
Regular season – 22
Paide
Vaprus
Regular season – 22
Trans Narva
Kalju Nomme
Regular season – 22
FC Levadia Tallinn
Nõmme United
Regular season – 22
Nõmme United
Tammeka
Regular season – 23
Kalju Nomme
Vaprus
Regular season – 23
Trans Narva
Paide
Regular season – 23
Flora Tallinn
Kuressaare
Regular season – 23
Laagri
FC Levadia Tallinn
Regular season – 23
Tammeka
Flora Tallinn
Regular season – 13
FC Levadia Tallinn
Trans Narva
Regular season – 24
Laagri
Kalju Nomme
Regular season – 24
Tammeka
Kuressaare
Regular season – 24
Paide
Nõmme United
Regular season – 24
Vaprus
Flora Tallinn
Regular season – 24
Trans Narva
Tammeka
Regular season – 25
Nõmme United
Laagri
Regular season – 25
Kuressaare
Vaprus
Regular season – 25
Kalju Nomme
FC Levadia Tallinn
Regular season – 25
Flora Tallinn
Paide
Regular season – 25
Flora Tallinn
Kalju Nomme
Regular season – 26
Kuressaare
Trans Narva
Regular season – 26
Vaprus
Nõmme United
Regular season – 26
Paide
FC Levadia Tallinn
Regular season – 26
Laagri
Tammeka
Regular season – 26
Kalju Nomme
Nõmme United
Regular season – 27
Trans Narva
Flora Tallinn
Regular season – 27
FC Levadia Tallinn
Kuressaare
Regular season – 27
Vaprus
Laagri
Regular season – 27
Tammeka
Paide
Regular season – 27
Kalju Nomme
Trans Narva
Regular season – 28
FC Levadia Tallinn
Vaprus
Regular season – 28
Nõmme United
Flora Tallinn
Regular season – 28
Paide
Laagri
Regular season – 28
Kuressaare
Tammeka
Regular season – 28
Laagri
Kuressaare
Regular season – 29
Flora Tallinn
Vaprus
Regular season – 29
Nõmme United
Paide
Regular season – 29
Tammeka
Kalju Nomme
Regular season – 29
Trans Narva
FC Levadia Tallinn
Regular season – 29
Kalju Nomme
Laagri
Regular season – 30
Vaprus
Trans Narva
Regular season – 30
Tammeka
Nõmme United
Regular season – 30
FC Levadia Tallinn
Paide
Regular season – 30
Kuressaare
Flora Tallinn
Regular season – 30
Laagri
Nõmme United
Regular season – 31
Vaprus
Kalju Nomme
Regular season – 31
Trans Narva
Kuressaare
Regular season – 31
Paide
Tammeka
Regular season – 31
Flora Tallinn
FC Levadia Tallinn
Regular season – 31
Kuressaare
FC Levadia Tallinn
Regular season – 32
Nõmme United
Kalju Nomme
Regular season – 32
Flora Tallinn
Tammeka
Regular season – 32
Laagri
Vaprus
Regular season – 32
Paide
Trans Narva
Regular season – 32
Nõmme United
Vaprus
Regular season – 33
Tammeka
Trans Narva
Regular season – 33
FC Levadia Tallinn
Laagri
Regular season – 33
Kalju Nomme
Flora Tallinn
Regular season – 33
Kuressaare
Paide
Regular season – 33
FC Levadia Tallinn
Tammeka
Regular season – 34
Trans Narva
Nõmme United
Regular season – 34
Laagri
Flora Tallinn
Regular season – 34
Vaprus
Kuressaare
Regular season – 34
Paide
Kalju Nomme
Regular season – 34
Nõmme United
FC Levadia Tallinn
Regular season – 35
Vaprus
Paide
Regular season – 35
Tammeka
Laagri
Regular season – 35
Kalju Nomme
Kuressaare
Regular season – 35
Flora Tallinn
Trans Narva
Regular season – 35
Kuressaare
Nõmme United
Regular season – 36
FC Levadia Tallinn
Kalju Nomme
Regular season – 36
Trans Narva
Laagri
Regular season – 36
Paide
Flora Tallinn
Regular season – 36
Tammeka
Vaprus
Regular season – 36

Team Stats

Side-by-side performance comparison of all 10 teams in the Meistriliiga. FC Levadia Tallinn leads with 13 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

Meistriliiga

All 10 teams competing in the Meistriliiga 2026 season. Click any club to view their full squad, match history, and detailed statistics.

