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Primera Division Femenina

Today's Matches

Primera División Femenina

Live scores, upcoming kick-offs, and finished results for today. Data refreshes automatically so you never miss a moment.

Standings

CLELECLRelegation
#TeamPlayedWonLostPoints
1
Barcelona W
2625175
2
Real Madrid W
2720463
32718360
42714550
52713350
62713845
7
Sevilla W
27121239
82710938
92791035
102791431
112771328
122771427
132761821
142731518
152732013
16
Levante W
262228

Results

Primera División Femenina · 50
View all match results

Team Stats

Betting Insights

2025
Goals / Match
2.89
Average goals per match this season
Both Score %
38.2%
Percentage of matches where both teams scored
Over 2.5 / 5.5 %
50.5%
Percentage of matches with over 2.5 goals (football) or 5.5 (hockey)
Over 1.5 %
74.0%
Percentage of matches with over 1.5 goals
Over 3.5 %
33.3%
Percentage of matches with over 3.5 goals
Home Win %
38.7%
Percentage of matches won by home teams
Draw %
20.1%
Percentage of matches ending in a draw
Away Win %
41.2%
Percentage of matches won by away teams
Clean Sheet %
61.8%
Percentage of matches where at least one team kept a clean sheet
0-0 %
6.9%
Percentage of matches ending 0-0 (scoreless draw)
Avg Home Goals
1.46
Avg Away Goals
1.43
Cards/Match
3.6
Home Advantage
+5.40
Home advantage strength — higher means stronger home advantage
Most Common Scorelines
TOP 10
0-1
22 · 10.8%
1-1
18 · 8.8%
1-0
17 · 8.3%
2-0
15 · 7.4%
0-2
15 · 7.4%
0-0
14 · 6.9%
2-1
13 · 6.4%
1-2
9 · 4.4%
0-4
9 · 4.4%
4-0
9 · 4.4%
Season Trends
Goals distribution across 15-minute periods of play, revealing when goals are most likely to be scored. This is critical for live betting strategies — leagues with high concentrations of late goals (76-90 min) may offer value in late-goal markets, while first-half dominant leagues favor early cash-out strategies.
12.9%
0-15
16.1%
16-30
18.0%
31-45
16.1%
46-60
15.3%
61-75
21.7%
76-90

Primera División FemeninaUpcoming Fixtures

May 2026

1 May 20261 Jun 2026

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Top Cards

Yellow Cards
1LKL. Kullashi · FC Levante Badalona0
2SPS. Junge Pedersen · FC Levante Badalona0
3GGG. García · Atletico Madrid W0
4LLuany · Atletico Madrid W0
5ASAmaiur Sarriegi · Atletico Madrid W0
6SGSheila Guijarro · Atletico Madrid W0
7GQGio Queiroz · Atletico Madrid W0
8MPMacarena Portales · Atletico Madrid W0
9SJS. Jensen · Atletico Madrid W0
10FFiamma · Atletico Madrid W0
Red Cards
1LKL. Kullashi · FC Levante Badalona0
2SPS. Junge Pedersen · FC Levante Badalona0
3GGG. García · Atletico Madrid W0
4LLuany · Atletico Madrid W0
5ASAmaiur Sarriegi · Atletico Madrid W0
6SGSheila Guijarro · Atletico Madrid W0
7GQGio Queiroz · Atletico Madrid W0
8MPMacarena Portales · Atletico Madrid W0
9SJS. Jensen · Atletico Madrid W0
10FFiamma · Atletico Madrid W0
RefereeOfficiatedY/MR/M

Primera División FemeninaTeams

All 16 teams competing in the Primera División Femenina 2025 season. Click any club to view their full squad, match history, and detailed statistics.

History 22 Feb 2025

Founded1988

The Liga F was established in 1988 as Liga Nacional Femenina, marking the official beginning of organized top-flight women's football in Spain. Originally featuring fewer clubs and competing in single round-robin formats, the competition has undergone significant structural evolution. The league was rebranded as Primera División Femenina in 2011 to align with the broader Spanish football pyramid nomenclature. In 2023, it adopted the Liga F branding as part of La Liga's commercial expansion into women's football. A watershed moment came in 2022 when the Spanish government declared women's football a professional category, transforming the league from semi-professional to fully professional status. This professionalization drove substantial investment in club infrastructure, player wages, and broadcast distribution, elevating the league's competitive standard and international visibility. The 2025/26 season marks the first full year under Moeve as title sponsor, continuing the league's upward trajectory in commercial value and global reach.

