Standings
NB III - Southwest · 2025Current NB III - Southwest 2025 standings with 16 teams. Nagykanizsai ULE leads the table with 63 points after 28 matches, followed by Pécsi MFC on 61 points. The table shows wins, draws, losses, goals scored and conceded, goal difference, and recent form — essential for pre-match betting analysis.
| Team | Played | Won | Drawn | Lost | Goals For:Goals Against | Goal Diff | Points | Form |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Team1Nagykanizsai ULE | Played28 | Won19 | Drawn6 | Lost3 | Goals For:Goals Against61:26 | Goal Diff+35 | Points63 | Form WWWWW |
| Team2Pécsi MFC | Played28 | Won18 | Drawn7 | Lost3 | Goals For:Goals Against66:22 | Goal Diff+44 | Points61 | Form WDWWL |
| Team3Kaposvar | Played28 | Won19 | Drawn3 | Lost6 | Goals For:Goals Against57:28 | Goal Diff+29 | Points60 | Form DWLWW |
| Team4Majosi | Played28 | Won17 | Drawn2 | Lost9 | Goals For:Goals Against74:43 | Goal Diff+31 | Points53 | Form WWWLW |
| Team5Ferencváros II | Played28 | Won16 | Drawn4 | Lost8 | Goals For:Goals Against57:37 | Goal Diff+20 | Points52 | Form WLWDW |
| Team6MTK Budapest II | Played28 | Won15 | Drawn4 | Lost9 | Goals For:Goals Against60:32 | Goal Diff+28 | Points49 | Form DDWWW |
| Team7Dunaújváros-Pálhalma | Played28 | Won13 | Drawn10 | Lost5 | Goals For:Goals Against56:37 | Goal Diff+19 | Points49 | Form— |
| Team8Érdi VSE | Played28 | Won14 | Drawn6 | Lost8 | Goals For:Goals Against42:35 | Goal Diff+7 | Points48 | Form WWLWL |
| Team9Iváncsa | Played28 | Won10 | Drawn6 | Lost12 | Goals For:Goals Against45:41 | Goal Diff+4 | Points36 | Form DDWLW |
| Team10Siofok | Played28 | Won10 | Drawn4 | Lost14 | Goals For:Goals Against34:53 | Goal Diff-19 | Points34 | Form LWWDD |
| Team11Paksi SE II | Played28 | Won9 | Drawn2 | Lost17 | Goals For:Goals Against37:58 | Goal Diff-21 | Points29 | Form DLLLL |
| Team12Szekszárd | Played28 | Won8 | Drawn3 | Lost17 | Goals For:Goals Against38:71 | Goal Diff-33 | Points27 | Form LLLLL |
| Team13PTE-PEAC | Played28 | Won6 | Drawn8 | Lost14 | Goals For:Goals Against37:49 | Goal Diff-12 | Points26 | Form LDLWW |
| Team14Balatonlelle SE | Played28 | Won6 | Drawn5 | Lost17 | Goals For:Goals Against22:49 | Goal Diff-27 | Points23 | Form DLWLL |
| Team15Pénzügyőr | Played28 | Won4 | Drawn7 | Lost17 | Goals For:Goals Against29:58 | Goal Diff-29 | Points19 | Form LLLWL |
| Team16Dombóvári | Played28 | Won0 | Drawn3 | Lost25 | Goals For:Goals Against19:95 | Goal Diff-76 | Points3 | Form DLLLL |
Team Stats
Side-by-side performance comparison of all 16 teams in the NB III - Southwest. Nagykanizsai ULE leads with 19 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
Top Assists
Referees
Top Cards
Teams
NB III - SouthwestAll 15 teams competing in the NB III - Southwest 2025 season. Click any club to view their full squad, match history, and detailed statistics.
Past Seasons
NB III - SouthwestBrowse 7 archived seasons of the NB III - Southwest, from 2019 to 2025. Each season page includes full standings, top scorers, and match results — useful for comparing historical performance and identifying long-term betting patterns.
