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A Lyga

Standings

A Lyga · 2026

Current A Lyga 2026 standings with 10 teams. Džiugas Telšiai leads the table with 28 points after 17 matches, followed by Kauno Žalgiris on 27 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
1Džiugas Telšiai1784528:22+628
LDWWW
2Kauno Žalgiris1776431:15+1627
WLDLL
3Suduva Marijampole1768319:15+426
WWDWD
4TransINVEST Vilnius1674524:21+325
LWWLW
5Banga1766517:13+424
WWDDL
6FK Zalgiris Vilnius1773724:21+324
LWWLL
7Hegelmann Litauen1739519:26-718
DDLWD
8Panevėžys1753916:31-1518
WLLLW
9Šiauliai1727817:31-1413
LLLDD
10FK Trakai00000:000

Results

A Lyga · 48
Regular season – 1820/06/2026–21/06/2026
Sun 21/06
Match Details
Sat 20/06
Match Details
Sat 20/06
Match Details
Sat 20/06
Match Details
Regular season – 2016/06/2026–17/06/2026
Wed 17/06
Match Details
Wed 17/06
Match Details
Tue 16/06
Match Details
Tue 16/06
Match Details
Regular season – 1712/06/2026–14/06/2026
Sun 14/06
Match Details
Sat 13/06
Match Details
Fri 12/06
Match Details
Fri 12/06
Match Details
Fri 12/06
Match Details
Regular season – 1629/05/2026–31/05/2026
Sun 31/05
Match Details
Sat 30/05
Match Details
Sat 30/05
Match Details
Fri 29/05
Match Details
Fri 29/05
Match Details
Regular season – 1523/05/2026–25/05/2026
Mon 25/05
Match Details
Sun 24/05
Match Details
Sun 24/05
Match Details
Sun 24/05
Match Details
Sat 23/05
Match Details
Regular season – 1416/05/2026–17/05/2026
Sun 17/05
Match Details
Sat 16/05
Match Details

