Playoffs
Premier League · 2025Final
Standings
Premier League · 2025Current Premier League 2025 standings with 16 teams. Zenit leads the table with 68 points after 30 matches, followed by FC Krasnodar on 66 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 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Team1Zenit | Played30 | Won20 | Drawn8 | Lost2 | Goals For:Goals Against53:19 | Goal Diff+34 | Points68 | Form WWWWD |
| Team2FC Krasnodar | Played30 | Won20 | Drawn6 | Lost4 | Goals For:Goals Against60:23 | Goal Diff+37 | Points66 | Form WLWWW |
| Team3Lokomotiv | Played30 | Won14 | Drawn11 | Lost5 | Goals For:Goals Against54:39 | Goal Diff+15 | Points53 | Form LWDLD |
| Team4Spartak Moscow | Played30 | Won15 | Drawn7 | Lost8 | Goals For:Goals Against47:39 | Goal Diff+8 | Points52 | Form DWLWL |
| Team5CSKA Moscow | Played30 | Won15 | Drawn6 | Lost9 | Goals For:Goals Against44:33 | Goal Diff+11 | Points51 | Form WWLDD |
| Team6Baltika | Played30 | Won11 | Drawn13 | Lost6 | Goals For:Goals Against38:21 | Goal Diff+17 | Points46 | Form LLLLD |
| Team7Dynamo | Played30 | Won12 | Drawn9 | Lost9 | Goals For:Goals Against51:40 | Goal Diff+11 | Points45 | Form WWDWL |
| Team8Rubin | Played30 | Won11 | Drawn10 | Lost9 | Goals For:Goals Against29:30 | Goal Diff-1 | Points43 | Form DLWDW |
| Team9Akhmat | Played30 | Won9 | Drawn10 | Lost11 | Goals For:Goals Against35:39 | Goal Diff-4 | Points37 | Form DDWLD |
| Team10FC Rostov | Played30 | Won8 | Drawn9 | Lost13 | Goals For:Goals Against25:32 | Goal Diff-7 | Points33 | Form LWWLD |
| Team11Krylia Sovetov | Played30 | Won8 | Drawn8 | Lost14 | Goals For:Goals Against35:50 | Goal Diff-15 | Points32 | Form WLWWL |
| Team12FC Orenburg | Played30 | Won7 | Drawn8 | Lost15 | Goals For:Goals Against29:44 | Goal Diff-15 | Points29 | Form LWLWW |
| Team13Akron | Played30 | Won6 | Drawn9 | Lost15 | Goals For:Goals Against35:53 | Goal Diff-18 | Points27 | Form LWLLL |
| Team14Dinamo Makhachkala | Played30 | Won5 | Drawn11 | Lost14 | Goals For:Goals Against19:37 | Goal Diff-18 | Points26 | Form WWDDL |
| Team15Nizhny Novgorod | Played30 | Won6 | Drawn5 | Lost19 | Goals For:Goals Against26:50 | Goal Diff-24 | Points23 | Form DLLLL |
| Team16FC Sochi | Played30 | Won6 | Drawn4 | Lost20 | Goals For:Goals Against29:60 | Goal Diff-31 | Points22 | Form DLWLW |
Team Stats
Side-by-side performance comparison of all 16 teams in the Premier League. Zenit leads with 20 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
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Referees
Top Cards
Teams
Premier LeagueAll 16 teams competing in the Premier League 2025 season. Click any club to view their full squad, match history, and detailed statistics.
Past Seasons
Premier LeagueBrowse 10 archived seasons of the Premier League, from 2016 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 2025
The Russian Premier League was established in 1992 following the dissolution of the Soviet Union, transforming what was previously the Soviet Top League into the new national competition of the Russian Federation. The league's early years were dominated by Spartak Moscow, which won nine titles in the first ten seasons (1992–2001), establishing itself as the most successful club in the competition's history. The introduction of the three-points-for-a-win system in 1995 modernized the competition's format, while Zenit Saint Petersburg's emergence as a title contender in the 2000s broke Moscow's monopoly and created a more balanced competitive landscape. The 2011 calendar reform introduced a winter break, shifting the season to run from August to May rather than spring to autumn, bringing the RPL in line with most major European leagues. The league underwent significant rebranding in 2002 and has evolved to become a commercially sophisticated competition despite geopolitical challenges, with the 2022 UEFA sanctions restricting European participation creating new operational challenges for the competition.
