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Liga MX

Upcoming Fixtures

100 matches
Necaxa
Atlante FC
Apertura - 1
Club Tijuana
Tigres UANL
Apertura - 1
Atletico San Luis
Cruz Azul
Apertura - 1
Leon
Atlas
Apertura - 1
FC Juarez
Puebla
Apertura - 1
U.N.A.M. - Pumas
CF Pachuca
Apertura - 1
Guadalajara Chivas
Toluca
Apertura - 1
Monterrey
Santos Laguna
Apertura - 1
Club Queretaro
Club America
Apertura - 1
Cruz Azul
Puebla
Apertura - 2
Toluca
U.N.A.M. - Pumas
Apertura - 2
Tigres UANL
Atletico San Luis
Apertura - 2
Club Tijuana
Leon
Apertura - 2
Atlante FC
Club America
Apertura - 2
Guadalajara Chivas
FC Juarez
Apertura - 2
Santos Laguna
Atlas
Apertura - 2
Necaxa
Monterrey
Apertura - 2
CF Pachuca
Club Queretaro
Apertura - 2
Puebla
Guadalajara Chivas
Apertura - 3
Atletico San Luis
Club Tijuana
Apertura - 3
FC Juarez
U.N.A.M. - Pumas
Apertura - 3
Club Queretaro
Tigres UANL
Apertura - 3
Atlas
Monterrey
Apertura - 3
Leon
CF Pachuca
Apertura - 3
Cruz Azul
Atlante FC
Apertura - 3
Club America
Santos Laguna
Apertura - 3
Toluca
Necaxa
Apertura - 3
Atlante FC
Toluca
Apertura - 4
Monterrey
FC Juarez
Apertura - 4
Atlas
Tigres UANL
Apertura - 4
U.N.A.M. - Pumas
Club Queretaro
Apertura - 4
Club America
Atletico San Luis
Apertura - 4
Santos Laguna
Guadalajara Chivas
Apertura - 4
Club Tijuana
Cruz Azul
Apertura - 4
Necaxa
Leon
Apertura - 4
CF Pachuca
Puebla
Apertura - 4
Puebla
Santos Laguna
Apertura - 5
FC Juarez
Club America
Apertura - 5
Guadalajara Chivas
Club Tijuana
Apertura - 5
Club Queretaro
Toluca
Apertura - 5
Leon
Monterrey
Apertura - 5
Cruz Azul
Atlas
Apertura - 5
Tigres UANL
Atlante FC
Apertura - 5
Atletico San Luis
CF Pachuca
Apertura - 5
U.N.A.M. - Pumas
Necaxa
Apertura - 5
Atlante FC
Leon
Apertura - 6
Necaxa
Cruz Azul
Apertura - 6
Club Tijuana
U.N.A.M. - Pumas
Apertura - 6
Atlas
Club Queretaro
Apertura - 6
CF Pachuca
Guadalajara Chivas
Apertura - 6
Club America
Puebla
Apertura - 6
Santos Laguna
Tigres UANL
Apertura - 6
Toluca
FC Juarez
Apertura - 6
Monterrey
Atletico San Luis
Apertura - 6
Puebla
Toluca
Apertura - 7
FC Juarez
CF Pachuca
Apertura - 7
Atletico San Luis
Guadalajara Chivas
Apertura - 7
Club Queretaro
Monterrey
Apertura - 7
Club America
Club Tijuana
Apertura - 7
Tigres UANL
Necaxa
Apertura - 7
Atlas
Atlante FC
Apertura - 7
U.N.A.M. - Pumas
Leon
Apertura - 7
Cruz Azul
Santos Laguna
Apertura - 7
Necaxa
Puebla
Apertura - 8
Club Tijuana
Club Queretaro
Apertura - 8
Atlante FC
CF Pachuca
Apertura - 8
Leon
Atletico San Luis
Apertura - 8
Cruz Azul
Club America
Apertura - 8
Toluca
Atlas
Apertura - 8
Guadalajara Chivas
U.N.A.M. - Pumas
Apertura - 8
Santos Laguna
FC Juarez
Apertura - 8
Monterrey
Tigres UANL
Apertura - 8
Puebla
Atlante FC
Apertura - 9
FC Juarez
Tigres UANL
Apertura - 9
Atlas
U.N.A.M. - Pumas
Apertura - 9
Atletico San Luis
Necaxa
Apertura - 9
Monterrey
Cruz Azul
Apertura - 9
Club America
Guadalajara Chivas
Apertura - 9
CF Pachuca
Club Tijuana
Apertura - 9
Toluca
Santos Laguna
Apertura - 9
Club Queretaro
Leon
Apertura - 9
Atlante FC
Monterrey
Apertura - 10
Club Tijuana
Atlas
Apertura - 10
Guadalajara Chivas
Club Queretaro
Apertura - 10
Santos Laguna
CF Pachuca
Apertura - 10
Tigres UANL
Puebla
Apertura - 10
Cruz Azul
Toluca
Apertura - 10
U.N.A.M. - Pumas
Atletico San Luis
Apertura - 10
Leon
FC Juarez
Apertura - 10
Necaxa
Club America
Apertura - 10
Puebla
Leon
Apertura - 11
Club Queretaro
Atlante FC
Apertura - 11
Tigres UANL
Toluca
Apertura - 11
FC Juarez
Club Tijuana
Apertura - 11
Atlas
Guadalajara Chivas
Apertura - 11
Club America
Monterrey
Apertura - 11
Atletico San Luis
Santos Laguna
Apertura - 11
CF Pachuca
Necaxa
Apertura - 11
U.N.A.M. - Pumas
Cruz Azul
Apertura - 11
Necaxa
Atlas
Apertura - 12