Upcoming Fixtures

85 matches
Banga
Hegelmann Litauen
Regular season – 19
Džiugas Telšiai
FK Zalgiris Vilnius
Regular season – 19
FK Trakai
Kauno Žalgiris
Regular season – 19
Šiauliai
TransINVEST Vilnius
Regular season – 19
Panevėžys
Suduva Marijampole
Regular season – 19
Džiugas Telšiai
Kauno Žalgiris
Regular season – 21
Panevėžys
Hegelmann Litauen
Regular season – 21
Šiauliai
FK Zalgiris Vilnius
Regular season – 21
Suduva Marijampole
TransINVEST Vilnius
Regular season – 21
Banga
FK Trakai
Regular season – 21
Kauno Žalgiris
Panevėžys
Regular season – 22
TransINVEST Vilnius
Banga
Regular season – 22
Šiauliai
Hegelmann Litauen
Regular season – 13
FK Zalgiris Vilnius
Suduva Marijampole
Regular season – 22
FK Trakai
Džiugas Telšiai
Regular season – 22
Panevėžys
FK Trakai
Regular season – 23
Šiauliai
Kauno Žalgiris
Regular season – 23
Džiugas Telšiai
Banga
Regular season – 23
FK Zalgiris Vilnius
TransINVEST Vilnius
Regular season – 23
Suduva Marijampole
Hegelmann Litauen
Regular season – 23
Kauno Žalgiris
Suduva Marijampole
Regular season – 24
TransINVEST Vilnius
Džiugas Telšiai
Regular season – 24
Banga
Panevėžys
Regular season – 24
Hegelmann Litauen
FK Zalgiris Vilnius
Regular season – 24
FK Trakai
Šiauliai
Regular season – 24
FK Zalgiris Vilnius
Kauno Žalgiris
Regular season – 25
Hegelmann Litauen
TransINVEST Vilnius
Regular season – 25
Suduva Marijampole
FK Trakai
Regular season – 25
Šiauliai
Banga
Regular season – 25
Panevėžys
Džiugas Telšiai
Regular season – 25
Banga
Suduva Marijampole
Regular season – 26
Šiauliai
Džiugas Telšiai
Regular season – 26
Kauno Žalgiris
Hegelmann Litauen
Regular season – 26
TransINVEST Vilnius
Panevėžys
Regular season – 26
FK Trakai
FK Zalgiris Vilnius
Regular season – 26
Kauno Žalgiris
TransINVEST Vilnius
Regular season – 27
FK Zalgiris Vilnius
Banga
Regular season – 27
Šiauliai
Panevėžys
Regular season – 27
Džiugas Telšiai
Suduva Marijampole
Regular season – 27
Hegelmann Litauen
FK Trakai
Regular season – 27
Hegelmann Litauen
Banga
Regular season – 28
Suduva Marijampole
Panevėžys
Regular season – 28
FK Zalgiris Vilnius
Džiugas Telšiai
Regular season – 28
TransINVEST Vilnius
Šiauliai
Regular season – 28
Kauno Žalgiris
FK Trakai
Regular season – 28
Banga
Kauno Žalgiris
Regular season – 29
Panevėžys
FK Zalgiris Vilnius
Regular season – 29
Šiauliai
Suduva Marijampole
Regular season – 29
Džiugas Telšiai
Hegelmann Litauen
Regular season – 29
FK Trakai
TransINVEST Vilnius
Regular season – 29
TransINVEST Vilnius
Suduva Marijampole
Regular season – 30
Kauno Žalgiris
Džiugas Telšiai
Regular season – 30
FK Zalgiris Vilnius
Šiauliai
Regular season – 30
Hegelmann Litauen
Panevėžys
Regular season – 30
FK Trakai
Banga
Regular season – 30
Panevėžys
Kauno Žalgiris
Regular season – 31
Suduva Marijampole
FK Zalgiris Vilnius
Regular season – 31
Šiauliai
Hegelmann Litauen
Regular season – 31
Džiugas Telšiai
FK Trakai
Regular season – 31
Banga
TransINVEST Vilnius
Regular season – 31
Kauno Žalgiris
Šiauliai
Regular season – 32
Banga
Džiugas Telšiai
Regular season – 32
TransINVEST Vilnius
FK Zalgiris Vilnius
Regular season – 32
Hegelmann Litauen
Suduva Marijampole
Regular season – 32
FK Trakai
Panevėžys
Regular season – 32
Panevėžys
Banga
Regular season – 33
Džiugas Telšiai
TransINVEST Vilnius
Regular season – 33
Suduva Marijampole
Kauno Žalgiris
Regular season – 33
Šiauliai
FK Trakai
Regular season – 33
FK Zalgiris Vilnius
Hegelmann Litauen
Regular season – 33
Kauno Žalgiris
FK Zalgiris Vilnius
Regular season – 34
TransINVEST Vilnius
Hegelmann Litauen
Regular season – 34
Banga
Šiauliai
Regular season – 34
Džiugas Telšiai
Panevėžys
Regular season – 34
FK Trakai
Suduva Marijampole
Regular season – 34
Panevėžys
TransINVEST Vilnius
Regular season – 35
Šiauliai
Džiugas Telšiai
Regular season – 35
Hegelmann Litauen
Kauno Žalgiris
Regular season – 35
Suduva Marijampole
Banga
Regular season – 35
FK Zalgiris Vilnius
FK Trakai
Regular season – 35
Banga
FK Zalgiris Vilnius
Regular season – 36
Panevėžys
Šiauliai
Regular season – 36
FK Trakai
Hegelmann Litauen
Regular season – 36
Suduva Marijampole
Džiugas Telšiai
Regular season – 36
TransINVEST Vilnius
Kauno Žalgiris
Regular season – 36

Team Stats

Side-by-side performance comparison of all 10 teams in the A Lyga. Džiugas Telšiai leads with 8 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

A Lyga

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

Past Seasons

A Lyga

Browse 15 archived seasons of the A Lyga, 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 16 Jan 2025

Founded1991

The A Lyga was established in 1991 as Lithuania regained independence, replacing the Soviet-era football structures. FK Žalgiris Vilnius won the inaugural championship and has since become the league's most successful club with 11 titles. The competition has undergone significant evolution, expanding from 15 teams in its first season to a more streamlined 10-team format that has been in place since the early 2000s. In 2025, the league underwent a rebrand to TOPLYGA, modernizing its commercial identity while maintaining its status as Lithuania's top professional division. The league has progressively strengthened its infrastructure and international profile, with clubs regularly competing in European competitions.

  • 1991 — A Lyga founded as Lithuania's top football division with FK Žalgiris Vilnius as first champion
  • 1992-1999 — Expansion and consolidation period with fluctuating number of participating clubs
  • 2000s — Stabilization at 10-team format and increased competitive balance
  • 2012-2016 — Introduction of title sponsorship with Credit Service and other corporate partners
  • 2025 — League rebranded as TOPLYGA with new commercial identity and continued European ambitions

Competition Format 16 Jan 2025

Teams10Relegation spots2European spots2

The A Lyga operates as a 10-team double round-robin competition, with each club playing 18 home and 18 away matches across a 36-match season. The champion is determined by total points accumulated, with 3 points awarded for a win and 1 point for a draw. The two highest-finishing clubs qualify for European competition: the champion enters the UEFA Champions League second qualifying round, while the runner-up enters the UEFA Conference League. The bottom two clubs are automatically relegated to the I Lyga (second tier), with no playoff mechanism for the top division.