  • 1988 — Liga Nacional Femenina founded, establishing Spain's first official women's football top division
  • 2011 — Competition rebranded as Primera División Femenina to align with Spanish football pyramid structure
  • 2021 — La Liga assumes governance of the league, rebranding it as Liga F
  • 2022 — Spanish government declares women's football a professional category, triggering full professionalization
  • 2024 — Moeve becomes title sponsor, securing multi-year partnership across Spanish football ecosystem
  • 2025 — Barcelona Femení dominates season with record-breaking 94 goals in 21 matches

Competition Format 22 Feb 2025

Teams16Relegation spots2European spots4

The Liga F operates as a single-division, home-and-away round-robin tournament across 30 matchdays. Clubs compete for the title based on accumulated points, with the champion determined by total points at season's end. The top four finishers gain automatic qualification to the UEFA Women's Champions League, Europe's premier club competition. The bottom two clubs are relegated to the Primera Federación Femenina, Spain's second tier, with no playoff mechanism. This straightforward format emphasizes consistency and head-to-head competition throughout the campaign.

Records 22 Feb 2025

Most titlesBarcelona Femení (10)All-time top scorerEwa Pajor (25 goals, 2024/25 season)

Barcelona Femení's 2024/25 season set a new points record of 84 points across 30 matches, surpassing previous benchmarks and establishing a new competitive standard for the league.

Analysis 22 Feb 2025

Current Season Analysis

Barcelona Femení continues to establish themselves as the dominant force in Spanish women's football, sitting atop the 2024/25 standings with an extraordinary 60 points from 21 matches—a 12-point advantage over second-placed Real Madrid Femení. The Catalan club has won 20 of 21 matches with a single draw, scoring an remarkable 94 goals while conceding just 5. Their goal differential of +89 represents one of the most commanding performances in Liga F history, with Barcelona's attacking prowess and defensive solidity creating an essentially insurmountable gap in the title race.

The battle for the remaining Champions League qualification spots has become the season's genuine intrigue. Real Madrid Femení occupies second place with 50 points from 21 matches, maintaining a strong 76% win rate but trailing Barcelona by a chasm. Real Sociedad Femenina sits third with 47 points and a respectable 67% win percentage, having lost only twice. Granadilla Tenerife Femenina holds fourth place with 36 points, though their position remains vulnerable as teams below them—including Sevilla Femenino on 36 points with superior goal difference—continue to challenge. The fourth Champions League spot could shift dramatically in the run-in, with multiple clubs within striking distance.

The relegation picture has become increasingly perilous for clubs in the bottom four. EDF Logroño and Alhama appear destined for the drop, sitting on 10 and 9 points respectively with mathematical elimination becoming inevitable. Levante Femenino (8 points) and Eibar Femenino (17 points) are also in acute danger, requiring dramatic turnarounds to survive. The contrast between Barcelona's record-setting campaign and the struggle at the bottom illustrates the growing gap between Spain's elite and mid-table competition.

The standout individual performer has been Ewa Pajor, Barcelona's Polish striker, who has netted 25 goals in 28 appearances—a remarkable strike rate that positions her among Europe's most lethal forwards. Her partnership with Alexia Putellas and Patri Guijarro creates a formidable attacking triumvirate that has proven virtually unstoppable. Pajor's goal tally alone represents nearly a quarter of Barcelona's 128-goal season total, highlighting the concentration of attacking firepower at the league's summit.

An unexpected narrative has emerged regarding the professionalization of Spanish women's football and its competitive consequences. While the 2022 professionalization decree aimed to elevate the entire league, it has paradoxically widened the gap between Barcelona—backed by one of Europe's richest clubs—and competitors with more modest resources. Barcelona's investment in world-class signings, training facilities, and coaching staff has created a quality chasm that even well-funded rivals like Real Madrid struggle to bridge. This dynamic raises important questions about competitive balance and the sustainability of a league where one club's dominance is becoming historically unprecedented. The season's narrative increasingly centers not on who wins the title—that appears settled—but whether other clubs can develop the infrastructure and investment to mount genuine challenges in future campaigns.