Past Seasons

Meistriliiga

Browse 16 archived seasons of the Meistriliiga, from 2011 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 29 Nov 2025

Founded1992

The Meistriliiga was established in 1992 as Estonia's premier football league following the country's restoration of independence from the Soviet Union. Originally semi-professional with amateur clubs permitted to participate, the league has evolved into a fully professional competition featuring Estonia's elite clubs. The league underwent significant structural changes in its early years, stabilizing to its current format of 10 teams playing a quadruple round-robin schedule (36 matches per team) by the late 1990s. In recent decades, the Meistriliiga has grown in competitive depth and international exposure, with champions regularly competing in UEFA Champions League qualifying rounds and generating increased broadcast revenue. The league's global profile has expanded through digital platforms, bringing Estonian football to a wider international audience.

  • 1992 — Meistriliiga founded as Estonia's top division following independence restoration
  • 1992 — JK Viljandi wins the inaugural Meistriliiga championship
  • 2000s — FC Flora Tallinn emerges as the league's dominant force, beginning its title-winning streak
  • 2009 — FC Levadia Tallinn wins the league by a record 21-point margin (97 points vs 76)
  • 2019 — FC Flora Tallinn wins the championship with 29 wins, tying a league record
  • 2025 — FC Flora Tallinn claims record 16th Meistriliiga title, defeating FC Levadia in title race

Competition Format 29 Nov 2025

Teams10Relegation spots1European spots3

The Meistriliiga operates as a single-division league where all 10 teams play each other four times during the season—twice at home and twice away—for a total of 36 matches per team and 180 matches across the entire competition. The club with the highest points total is crowned champions, with ties broken by goal difference and goals scored. The bottom-placed club is automatically relegated to the Esiliiga, the second tier of Estonian football. The top three clubs qualify directly for European competition: the champions enter the UEFA Champions League qualifying rounds, while the second and third-placed clubs enter the UEFA Conference League qualifying rounds. Teams are awarded three points for a win, one point for a draw, and zero points for a loss.

Records 29 Nov 2025

Most titlesFC Flora Tallinn (16)All-time top scorerMaksim Gruznov (304 goals)

The 2025 season set a new points record for the champions, with FC Flora Tallinn accumulating 82 points across 36 matches (26 wins, 4 draws, 6 losses), surpassing previous championship records.

Analysis 29 Nov 2025

Current Season Analysis (2024/25)

FC Flora Tallinn claimed their record 16th Meistriliiga championship in the 2024/25 season, finishing with 82 points from 36 matches (26 wins, 4 draws, 6 losses) and an impressive +53 goal difference. The Tallinn giants demonstrated exceptional consistency throughout the campaign, scoring 84 goals while conceding only 31, showcasing both offensive firepower and defensive solidity. FC Levadia Tallinn mounted a fierce challenge, accumulating 79 points (25 wins, 4 draws, 7 losses) with an identical +53 goal difference but ultimately falling three points short of their rivals. The title race remained competitive until the final rounds, with both clubs trading victories and neither able to establish a decisive early lead.

The battle for third place and European qualification proved equally compelling. Kalju Nomme secured the third position with 74 points (23 wins, 5 draws, 9 losses), guaranteeing their spot in UEFA Conference League qualifying. Paide narrowly missed out on European football, finishing fourth with 70 points (21 wins, 7 draws, 8 losses) and a +31 goal difference. The gap between the top four clubs and the remainder of the division highlighted a clear quality divide, with Trans Narva occupying fifth place with just 51 points, indicating the dominance of the league's established powerhouses.