History 16 Mar 2026
The Nemzeti Bajnokság III was founded in autumn 1997 by the Hungarian Football Federation (MLSZ) to expand the national league system beyond the existing two-tier structure of NB I and NB II. Initially established as the fourth tier, it served regional and semi-professional clubs through a system of county-based competitions. In 2005, following a major reorganization of NB II, NB III was elevated to the third tier of Hungarian football, replacing the fragmented county league system as the primary third-tier competition. The league has undergone several structural reforms, most recently in 2023–24 when it was reorganized from three groups (West, Centre, East) into four regional groups (Northeast, Northwest, Southeast, and Southwest) with 16 teams each, creating a more balanced pyramid and improving logistical efficiency for clubs across Hungary's diverse geography.
- —1997 — Nemzeti Bajnokság III founded as the fourth tier of Hungarian football with two groups (West and East)
- —2005 — NB III elevated to third tier following reorganization of NB II; expanded to six regional groups
- —2013 — League consolidated from six groups to three groups (West, Centre, East) with 16-18 teams each
- —2019–20 — COVID-19 pandemic forces season abandonment; titles awarded based on points per game
- —2023–24 — Restructured into four regional groups (Northeast, Northwest, Southeast, Southwest) with standardized 16 teams per group
Competition Format 16 Mar 2026
The NB III - Southwest operates as a double round-robin tournament in which each of the 16 clubs plays every opponent twice—once at home and once away—for a total of 30 matches per season. Clubs earn three points for a victory, one point for a draw, and zero points for a loss. The group winner is crowned champion and enters the NB III promotion playoff alongside the winners of the Northeast, Northwest, and Southeast groups. In the playoff tournament, the four group winners compete in a two-leg semifinal format (seeded 1 vs 4 and 2 vs 3), with the two semifinal winners earning promotion to NB II. The bottom three clubs in the Southwest group are automatically relegated to the Megyei Bajnokság I (County Leagues), and in the rare event of a tie in final standings, the comprehensive tiebreaker system applies.
Records 16 Mar 2026
Comprehensive all-time records for NB III - Southwest are limited due to the league's regional reorganization in 2023–24; however, Mosonmagyaróvári TE has emerged as one of the most successful clubs with multiple group titles across different regional configurations.
Analysis 16 Mar 2026
Current Season Analysis
The 2024/25 season in the NB III - Southwest features an intensely competitive title race with Kaposvar and Nagykanizsai ULE locked at the summit on 39 points each after 18 matches, having won 12 games apiece. Pécsi MFC sits closely in third place with 38 points, boasting the group's most impressive attacking record with 44 goals scored—a testament to their aggressive, goal-heavy approach. The race for the playoff promotion spot remains wide open, with Majosi also on 38 points and Ferencváros II on 35 points, creating a five-team battle for the top positions.
The relegation battle is emerging as equally dramatic in the lower half of the table. Dombóvári faces a perilous situation, sitting bottom with just 3 points from 18 matches and a staggering minus-46 goal difference, having conceded 61 goals—the worst defensive record in the group by a significant margin. Pénzügyőr (11 points) and Szekszárd (21 points) are also in genuine danger, with only a narrow buffer separating them from the automatic relegation zone. The middle-table cluster around positions 8–12 remains congested, with clubs like Iváncsa and Érdi VSE both on 24 points, fighting to establish safe distance from the drop.
Majosi has emerged as the standout performer of the season so far, combining defensive solidity with prolific attacking output. With 49 goals scored against 23 conceded, Majosi's plus-26 goal difference is second only to Pécsi MFC, and their 12 wins from 18 matches demonstrate remarkable consistency. The club's ability to maintain competitive intensity while developing youth talent exemplifies the strategic success that NB III clubs aspire to achieve. Meanwhile, Pécsi MFC's extraordinary offensive prowess—averaging 2.4 goals per match—suggests they possess the attacking firepower to contend for the playoff positions despite facing formidable defensive opponents.
An unexpected storyline involves Ferencváros II, the reserve team of Hungarian giants Ferencváros, maintaining a respectable fifth-place position with 35 points. As a development squad, Ferencváros II's competitive performance in NB III underscores the league's dual role: serving both as a promotion pathway for independent clubs and as a crucial talent incubation ground for top-tier academies. Their presence in the playoff race demonstrates how reserve teams from elite clubs can leverage superior resources and coaching infrastructure to compete effectively at the third-tier level, though their participation also highlights the structural challenges facing smaller, independently-owned clubs in the same competition.
