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Ligat Ha'al

Upcoming Fixtures

100 matches
Hapoel Katamon
Maccabi Tel Aviv
Regular season – 1
Hapoel Tel Aviv
Beitar Jerusalem
Regular season – 1
Hapoel Beer Sheva
Hapoel Haifa
Regular season – 1
Ironi Tiberias
Hapoel Petah Tikva
Regular season – 1
Maccabi Haifa
Hapoel Ramat Gan
Regular season – 1
Maccabi Petah Tikva
Ironi Kiryat Shmona
Regular season – 1
Maccabi Netanya
Bnei Sakhnin
Regular season – 1
Beitar Jerusalem
Maccabi Netanya
Regular season – 2
Hapoel Haifa
Hapoel Tel Aviv
Regular season – 2
Hapoel Petah Tikva
Hapoel Katamon
Regular season – 2
Hapoel Ramat Gan
Hapoel Beer Sheva
Regular season – 2
Ironi Kiryat Shmona
Ironi Tiberias
Regular season – 2
Maccabi Tel Aviv
Maccabi Haifa
Regular season – 2
Bnei Sakhnin
Maccabi Petah Tikva
Regular season – 2
Hapoel Katamon
Ironi Kiryat Shmona
Regular season – 3
Hapoel Tel Aviv
Hapoel Ramat Gan
Regular season – 3
Hapoel Beer Sheva
Maccabi Tel Aviv
Regular season – 3
Maccabi Haifa
Hapoel Petah Tikva
Regular season – 3
Maccabi Petah Tikva
Ironi Tiberias
Regular season – 3
Maccabi Netanya
Hapoel Haifa
Regular season – 3
Bnei Sakhnin
Beitar Jerusalem
Regular season – 3
Beitar Jerusalem
Maccabi Petah Tikva
Regular season – 4
Hapoel Haifa
Bnei Sakhnin
Regular season – 4
Hapoel Petah Tikva
Hapoel Beer Sheva
Regular season – 4
Hapoel Ramat Gan
Maccabi Netanya
Regular season – 4
Ironi Tiberias
Hapoel Katamon
Regular season – 4
Ironi Kiryat Shmona
Maccabi Haifa
Regular season – 4
Maccabi Tel Aviv
Hapoel Tel Aviv
Regular season – 4
Beitar Jerusalem
Hapoel Haifa
Regular season – 5
Hapoel Tel Aviv
Hapoel Petah Tikva
Regular season – 5
Hapoel Beer Sheva
Ironi Kiryat Shmona
Regular season – 5
Maccabi Haifa
Ironi Tiberias
Regular season – 5
Maccabi Petah Tikva
Hapoel Katamon
Regular season – 5
Maccabi Netanya
Maccabi Tel Aviv
Regular season – 5
Bnei Sakhnin
Hapoel Ramat Gan
Regular season – 5
Hapoel Haifa
Maccabi Petah Tikva
Regular season – 6
Hapoel Katamon
Maccabi Haifa
Regular season – 6
Hapoel Petah Tikva
Maccabi Netanya
Regular season – 6
Hapoel Ramat Gan
Beitar Jerusalem
Regular season – 6
Ironi Tiberias
Hapoel Beer Sheva
Regular season – 6
Ironi Kiryat Shmona
Hapoel Tel Aviv
Regular season – 6
Maccabi Tel Aviv
Bnei Sakhnin
Regular season – 6
Beitar Jerusalem
Maccabi Tel Aviv
Regular season – 7
Hapoel Haifa
Hapoel Ramat Gan
Regular season – 7
Hapoel Tel Aviv
Ironi Tiberias
Regular season – 7
Hapoel Beer Sheva
Hapoel Katamon
Regular season – 7
Maccabi Petah Tikva
Maccabi Haifa
Regular season – 7
Maccabi Netanya
Ironi Kiryat Shmona
Regular season – 7
Bnei Sakhnin
Hapoel Petah Tikva
Regular season – 7
Hapoel Katamon