The relegation battle unfolded dramatically at the bottom of the table, with JK Tallinna Kalev facing the drop despite competing throughout the season. The Tallinn-based club finished in 10th place with only 17 points from 36 matches (5 wins, 2 draws, 29 losses), conceding a league-high 113 goals and scoring just 32. Their catastrophic defensive record—exemplified by a humiliating 0–9 defeat to FC Levadia Tallinn on 19 April 2025—sealed their fate as they were automatically relegated to the Esiliiga. Kuressaare (28 points) and Tammeka (30 points) also struggled significantly, occupying ninth and eighth positions respectively.

Rauno Sappinen of FC Flora Tallinn emerged as the season's standout performer, finishing as the league's top scorer with 21 goals across 36 matches. The striker's prolific form proved instrumental in Flora's title triumph, combining clinical finishing with intelligent movement to consistently find the back of the net. His goal-per-game ratio of 0.58 demonstrated remarkable consistency, making him the most dangerous attacking threat in the Meistriliiga and a key factor in Flora's success.

An unexpected storyline emerged with Vaprus Pärnu's mid-season resurgence, which included a dominant 8–1 victory over Tammeka on 15 August 2025—one of the season's most emphatic performances. Despite this impressive display, Vaprus ultimately finished sixth with 49 points, unable to sustain their challenge for European qualification. The contrast between their best and worst performances highlighted the volatility of mid-table competition, where consistency proved as important as individual moments of brilliance.

League Structure and Competition Format

The Meistriliiga operates under a unique quadruple round-robin format that ensures competitive balance and frequent encounters between rivals. Each of the 10 clubs plays every opponent four times—twice at home and twice away—creating a 36-match season that typically runs from late February through November. This extended schedule accommodates Estonia's challenging winter climate, with the league strategically avoiding the harshest months to maintain fixture continuity. The format generates 180 total matches across the season, providing substantial data for analysis and allowing teams multiple opportunities to prove their capabilities against each opponent.

Points are awarded on the traditional three-points-for-a-win system: clubs receive three points for a victory, one point for a draw, and zero points for a defeat. When clubs finish level on points, the tiebreaker hierarchy prioritizes goal difference first, then goals scored, followed by head-to-head record between the tied clubs. This system encourages attacking football while maintaining competitive integrity, as clubs cannot rely solely on defensive solidity to secure titles. The champion is determined purely by final league position—no playoff system exists—meaning the 36-match regular season definitively decides the outcome.

European qualification is a significant incentive in the Meistriliiga, with the top three clubs earning continental football. The champions automatically qualify for the UEFA Champions League qualifying rounds, providing the most prestigious European exposure and substantial revenue. The second and third-placed clubs enter the UEFA Conference League qualifying rounds, offering additional European experience and financial rewards. These qualification spots drive competitive intensity throughout the season, as clubs battle for positions that enhance their profiles and coffers.

Relegation creates genuine jeopardy for the bottom club, which drops automatically to the Esiliiga without any playoff reprieve. This single-relegation format maintains high stakes throughout the season, particularly in the bottom third, where clubs fight desperately to avoid demotion to the second tier. The absence of a playoff system means that consistency over 36 matches is paramount—a single catastrophic run cannot be recovered through knockout competition.

Historical Dominance and Title Trends

FC Flora Tallinn's 16 championship titles represent an extraordinary level of sustained excellence within the Meistriliiga. The club's dominance intensified in the 2000s and 2010s, during which they secured the vast majority of their titles. Flora's most recent championship in 2024/25 came after a one-year absence from the top spot, demonstrating their ability to recalibrate and return to championship form. The club's 82-point total in 2024/25 ranks among their highest-scoring seasons, reflecting both their attacking prowess and defensive resilience.

FC Levadia Tallinn stands as Flora's principal challenger, having accumulated 10 championship titles—substantially fewer than Flora but still establishing Levadia as the second-most successful club in the league's history. Levadia's recent campaigns have produced increasingly competitive challenges to Flora's dominance. Their 2024/25 finish with 79 points—just three points behind Flora—suggests the gap between the league's top two clubs remains narrow, with either capable of claiming the championship in any given season. The rivalry between Flora and Levadia represents the Meistriliiga's central narrative, with both clubs' success and occasional failures defining the competition's recent trajectory.