League Dynamics and Competitive Evolution

The 2024/25 season exemplifies the dramatic transformation of Spanish women's football since professionalization. The league now features genuinely elite-level competition, with Barcelona's 94 goals in 21 matches representing an average of 4.5 goals per game—a rate that reflects both Barcelona's attacking excellence and the overall elevation of tactical sophistication across the division. Teams like Real Madrid and Real Sociedad compete at a level that would be competitive in any European top division, yet they find themselves playing second fiddle to a Barcelona side operating at a different altitude.

Barcelona's dominance extends beyond raw statistics into tactical innovation and player development. The club's academy has produced world-class talent including Putellas, Aitana Bonmatí, and Patri Guijarro, while also attracting premium international signings like Ewa Pajor and Mapi León. This combination of homegrown excellence and strategic recruitment has created a self-perpetuating cycle of success that competitors find difficult to disrupt. Real Madrid has attempted to match Barcelona's investment but remains constrained by the club's historical prioritization of men's football, while other Spanish clubs lack the financial infrastructure to compete at the same level.

The league's second-tier, the Primera Federación Femenina, continues to develop talent that occasionally breaks through to the top division, though the quality gap between the two levels remains significant. Clubs like Granadilla Tenerife have demonstrated that sustained investment and strategic recruitment can position teams to compete for European qualification, but only Barcelona and Real Madrid currently operate with the resources and infrastructure to sustain elite-level performance over multiple seasons.

International Context and European Standing

Liga F has emerged as one of Europe's top women's football competitions, ranking alongside Germany's Bundesliga and England's Super League in terms of competitive quality and global viewership. The league's four Champions League qualification spots ensure regular participation from Spanish clubs in European competition, with Barcelona having become a perennial finalist in recent years. The professionalization of the league in 2022 accelerated this trajectory, attracting international talent and raising broadcast standards.

Barcelona's current dominance in European competition—they reached the 2023 and 2024 Champions League finals—validates the league's competitive standard. However, the concentration of quality at the top raises questions about whether Liga F can develop a broader base of competitive teams capable of challenging Europe's established powerhouses. Clubs like Real Madrid and Real Sociedad have shown capability in European competition, but the gap between them and Barcelona suggests that Spanish women's football may be developing a two-tier structure at the elite level.

Sponsorship and Commercial Growth

The Moeve sponsorship represents a watershed moment for Liga F's commercial development. As an energy company transitioning from CEPSA to Moeve, the company's decision to invest in women's football reflects broader corporate recognition of the sport's commercial potential and social significance. The multi-year agreement across La Liga's entire ecosystem—including Liga F, LALIGA EA SPORTS, LALIGA HYPERMOTION, and LALIGA GENUINE—signals confidence in women's football's growth trajectory.

Volkswagen's appointment as official sponsor adds another layer of corporate investment, positioning Liga F alongside Europe's most commercially sophisticated leagues. These partnerships have translated into improved broadcast distribution, with La Liga's distribution network ensuring Liga F matches reach Spanish audiences and increasingly global audiences through UEFA competition participation. The league's trajectory suggests that commercial investment will continue to drive professionalization and competitive elevation in coming seasons.

Frequently Asked Questions

How many teams compete in Liga F?

The Liga F features 16 teams competing in a single division. Each club plays 30 matches in a home-and-away round-robin format across the season.

Who has won the most Liga F titles?

Barcelona Femení holds the record with 10 Liga F championships, making them the competition's most successful club by a significant margin.

How does relegation work in Liga F?

The bottom two clubs in the final standings are automatically relegated to the Primera Federación Femenina (Spain's second tier). There is no playoff mechanism for relegation.

How many European Champions League spots does Liga F offer?

The top four finishers in Liga F earn automatic qualification to the UEFA Women's Champions League, Europe's premier club competition.

When was Liga F founded?

The competition was founded in 1988 as Liga Nacional Femenina. It was rebranded as Primera División Femenina in 2011 and adopted the Liga F name in 2023.

What is the current title sponsor of Liga F?

Moeve, a global energy company, holds the title sponsorship rights for Liga F starting from the 2025/26 season under a multi-year agreement.

API data: 7 May 2026 · Stats updated: 26 Apr 2026 · Content updated: 22 Feb 2025