Teams

Liga MX

All 18 teams competing in the Liga MX 2026 season. Click any club to view their full squad, match history, and detailed statistics.

Past Seasons

Liga MX

Browse 11 archived seasons of the Liga MX, 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

Founded1943

Liga MX was established in 1943 when ten pioneering clubs formed Mexico's first professional football league, replacing the amateur tournaments that had previously dominated the sport. The league was founded to create a structured, competitive framework that would elevate Mexican football to international standards and generate commercial revenue through organized competition. Since its inception, Liga MX has undergone significant structural evolution: the introduction of the Apertura-Clausura format in 1996-97 created two distinct tournaments per season, fundamentally altering the competitive calendar and championship structure. The league expanded from its original ten clubs to the current 18-team format, and has witnessed multiple rebranding initiatives tied to commercial sponsorships, most notably the "Liga BBVA MX" title from 2019 onwards. From a regional competition, Liga MX has transformed into a global football institution, establishing itself as one of the most-watched leagues outside Europe through strategic broadcasting partnerships and the development of world-class infrastructure and player development systems.

  • 1943 — Liga MX founded with ten professional clubs, replacing amateur tournaments
  • 1996-97 — Introduction of Apertura-Clausura format, creating two tournaments per season
  • 2019 — Rebranding as Liga BBVA MX following major commercial sponsorship deal
  • 2024 — Liga MX negotiations for transformational investment deals with international private equity firms
  • 2025 — Expansion of international broadcasting partnerships with major media companies including NBCUniversal

Competition Format 18 Mar 2026

Teams18Relegation spots4

Liga MX operates on a unique dual-tournament system, splitting the calendar year into two separate championships: the Apertura (August–December) and Clausura (January–May). Each tournament consists of 17 regular season matches in a round-robin format, with all 18 teams playing each opponent once. Following the regular season, the top eight teams from each tournament advance to the Liguilla playoffs, a knockout competition that determines the tournament champion. This format ensures two opportunities for championship glory annually, intensifying competition and maintaining fan engagement throughout the year. Four clubs are relegated at the end of each season based on a three-year average performance metric, creating sustained pressure on lower-placed teams and dynamic competitive balance.

Records 18 Mar 2026

Most titlesClub América (16)All-time top scorerCabinho (312 goals)

Cruz Azul achieved the all-time points record of 57 in a 17-game Apertura tournament, demonstrating the competitive intensity of Liga MX's modern era.