Other historic champions include Kalju Nomme, JK Sillamäe Kalev, and JK Viljandi, though their title counts pale in comparison to Flora and Levadia. The concentration of success among a small group of clubs reflects the Meistriliiga's competitive hierarchy, where financial resources, infrastructure, and player development systems favor established powerhouses. This pattern is common in smaller European leagues, where accumulated advantages compound over time.

Notable Records and Achievements

The biggest victory in Meistriliiga history occurred on 19 April 2025, when FC Levadia Tallinn demolished JK Tallinna Kalev by a score of 9–0. This extraordinary scoreline represents the extreme gulf in quality that can emerge between the league's elite and struggling clubs. Tallinna Kalev's comprehensive defeat foreshadowed their eventual relegation, as the club's inability to compete with top-tier opposition became increasingly apparent throughout the season. The 9–0 scoreline stands as a stark illustration of the Meistriliiga's competitive asymmetry.

Maksim Gruznov remains the Meistriliiga's all-time top scorer with an extraordinary 304 goals across his career. Gruznov's prolific record, compiled over multiple decades of competition, established a benchmark that has proven remarkably difficult for subsequent generations to approach. The Estonian striker's consistency and longevity made him a central figure in the league's history, and his record continues to define elite goalscoring achievement within the Meistriliiga.

The points record for a championship-winning season stands at 82, set by FC Flora Tallinn in 2024/25. This total reflects Flora's exceptional consistency, combining 26 victories with only 6 defeats across 36 matches. The high points total indicates that Flora's championship was not merely a product of opponents' failures but rather a demonstration of their own sustained excellence. Previous championship-winning totals typically ranged from 65 to 75 points, making Flora's 82-point achievement a notable milestone in league history.

Competitive Balance and Future Outlook

The Meistriliiga's competitive structure creates a delicate balance between maintaining the dominance of elite clubs and providing meaningful opportunities for challengers. Flora and Levadia's combined 26 titles represent 87% of all championships since 1992, reflecting the concentration of success among the league's largest and best-resourced organizations. However, the narrowing point differential in recent seasons—Flora's 82-point title win over Levadia's 79 points—suggests that competitive intensity is increasing, with other clubs potentially developing the capability to mount genuine title challenges.

Kalju Nomme's consistent presence in the top three indicates that a third force is beginning to establish itself as a regular challenger. With 74 points in 2024/25, Kalju demonstrated capability to compete with the league's elite, finishing just five points behind Levadia. If Kalju can continue developing their squad and infrastructure, they may emerge as a more frequent title contender, potentially breaking the Flora-Levadia duopoly that has characterized recent seasons.

The relegation of JK Tallinna Kalev introduces uncertainty into the competitive landscape, as the club's demotion removes one of the traditional Tallinn-based organizations from the top flight. The influx of a promoted club from the Esiliiga will alter the league's composition and potentially create new competitive dynamics. However, the historical pattern suggests that Flora and Levadia will likely reassert their dominance in subsequent seasons, barring significant organizational changes or investment shifts among other clubs.

Frequently Asked Questions

How many teams compete in the Meistriliiga?

The Meistriliiga features 10 teams competing in the Estonian top division of football.

Who has won the most Meistriliiga titles?

FC Flora Tallinn holds the record with 16 championship titles, most recently in the 2024/25 season.

How does relegation work in the Meistriliiga?

The club finishing in 10th place at the end of the season is automatically relegated to the Esiliiga, Estonia's second tier.

How many European spots does the Meistriliiga have?

The top three clubs qualify for European competition: the champions enter the UEFA Champions League qualifying rounds, while the second and third-placed clubs enter the UEFA Conference League qualifying rounds.

What is the biggest win in Meistriliiga history?

FC Levadia Tallinn defeated JK Tallinna Kalev 9–0 on 19 April 2025, marking the largest victory margin in the league.

Who is the all-time top scorer in the Meistriliiga?

Maksim Gruznov holds the all-time scoring record with 304 goals across his Meistriliiga career.

API data: 27 Jun 2026 · Content updated: 29 Nov 2025