Hapoel Tel Aviv
Regular season – 8
Hapoel Petah Tikva
Beitar Jerusalem
Regular season – 8
Hapoel Ramat Gan
Maccabi Petah Tikva
Regular season – 8
Ironi Tiberias
Maccabi Netanya
Regular season – 8
Ironi Kiryat Shmona
Bnei Sakhnin
Regular season – 8
Maccabi Haifa
Hapoel Beer Sheva
Regular season – 8
Maccabi Tel Aviv
Hapoel Haifa
Regular season – 8
Beitar Jerusalem
Ironi Kiryat Shmona
Regular season – 9
Hapoel Haifa
Hapoel Petah Tikva
Regular season – 9
Hapoel Tel Aviv
Maccabi Haifa
Regular season – 9
Hapoel Ramat Gan
Maccabi Tel Aviv
Regular season – 9
Maccabi Petah Tikva
Hapoel Beer Sheva
Regular season – 9
Maccabi Netanya
Hapoel Katamon
Regular season – 9
Bnei Sakhnin
Ironi Tiberias
Regular season – 9
Hapoel Katamon
Bnei Sakhnin
Regular season – 10
Hapoel Petah Tikva
Hapoel Ramat Gan
Regular season – 10
Hapoel Beer Sheva
Hapoel Tel Aviv
Regular season – 10
Ironi Tiberias
Beitar Jerusalem
Regular season – 10
Ironi Kiryat Shmona
Hapoel Haifa
Regular season – 10
Maccabi Haifa
Maccabi Netanya
Regular season – 10
Maccabi Tel Aviv
Maccabi Petah Tikva
Regular season – 10
Beitar Jerusalem
Hapoel Katamon
Regular season – 11
Hapoel Haifa
Ironi Tiberias
Regular season – 11
Hapoel Ramat Gan
Ironi Kiryat Shmona
Regular season – 11
Maccabi Petah Tikva
Hapoel Tel Aviv
Regular season – 11
Maccabi Tel Aviv
Hapoel Petah Tikva
Regular season – 11
Maccabi Netanya
Hapoel Beer Sheva
Regular season – 11
Bnei Sakhnin
Maccabi Haifa
Regular season – 11
Hapoel Katamon
Hapoel Haifa
Regular season – 12
Hapoel Tel Aviv
Maccabi Netanya
Regular season – 12
Hapoel Beer Sheva
Bnei Sakhnin
Regular season – 12
Ironi Tiberias
Hapoel Ramat Gan
Regular season – 12
Ironi Kiryat Shmona
Maccabi Tel Aviv
Regular season – 12
Maccabi Haifa
Beitar Jerusalem
Regular season – 12
Maccabi Petah Tikva
Hapoel Petah Tikva
Regular season – 12
Beitar Jerusalem
Hapoel Beer Sheva
Regular season – 13
Hapoel Haifa
Maccabi Haifa
Regular season – 13
Hapoel Petah Tikva
Ironi Kiryat Shmona
Regular season – 13
Hapoel Ramat Gan
Hapoel Katamon
Regular season – 13
Maccabi Tel Aviv
Ironi Tiberias
Regular season – 13
Maccabi Netanya
Maccabi Petah Tikva
Regular season – 13
Bnei Sakhnin
Hapoel Tel Aviv
Regular season – 13
Beitar Jerusalem
Hapoel Tel Aviv
Regular season – 14
Hapoel Haifa
Hapoel Beer Sheva
Regular season – 14
Hapoel Petah Tikva
Ironi Tiberias
Regular season – 14
Hapoel Ramat Gan
Maccabi Haifa
Regular season – 14
Ironi Kiryat Shmona
Maccabi Petah Tikva
Regular season – 14
Maccabi Tel Aviv
Hapoel Katamon
Regular season – 14
Bnei Sakhnin
Maccabi Netanya
Regular season – 14
Hapoel Katamon
Hapoel Petah Tikva
Regular season – 15
Hapoel Tel Aviv
Hapoel Haifa
Regular season – 15