- —1992 — Russian Premier League founded as successor to the Soviet Top League
- —1995 — Three-points-for-a-win system introduced, modernizing the competition
- —2001 — Spartak Moscow's era of dominance ends after winning nine titles in ten seasons
- —2007 — Zenit Saint Petersburg wins first title, breaking Moscow clubs' monopoly
- —2011 — Calendar reform introduces winter break, season shifted to August–May format
- —2020 — Zenit sets league record with 72 points in a single season
- —2022 — UEFA suspends Russian clubs from European competitions due to sanctions
- —2025 — FC Krasnodar wins first-ever RPL title
Competition Format 16 Mar 2025
The Russian Premier League operates as a 16-team double round-robin competition, with each club playing 30 matches across the season—15 home and 15 away—for a total of 240 matches. The champion is determined by the highest points total, with three points awarded for a win, one for a draw, and zero for a loss. At the conclusion of the season, the two lowest-placed clubs are automatically relegated to the Russian First League. The league currently has no European competition spots due to UEFA sanctions imposed in 2022, restricting Russian clubs from participation in the Champions League, Europa League, and Conference League. Promotion and relegation operate on a straight basis with no playoff mechanism at the top division level.
Records 16 Mar 2025
The 2020 season produced the highest-scoring campaign in recent RPL history, with 1,017 goals across all 240 matches, averaging 4.24 goals per match.
Analysis 16 Mar 2025
Current Season Analysis
The 2024–25 Russian Premier League season has delivered an exceptionally competitive title race, with FC Krasnodar leading the standings after 19 matches with 43 points and a record of 13 wins, 4 draws, and 2 losses. The Sochi-based club, historically a strong performer but never a title winner, is on pace for their first-ever RPL championship. Close behind sits Zenit Saint Petersburg with 42 points from 12 wins, 6 draws, and only 1 loss—the league's most impressive defensive record with just 12 goals conceded in 19 matches. This represents a remarkable turnaround for Zenit, which has reasserted itself as a championship contender despite the turbulent geopolitical circumstances affecting Russian football.
The title race remains extraordinarily tight, separated by just one point between first and second place after 19 matches. Lokomotiv Moscow occupies third place with 40 points (11 wins, 7 draws, 1 loss) and an impressive goal tally of 41 goals scored, demonstrating attacking prowess that could prove decisive in the final stretch. CSKA Moscow, traditionally one of the "Big Three" alongside Spartak and Zenit, sits fourth with 36 points from 11 wins and 3 draws, but has shown inconsistency with 5 losses. The top four clubs are separated by just 7 points, suggesting the championship will likely be decided in the final matches of the season.
The relegation battle at the foot of the table is equally dramatic. FC Sochi finds itself in grave danger, occupying 16th place with only 9 points from 2 wins, 3 draws, and 14 losses—a concerning record that leaves them 9 points adrift of safety. The club has conceded 44 goals in 19 matches, the worst defensive record in the league by a significant margin. Nizhny Novgorod (14 points) and FC Orenburg (15 points) are also in the relegation zone, while Dinamo Makhachkala (18 points) and Krylia Sovetov (17 points) are only marginally above the danger zone. The battle to avoid the drop is intensifying as clubs approach the critical final stage of the season.
Baltika has emerged as one of the season's surprise packages, sitting fifth with 35 points from 9 wins, 8 draws, and only 2 losses. The Kaliningrad club has demonstrated exceptional consistency and defensive solidity, conceding just 8 goals in 19 matches—the second-best defensive record in the league behind Zenit. Baltika's strong start suggests they could challenge for European qualification if the sanctions were lifted, and their performance represents a significant achievement for a club that has historically been outside the traditional power structure. Spartak Moscow, despite their historical pedigree and 10 titles, sits sixth with 32 points, indicating a rebuilding phase and highlighting the shifting power dynamics within Russian football.
The standout individual performer of the 2024–25 season has been Eduard Spertsyan, who leads the league in assists with 11 created goals for his teammates. Spertsyan's creative brilliance has been instrumental in Krasnodar's title challenge, providing the playmaking that complements the club's solid defensive foundation. The emergence of Krasnodar as a genuine title contender—and their eventual position as leaders—represents perhaps the most significant storyline of the season, as the club breaks the historical stranglehold that Spartak, Zenit, and CSKA have maintained over the championship since 1992. A Krasnodar title would fundamentally reshape the narrative of Russian football and demonstrate that the competitive balance has shifted away from the traditional Moscow-based powerhouses toward a more distributed championship structure.