Records 16 Jan 2025

Most titlesFK Žalgiris Vilnius (11)All-time top scorerPovilas Luksys (105 goals)

Kauno Žalgiris won their first-ever A Lyga championship in 2025 with 75 points, the highest total in the modern league era, finishing 8 points clear of second-place Hegelmann Litauen.

Analysis 16 Jan 2025

Current Season Analysis

The 2024/25 season concluded with Kauno Žalgiris claiming their first-ever A Lyga championship, a historic achievement for the Kaunas-based club. The champions accumulated 75 points across 36 matches, establishing a new points record in the modern league era. Their dominant campaign was built on a strong defensive foundation—conceding just 26 goals while scoring 67—and a remarkable 61% win rate with 22 victories. The 8-point margin over second-place Hegelmann Litauen (67 points) demonstrated clear superiority, with FK Zalgiris Vilnius finishing third on 62 points.

The title race was effectively decided by mid-season, as Kauno Žalgiris maintained consistent form throughout the campaign. Hegelmann Litauen provided the strongest challenge with 21 wins and a respectable goal difference of +13, but their 11 losses proved costly in the pursuit of the championship. The third-place finish for FK Zalgiris Vilnius, despite 17 wins and 62 points, illustrated the competitive depth of the upper tier. Suduva Marijampole rounded out the European qualification spots in fourth place with 59 points, securing Conference League football for the 2025/26 campaign.

The relegation battle proved dramatic, with FK Trakai (26 points) and Dainava (18 points) facing the drop to the I Lyga. Trakai's struggle was evident in their 6 wins and 22 defeats, while Dainava's catastrophic campaign—just 3 wins from 36 matches—represented one of the division's poorest performances in recent memory. Banga (42 points) narrowly avoided the drop zone, while Džiugas Telšiai (46 points) and Panevėžys (49 points) secured mid-table safety.

The standout individual performer of the season was Eligijus Jankauskas with 18 goals, leading the scoring charts and demonstrating consistent finishing throughout the campaign. Šiauliai emerged as an unexpected package in the upper-mid-table with 52 points and 59 goals scored—the third-highest tally in the league—suggesting a more attacking approach than their final position might indicate.

Competitive Structure and League Evolution

The A Lyga's transformation into TOPLYGA reflects a broader modernization of Lithuanian football's top tier. The 10-team format, established in the early 2000s, has proven sustainable and competitive, creating a fixture list of 36 matches per team that balances accessibility with commercial viability. Unlike some European leagues, the A Lyga employs a pure double round-robin system without playoff mechanisms, meaning the title is determined by final league position alone. This straightforward format has contributed to the league's clarity and predictability, though it also means that late-season collapses—as seen with FK Trakai and Dainava—offer no second chances.

The European qualification structure has evolved significantly since the league's founding. Currently, the top two finishers secure continental football, with the champion entering the Champions League second qualifying round and the runner-up competing in the Conference League. This dual pathway provides meaningful incentive for clubs to compete at the highest level, and the financial rewards from European participation have become increasingly important for smaller Lithuanian clubs' sustainability. Kauno Žalgiris' maiden championship guarantees their entry into the 2025/26 Champions League qualifiers, a potential windfall for the club's budget.

Historical Dominance and Record-Breaking Performances

FK Žalgiris Vilnius' 11-title haul represents unparalleled dominance in Lithuanian football history. The Vilnius-based club's most recent championship came in 2014/15, and their consistent presence in the upper reaches of the table has made them the league's benchmark. However, the emergence of Kauno Žalgiris as champions in 2024/25 suggests a potential shift in the competitive balance. Kauno Žalgiris' 75-point total surpasses any previous points aggregate in the modern era, demonstrating not just consistency but a level of performance that has set a new standard for the division.

All-time scoring records reveal the league's historical quality. Povilas Luksys holds the all-time top-scorer record with 105 goals across 211 appearances, a tally that underscores his prolific nature during his playing career in the late 1990s and 2000s. Ričardas Beniušis follows closely with 103 goals from 231 appearances, while Arturas Rimkevicius (92 goals) rounds out the top three. These figures suggest that while the A Lyga may not attract the world's elite talent, it has consistently produced technically proficient forwards capable of delivering double-digit goal tallies across full seasons.