Analysis 18 Mar 2026

Current Season Analysis

Cruz Azul and Toluca dominate Liga MX's 2024-25 season, with the Mexico City club establishing themselves as the frontrunners after nine matches. Cruz Azul has accumulated 22 points from seven wins, one draw, and one loss, showcasing a 78% win rate and a commanding 0 goal difference. Toluca sits in second position with 21 points, boasting an impressive unbeaten record of six wins and three draws, though they have played one fewer match. The defending Clausura champions demonstrate the defensive solidity that characterizes their recent success, having conceded only four goals across nine matches. U.N.A.M. - Pumas occupy third place with 0 points from 0 matches, maintaining a balanced approach with five wins and four draws, while Guadalajara Chivas sit fourth with 18 points from eight matches, showcasing their traditional attacking prowess with 12 goals scored.

The title race remains remarkably competitive, with the top four clubs separated by just four points, creating genuine uncertainty about which team will claim the Apertura tournament crown. Guadalajara Chivas, despite sitting fourth, represent a genuine threat to the leaders, having won six of their eight matches with a 75% win rate. Their experience in high-pressure situations and historical championship pedigree—with 12 Liga MX titles—cannot be discounted. Pachuca and Atlas occupy fifth and sixth positions respectively with 17 and 16 points, maintaining outside hopes of challenging for the title should the leaders stumble.

The relegation battle has already begun to take shape, with Santos Laguna in genuine peril at the foot of the table with just two points from nine matches and a catastrophic -15 goal difference. The club has won only two draws from seven losses, indicating fundamental structural problems requiring immediate intervention. Club Querétaro (6 points), Necaxa (9 points), and Mazatlán (10 points) occupy the danger zone, each facing the realistic prospect of playing in the second division next season if their current trajectory continues. The relegation mechanism's three-year average calculation means these clubs must reverse their form dramatically to avoid the drop.

Toluca's defensive excellence represents the season's standout statistical achievement, having conceded merely four goals across nine matches—a rate that would project to approximately nine goals conceded across a full 17-match tournament. This defensive resilience, combined with their clinical finishing (14 goals), provides a template for sustained success in Liga MX's demanding environment. Cruz Azul's attacking potency mirrors this excellence, with 17 goals scored suggesting they possess the offensive firepower necessary to maintain their title challenge.

The unexpected narrative of the season centers on Club América's surprising struggles, as the record 16-time champions sit ninth with only 11 points from nine matches. The Eagles' 33% win rate represents a stark departure from their historical dominance, raising questions about squad depth, tactical adaptation, and the psychological impact of recent championship disappointments. This represents a genuine opportunity for rival clubs to capitalize on América's vulnerability and establish new power dynamics within Liga MX's competitive hierarchy.

Liga MX: Mexico's Football Institution and Continental Powerhouse

Liga MX transcends its status as a domestic football league, functioning as the cultural heartbeat of Mexican sport and a driving force in North American football development. The league's dual-tournament format—unique among major global football competitions—creates an intensity and frequency of championship competition that maintains sustained fan engagement and commercial vibrancy throughout the calendar year. This structural innovation has become Liga MX's defining characteristic, generating two distinct seasons of drama, tactical evolution, and championship opportunity within a single calendar year.

The competitive landscape of Liga MX reflects Mexico's football philosophy: attacking, entertaining football combined with fierce defensive organization. The traditional "grandes" (big clubs)—Club América, Guadalajara Chivas, Monterrey, and Tigres UANL—have historically dominated the competition, but recent seasons demonstrate the emergence of competitive challengers. Toluca's recent success, evidenced by their Clausura 2025 championship and strong Apertura form, illustrates how sustained investment, tactical discipline, and player development can disrupt established hierarchies. Similarly, Cruz Azul's record-breaking performance demonstrates that championship success remains achievable for clubs willing to commit significant resources and maintain strategic consistency.

The international dimension of Liga MX has expanded dramatically, with Mexican clubs increasingly attracting global talent while developing homegrown players who achieve success in Europe's elite leagues. This bidirectional flow of talent—international players coming to Liga MX and Mexican stars departing for European opportunities—creates a dynamic marketplace that enhances competitive quality while maintaining the league's cultural authenticity. The presence of South American talent, particularly from Argentina and Brazil, has elevated tactical sophistication and technical quality across the competition.

Broadcasting Revolution and Commercial Transformation

Liga MX stands at a transformational juncture commercially, with 2024-2025 negotiations involving major international private equity firms seeking to develop the league's global media and sponsorship infrastructure. The collapse of the proposed Apollo Global Management investment deal—valued at approximately $1.25 billion for 20% of non-Mexican media rights over 50 years—illustrates both the league's commercial attractiveness and the complexities of monetizing Mexican football on the global stage. Despite this setback, Liga MX continues to attract significant broadcasting partnerships, with NBCUniversal and Telemundo securing substantial rights packages for international distribution.