Teams

Ligat Ha'al

All 14 teams competing in the Ligat Ha'al 2026 season. Click any club to view their full squad, match history, and detailed statistics.

Past Seasons

Ligat Ha'al

Browse 11 archived seasons of the Ligat Ha'al, from 2016 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 18 Mar 2026

Founded1999Preceded byFootball League First Division

The Ligat Ha'al was established in 1999 following a comprehensive restructuring of Israeli professional football by the Israel Football Association (IFA). The league was created to improve the quality and competitiveness of domestic football by consolidating the top tier into a single, unified competition. Since its inception, the league has maintained a consistent format of home-and-away fixtures across 14 teams, with only six clubs having won the championship title in its 26-year history. The competition has undergone several sponsorship rebrands—including periods as the Toto Winner Organization (2016–2018) and Japanika League (2018–2019)—reflecting growing commercial interest. The league has evolved to become increasingly competitive internationally, with Israeli clubs regularly participating in UEFA Champions League and Europa League competitions, elevating the global profile of domestic football and attracting investment from international broadcasters.

  • 1999 — Ligat Ha'al founded as the top tier of Israeli professional football
  • 2012 — Ashdod won the championship, one of the league's most surprising title winners
  • 2013–14 — Eran Zahavi scored 29 goals for Maccabi Tel Aviv, setting a single-season scoring record
  • 2015–16 — Maccabi Tel Aviv completed a domestic treble (league, cup, and super cup)
  • 2024–25 — Maccabi Tel Aviv captured the championship on the final matchday with a 5-0 victory over Beitar Jerusalem

Competition Format 18 Mar 2026

Teams14Relegation spots2European spots4

The Ligat Ha'al operates on a standard double round-robin format, with each of the 14 teams playing every other club twice—once at home and once away—for a total of 26 matches per season. The champion is determined by the highest points total at the end of the regular season, with three points awarded for a win, one for a draw, and none for a loss. At the conclusion of each season, the bottom two clubs are automatically relegated to Liga Leumit (the second division), while the top two clubs from Liga Leumit are promoted to replace them. The league does not employ a playoff system for promotion or title determination; all outcomes are decided by regular-season performance. The top four finishers qualify for European competition: typically the champion and runner-up enter the UEFA Champions League, while the third and fourth-placed teams enter the UEFA Europa League or UEFA Europa Conference League depending on UEFA's allocation that season.

Records 18 Mar 2026

Most titlesMaccabi Tel Aviv (26)All-time top scorerAlon Mizrahi (206 goals)

Eran Zahavi holds the single-season scoring record with 35 goals in the 2015–16 campaign for Maccabi Tel Aviv, achieved across 36 matches.

Analysis 18 Mar 2026

Current Season Analysis (2024/25)

Hapoel Beer Sheva currently leads the Ligat Ha'al with 55 points from 24 matches, sitting atop the table with a commanding goal difference of +31. The Beer Sheva side has been the standout performer of the season, posting a 71% win rate (17 wins from 24 matches) and demonstrating exceptional consistency both defensively—conceding only 23 goals—and offensively with 54 goals scored. However, their position at the summit masks an intensely competitive title race that remains far from decided.

Beitar Jerusalem sits just four points behind in second place with 51 points, having played the same number of matches as the leaders. Beitar has matched Beer Sheva's defensive solidity with 27 goals conceded while scoring 56 goals—more than any other team in the league. The Jerusalem club's 63% win rate (15 wins) indicates they are a potent force, and their superior goal-scoring prowess could yet prove decisive in the final stretch. Maccabi Tel Aviv, the defending champions with a record 26 titles, occupy third place with 46 points but have played 24 matches like their rivals, leaving them four points adrift of the leaders. The defending champions' campaign has been more inconsistent than expected, with 13 wins, 7 draws, and only 4 losses, suggesting they remain capable of a late surge.

The battle for European qualification extends beyond the top three. Hapoel Tel Aviv sits fourth with 45 points, level on wins with Maccabi Tel Aviv (14 victories) but with five draws limiting their points accumulation. Maccabi Haifa, the 2022/23 champions, occupy fifth place with 39 points, representing a disappointing campaign by their standards and raising questions about their ability to maintain elite status.

The relegation battle is crystallizing at the bottom of the table. Maccabi Bnei Raina sits in 14th place with only 11 points from 24 matches—a catastrophic return that has effectively ended their hopes of survival. With a goal difference of -40 and a win percentage of just 13%, Bnei Raina appear destined for immediate relegation to Liga Leumit. Hapoel Katamon in 13th place with 20 points and Ashdod in 12th with 23 points are also in acute danger, though both clubs retain mathematical chances of escape given the season's remaining matches.

The standout individual performer has been Dia Saba of Maccabi Netanya, who has emerged as one of the league's most prolific strikers. Meanwhile, the title race itself represents the season's primary narrative—whether Hapoel Beer Sheva can maintain their form to claim a first league title, or whether the experience and pedigree of Beitar Jerusalem and defending champions Maccabi Tel Aviv will prevail in the closing weeks. The convergence of the top teams on points suggests that goal difference and late-season momentum will likely determine the outcome.