The appearance record belongs to Robertas Vėževičius, who accumulated 341 appearances across multiple clubs—a testament to longevity and consistency in the Lithuanian top flight. Linas Pilibaitis also features prominently with 258 appearances and 89 goals, demonstrating the possibility of sustained excellence across a career spanning multiple decades.

International Dimension and European Participation

While the A Lyga operates primarily as a domestic competition, its clubs' participation in European tournaments provides valuable exposure and financial benefit. FK Žalgiris Vilnius has been the league's most consistent European representative, regularly competing in Champions League and Europa League qualifying rounds. Their presence in continental football has helped raise the profile of Lithuanian football internationally and provided a model for other clubs' ambitions.

The league's smaller market size—Lithuania has a population of approximately 2.8 million—means that clubs operate with modest budgets compared to Western European counterparts. However, this constraint has not prevented competitive performances in European competitions. Clubs have occasionally progressed to group stages of secondary European competitions, and regular qualification for European football has become a realistic target for the league's top finishers.

The pathway for Lithuanian talent development through the A Lyga has produced players who have subsequently competed at higher levels in Western Europe. This developmental function, while less glamorous than championship success, represents a crucial role in the broader ecosystem of European football, with the A Lyga serving as a training ground for ambitious young players seeking to establish themselves internationally.

Commercial Landscape and Media Infrastructure

The rebranding to TOPLYGA in 2025 with TOPsport as title sponsor represents a deliberate effort to enhance the league's commercial appeal. Previous sponsorship arrangements, including Credit Service's involvement from 2012 to 2016, demonstrated the league's capacity to attract corporate partners, though the scale of investment remains modest compared to major European leagues. The new broadcast partnership with LNK Group for 2025–2027 ensures consistent media coverage, a critical factor in sustaining fan engagement and generating revenue streams.

Television rights represent the primary commercial asset for the league, with domestic broadcast deals providing the foundation for club finances. The absence of significant international broadcasting agreements—compared to the Premier League's global reach or even regional competitors like the Polish Ekstraklasa—reflects both the smaller market size and the league's developing commercial infrastructure. However, the growing digitalization of sports consumption presents opportunities for expanded reach beyond traditional television.

Sponsorship potential remains underutilized compared to Western European leagues, though the rebranding effort suggests growing sophistication in commercial operations. The league's ability to attract title sponsors and secure broadcast partnerships indicates increasing professionalization, even if absolute revenues lag far behind the continent's elite competitions. For Lithuanian clubs, success in the A Lyga provides a platform for building fan bases and attracting investment that can support European participation.

Seasonal Rhythm and Competitive Calendar

The A Lyga operates on a spring-to-autumn calendar, typically running from March or April through November, with a winter break accommodating Lithuania's harsh climate. This schedule differs from many Western European leagues that run August-to-May, reflecting the practical realities of Baltic weather conditions. The 36-match season is compressed into approximately 9 months, requiring clubs to maintain fitness and squad depth throughout an intensive campaign.

The fixture schedule's density means that mid-week matches are common, particularly in the closing stages of the season when clubs are competing for European places or battling relegation. This creates dramatic finales where multiple clubs' European aspirations or survival hopes are determined across simultaneous matches. The 2024/25 season exemplified this drama, with the final rounds determining not only the champion but also the relegation candidates, creating compelling narratives that have sustained fan interest despite the league's modest global profile.

The winter break provides clubs with an opportunity for squad reconstruction and tactical adjustment, though the short turnaround between seasons means that planning must begin immediately following the autumn conclusion. For clubs targeting European competition, the quick transition from domestic season conclusion to European qualification rounds requires careful management of player fatigue and squad availability.

Frequently Asked Questions

How many teams compete in the A Lyga?

The A Lyga features 10 professional clubs competing in a double round-robin format, with each team playing 36 matches per season.

Who has won the most A Lyga titles?

FK Žalgiris Vilnius holds the record with 11 league championships, most recently in 2014/15. Kauno Žalgiris won their first title in 2024/25.

How does relegation work in the A Lyga?

The bottom two clubs are automatically relegated to the I Lyga (second tier) at the end of each season. There is no playoff mechanism; relegation is determined by final league position.

How many European spots does the A Lyga have?

Two clubs qualify for European competition: the champion enters the UEFA Champions League second qualifying round, and the runner-up enters the UEFA Conference League qualifying rounds.

When was the A Lyga founded?

The A Lyga was founded in 1991 following Lithuania's independence from the Soviet Union, with FK Žalgiris Vilnius winning the inaugural championship.

What is the current name of the Lithuanian top division?

As of 2025, the league is branded as TOPLYGA (previously A Lyga since 2001), with TOPsport as the title sponsor through 2027.

API data: 23 Jun 2026 · Content updated: 16 Jan 2025