The league's global reach has expanded exponentially, with matches broadcast in over 120 territories to an estimated audience exceeding 2 billion viewers globally. This international penetration positions Liga MX as one of the most-watched football competitions outside Europe, rivaling several established European leagues in terms of global viewership. The BBVA sponsorship deal, which rebranded the competition as "Liga BBVA MX," demonstrates the league's ability to attract major international corporate partners seeking association with Mexican football's passion and cultural significance.

The Apertura-Clausura Model: Innovation and Competitive Integrity

The introduction of the Apertura-Clausura format in 1996-97 represented a revolutionary structural innovation that fundamentally altered Mexican football's competitive calendar. Rather than adopting the traditional single-season European model, Liga MX created two distinct tournaments per season, each with its own regular season and playoff structure. This dual-tournament approach generates multiple competitive narratives, sustained fan engagement, and enhanced commercial opportunities through increased championship opportunities.

The format's brilliance lies in its competitive implications: no team can afford to underperform for an extended period, as championship opportunity arrives twice annually. This creates relentless competitive pressure, tactical innovation, and the possibility of dramatic turnarounds. A team struggling in the Apertura can refocus for the Clausura, while successful teams must maintain consistency across both tournaments to establish themselves as genuine powerhouses. The Liguilla playoffs—which feature the top eight teams from each tournament—introduce knockout drama that intensifies competition and rewards both regular season consistency and playoff performance.

Player Development and International Influence

Liga MX has established itself as a crucial development pathway for Mexican national team players and an attractive destination for international talent seeking high-level competition outside Europe's traditional power centers. The league has produced numerous players who have achieved success in Europe's elite leagues, including recent generations of Mexican internationals who have competed at the highest levels of Spanish La Liga, English Premier League, and Italian Serie A.

The presence of experienced international talent—particularly South American players in their prime years or established European players seeking new challenges—has elevated Liga MX's tactical sophistication and technical quality. This creates a competitive environment where Mexican clubs can develop homegrown talent while competing against world-class opposition, enhancing the quality of player development and preparation for international competition.

Future Outlook: Sustainability and Growth

Liga MX faces a critical juncture as it seeks to balance commercial expansion with competitive integrity and cultural authenticity. The league's unique position—as Mexico's primary sporting institution and a major player in North American football—creates both opportunities and challenges. Investment from international private equity firms could accelerate infrastructure development, enhance player wages, and expand global reach, but risks diluting the league's cultural identity and creating financial imbalances that undermine competitive balance.

The 2024-25 season demonstrates that Liga MX remains capable of producing compelling competition, with multiple clubs capable of challenging for championship glory and the relegation battle creating genuine stakes for lower-placed teams. The emergence of new competitive challengers to the traditional grandes suggests that Liga MX's future will feature dynamic power shifts rather than static hierarchies, maintaining fan engagement and commercial vibrancy.

Frequently Asked Questions

How many teams compete in Liga MX?

Liga MX consists of 18 professional clubs competing in two annual tournaments: the Apertura (August–December) and Clausura (January–May).

Which club has won the most Liga MX titles?

Club América holds the record with 16 Liga MX championships, followed by Guadalajara Chivas with 12 titles.

How does Liga MX's Apertura-Clausura format work?

The season is split into two separate tournaments, each with 17 regular season matches. The top eight teams from each tournament advance to the Liguilla playoffs to determine the champion.

How many teams are relegated from Liga MX each season?

Four clubs are relegated at the end of each season based on their three-year average performance, creating competitive pressure throughout the league.

Who is Liga MX's all-time top scorer?

Cabinho, the Brazilian striker who played for multiple Liga MX clubs including Pumas UNAM and Atlante, holds the all-time record with 312 goals.

Does Liga MX have European competition access?

Liga MX clubs do not qualify for European competitions. However, they compete in the CONCACAF Champions Cup and participate in international tournaments like the Copa Libertadores through special invitations.

API data: 13 Jun 2026 · Content updated: 18 Mar 2026