The Evolution of Israeli Football's Elite Competition

The Ligat Ha'al has undergone significant structural and competitive evolution since its establishment in 1999. In its early years, the league was characterized by the dominance of Maccabi Tel Aviv, who won five consecutive titles from 2010 to 2014, establishing themselves as the competition's undisputed powerhouse. However, the 2012/13 season provided a watershed moment when Ashdod, a club from a smaller city without the historical prestige of Tel Aviv or Jerusalem, captured the championship—a result that demonstrated the league's growing competitive depth and the possibility of upset victories.

The mid-2010s saw the rise of Maccabi Haifa, who won the 2022/23 championship and have consistently challenged for titles, and the emergence of Hapoel Beer Sheva as a serious contender. The league's structure has remained stable since 1999, but the quality of play has demonstrably improved through increased investment in player recruitment and coaching infrastructure. The presence of multiple clubs capable of winning the title—six different champions in 26 seasons—contrasts sharply with some European leagues and reflects a genuine competitive balance, albeit one dominated by the traditional "big four" of Maccabi Tel Aviv, Beitar Jerusalem, Hapoel Tel Aviv, and Maccabi Haifa.

International Performance and UEFA Ranking

Israel's position in the UEFA rankings has been bolstered by consistent European participation from Ligat Ha'al clubs. The league's top finishers regularly compete in the Champions League group stage, with Maccabi Tel Aviv being the most successful Israeli representative in European competition. The country's UEFA coefficient ranking of 15th reflects the cumulative performance of Israeli clubs across all European competitions, with Maccabi Tel Aviv's coefficient of 32.50 substantially outweighing all other Israeli clubs combined. This concentration of European success in a single club suggests that the broader competitiveness of the Ligat Ha'al has not yet translated into sustained European success beyond Maccabi Tel Aviv's participation.

The allocation of four European spots to the Ligat Ha'al—a relatively generous allocation reflecting Israel's UEFA standing—has incentivized investment in European competition preparation, with clubs increasingly recruiting foreign talent and employing experienced European coaches. This trend has gradually raised the technical level of the league, though Israeli clubs continue to face significant financial disadvantages compared to top-tier European competitions.

Notable Individual Records and Achievements

The history of the Ligat Ha'al is marked by extraordinary individual performances that have captured the league's competitive spirit. Eran Zahavi, who played for Maccabi Tel Aviv during the club's dominant 2010s period, set the single-season scoring record of 35 goals in 2015/16—a remarkable achievement that came in a 36-match season and remains unmatched. Zahavi's prolific output during this era made him the league's most feared striker and eventually led to his recruitment by European clubs.

Alon Mizrahi, the all-time leading goalscorer with 206 goals across a career spanning multiple clubs, represents the archetype of the Ligat Ha'al's elite strikers. Mizrahi's longevity and consistency—playing 373 matches with a goal every 29.9 minutes—demonstrates the sustained excellence required to dominate Israeli football across multiple decades. Avi Nimni, with 431 appearances, represents the other extreme: a midfielder whose durability and consistency made him one of the league's most reliable performers over an extended career.

The 2013/14 season witnessed Eran Zahavi score 29 goals for Maccabi Tel Aviv, a record that stood until his own subsequent 35-goal campaign. This progression illustrates how individual excellence in the Ligat Ha'al has evolved, with modern strikers benefiting from improved tactical support and higher-quality service from creative midfielders.

Frequently Asked Questions

How many teams compete in the Ligat Ha'al?

Fourteen clubs compete in the Ligat Ha'al each season. The top two from Liga Leumit are promoted annually, while the bottom two Ligat Ha'al teams are relegated.

Who has won the most Ligat Ha'al titles?

Maccabi Tel Aviv holds the record with 26 championship titles since the league's founding in 1999. No other club has won more than 15 titles.

How does relegation work in the Ligat Ha'al?

The two clubs finishing lowest in the league table at the end of the season are automatically relegated to Liga Leumit, the second tier. There is no playoff for survival.

How many European spots does the Ligat Ha'al have?

The top four finishers in the Ligat Ha'al qualify for UEFA European competition. The champion and runner-up typically enter the Champions League, while the third and fourth-placed teams enter the Europa League or Europa Conference League.

When does the Ligat Ha'al season run?

The Ligat Ha'al season runs from August to May each year, with 26 matches played by each team across the calendar year.

Who is the all-time top scorer in Ligat Ha'al history?

Alon Mizrahi holds the all-time scoring record with 206 goals across his career in the league, playing for nine different clubs.

API data: 26 Jun 2026 · Content updated: 18 Mar 2026