League Structure and Development Pathway
The NB III - Southwest operates as a critical component of Hungary's football pyramid, functioning as both a competitive arena and a talent development pipeline. The league's four-group structure, implemented in 2023–24, represents the Hungarian Football Federation's commitment to creating balanced regional competitions that minimize travel distances and foster sustainable club development. Each group's 16-team format ensures every club plays 30 matches, providing sufficient sample size for determining promotion and relegation outcomes while maintaining competitive intensity throughout the season.
The promotion pathway from NB III - Southwest to NB II is deliberately selective, with only one direct promotion spot available through the playoff system. This scarcity of promotion places creates intense competition and incentivizes clubs to invest in youth development and infrastructure improvements. Many successful NB III clubs, such as Kisvárda FC, have used their time in the third tier to establish sustainable foundations before progressing to higher levels. The playoff format—requiring group winners to compete in two-leg semifinals—ensures that the promoted clubs demonstrate consistency and resilience across multiple high-stakes matches rather than relying on a single strong season.
Reserve teams from major Hungarian clubs, including Ferencváros II, MTK Budapest II, and Pakski SE II, compete regularly in NB III - Southwest, bringing professional infrastructure and coaching expertise to the division. While these reserve teams provide competitive benchmarks and attract spectators, independent clubs face asymmetric challenges in competing against academy-backed opponents with superior resources. The league's youth development requirements—mandating at least one player born after January 1, 2007 on the field at all times—ensure that clubs prioritize young talent development alongside competitive results, creating a balanced ecosystem that serves Hungarian football's long-term interests.
Regional Significance and Club Profiles
The Southwest region encompasses some of Hungary's most historically significant football communities. Kaposvar, the early season leader, represents a club with deep roots in Hungarian football tradition and has consistently competed at high levels across multiple tiers. Pécsi MFC, another prominent Southwest club, brings Pécs's strong sporting heritage to the competition and has demonstrated the attacking prowess necessary to challenge for promotion. The presence of clubs like Nagykanizsai ULE and Majosi reflects the league's role in sustaining football culture across Hungary's diverse regional centers.
The competitive balance in the Southwest group—with multiple clubs capable of winning matches and maintaining points—reflects the quality of player development occurring at the third-tier level. Teams like Dunaújváros-Pálhalma (34 points) and MTK Budapest II (32 points) demonstrate that consistent performances across the season can accumulate sufficient points for playoff contention, even without the explosive goal-scoring records of top-placed teams. This competitive parity, while challenging for clubs seeking promotion, strengthens the overall quality of Hungarian football by ensuring that third-tier clubs must maintain high performance standards to progress.
Frequently Asked Questions
How many teams compete in the NB III - Southwest?
16 clubs compete in the Southwest regional group of NB III during each season, playing 30 matches in a double round-robin format.
How does promotion from NB III - Southwest work?
The Southwest group winner qualifies for the NB III promotion playoff alongside the winners of the three other regional groups. The four group winners compete in two-leg semifinals, with the two winners promoted to NB II.
Which teams are relegated from NB III - Southwest?
The bottom three clubs in the Southwest group are automatically relegated to the Megyei Bajnokság I (Hungarian County Leagues). Additionally, the two worst 13th-placed teams across all four NB III groups face relegation.
Is NB III - Southwest the top division in Hungary?
No. NB III is the third tier of Hungarian football. The top two tiers are NB I (12 teams) and NB II (16 teams), with NB III serving as the primary third-tier competition comprising 64 clubs across four regional groups.
Do NB III - Southwest clubs qualify for European competitions?
No. Only clubs from NB I and NB II have pathways to European competitions such as the UEFA Champions League and UEFA Conference League. NB III serves as a development league and promotion pathway to the second tier.
When was NB III founded?
Nemzeti Bajnokság III was founded in autumn 1997 as the fourth tier of Hungarian football. It was elevated to the third tier in 2005 following a major reorganization of the league system.
API data: 14 May 2026 · Content updated: 16 Mar 2026