The Rise of Krasnodar and the Shifting Power Structure
FC Krasnodar's emergence as the 2024–25 season leaders marks a watershed moment in Russian Premier League history. Prior to this season, the club had never won an RPL title despite consistent qualification for European competition in previous years (before the UEFA sanctions). The club's success is built on a foundation of defensive solidity—their +26 goal difference is the strongest in the league—combined with clinical finishing and tactical discipline. Krasnodar's 13 wins from 19 matches (68% win rate) demonstrates a level of consistency that suggests their position at the top is not a temporary anomaly but rather the result of sustained excellence.
This season represents a symbolic break from the traditional power structure that has defined Russian football for three decades. Spartak Moscow's nine titles in the first ten seasons (1992–2001) established a template of Moscow-based dominance that persisted through the 2020s. Even as Zenit emerged in the 2000s and CSKA won multiple titles, the championship remained confined to Russia's three largest metropolitan areas. Krasnodar's challenge to this structure, if they ultimately claim the title, would signal a genuine democratization of Russian football competition and suggest that financial resources and infrastructure are now sufficiently distributed across the country to enable clubs outside Moscow to compete for the championship.
Zenit's Defensive Excellence and Championship Credentials
Zenit Saint Petersburg's campaign this season exemplifies a return to the defensive excellence that characterized their title-winning seasons. With only 12 goals conceded in 19 matches, Zenit has constructed a defensive record that is virtually impenetrable. Their 63% win rate (12 wins from 19 matches) is marginally lower than Krasnodar's, but their single defeat—only one loss in 19 matches—suggests a consistency and resilience that could prove decisive in the final stages. Zenit's 35 goals scored represents a slightly more conservative attacking approach than Krasnodar, but their goal-scoring efficiency (1.84 goals per match) remains among the league's best.
The narrow 2-point gap between Krasnodar and Zenit after 19 matches sets up a compelling final stretch, with both clubs demonstrating the quality and consistency required for a championship. Zenit's experience in title races—they have won 10 titles and have been regulars in the Champions League—could prove advantageous in the psychological battle for the championship. However, Krasnodar's hunger for a first title and their marginally superior goal difference provide a tangible advantage as the season reaches its climax.
Commercial Significance and Sponsorship
The 2024–25 season marks the first campaign under Tinkoff's title sponsorship, representing a significant commercial milestone for the Russian Premier League. Tinkoff, one of Russia's largest financial services companies, has integrated its brand across television broadcasts, digital platforms, and stadium signage, providing the RPL with enhanced commercial visibility and revenue. The sponsorship deal underscores the league's continued commercial viability despite the geopolitical challenges that have affected Russian football since 2022.
The league's broadcasting arrangements remain centered on Match TV, which secured a four-year contract through 2030. This domestic focus reflects the reality of the UEFA sanctions, which have eliminated the international broadcasting opportunities that previously generated significant revenue for the RPL. However, the retention of Match TV as the primary broadcaster demonstrates confidence in the league's domestic appeal and the continued interest of Russian audiences in the competition.
Frequently Asked Questions
How many teams compete in the Russian Premier League?
The Russian Premier League features 16 teams competing in a double round-robin format, with each club playing 30 matches per season.
Which club has won the most Russian Premier League titles?
Spartak Moscow has won 10 RPL titles, the most of any club. Zenit Saint Petersburg is tied with 10 titles as well.
How does relegation work in the Russian Premier League?
The two clubs finishing lowest in the final standings are automatically relegated to the Russian First League (second tier) at the end of each season.
Can Russian clubs compete in European competitions?
As of 2022, Russian clubs are suspended from UEFA competitions (Champions League, Europa League, Conference League) due to sanctions. This suspension remains in effect through at least 2026.
What is the tiebreaker system if teams finish on equal points?
When clubs are level on points, the tiebreaker is determined by: goal difference, then goals scored, then head-to-head record, then head-to-head goal difference, and finally head-to-head goals scored.
Who is the all-time top scorer in the Russian Premier League?
Artem Dzyuba holds the all-time scoring record with 174 goals in the Russian Premier League, accumulated across his career with various clubs.
API data: 12 Jun 2026 · Content updated: 16 Mar 2025