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Segunda División RFEF - Group 3

Standings

Segunda División RFEF - Group 3 · 2025

Current Segunda División RFEF - Group 3 2025 standings with 18 teams. Sant Andreu leads the table with 66 points after 34 matches, followed by Atlético Baleares on 66 points. The table shows wins, draws, losses, goals scored and conceded, goal difference, and recent form — essential for pre-match betting analysis.

PlayoffsRelegation
TeamPlayedWonDrawnLostGoals For:Goals AgainstGoal DiffPointsForm
1Sant Andreu34206851:33+1866
LLWLW
2Atlético Baleares34199653:34+1966
WWWWW
3Poblense341611741:28+1359
LWWWL
4Reddis341671150:38+1255
WWLWD
5Alcoyano341316530:20+1055
DWDDW
6Barcelona B3414101062:40+2252
LWDWW
7Girona II3412111145:37+847
LWLWD
8Terrassa3411131036:44-846
LLLDD
9Valencia U213410141053:50+344
10Espanyol II3410141034:35-144
LLWLL
11Barbastro3410131132:31+143
WWWWL
12Olot3410121231:32-142
WLDDW
13Castellón II341191459:72-1342
WLLDW
14Ibiza Islas Pitiusas3410101435:44-940
WDLLL
15Andratx34891735:56-2133
WDDLW
16Atlètic Lleida346121637:51-1430
LLWLL
17Torrent34791836:53-1730
WLLLD
18Porreres34691922:44-2227
DLLLL

Results

Segunda División RFEF - Group 3 · 50
Group 3 - 3402/05/2026–03/05/2026
Sun 03/05
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Sat 02/05
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Group 3 - 3326/04/2026
Sun 26/04
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Sun 26/04
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Sun 26/04
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Sun 26/04
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Sun 26/04
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Sun 26/04
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Sun 26/04
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Sun 26/04
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Group 3 - 3219/04/2026
Sun 19/04
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Sun 19/04
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Sun 19/04
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Sun 19/04
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Sun 19/04
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Sun 19/04
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Team Stats

Side-by-side performance comparison of all 18 teams in the Segunda División RFEF - Group 3. Sant Andreu 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

Top Assists

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Teams

Segunda División RFEF - Group 3

All 17 teams competing in the Segunda División RFEF - Group 3 2025 season. Click any club to view their full squad, match history, and detailed statistics.

Past Seasons

Segunda División RFEF - Group 3

Browse 5 archived seasons of the Segunda División RFEF - Group 3, from 2021 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 19 Mar 2026

Founded2021Preceded bySegunda División B

The Segunda Federación was created in 2021 as part of a comprehensive restructuring of the Spanish football pyramid. The competition replaced the Segunda División B, which had operated since 1977 as the third tier of Spanish football. This reformation elevated the quality of professional football below the top two tiers by introducing the Primera Federación (third tier) and reorganising the fourth tier into the Segunda Federación with five regional groups. The new structure was designed to balance competitive integrity with geographical accessibility, allowing clubs from northeastern Spain to compete in Group 3 while maintaining regional representation. The league has evolved to become a genuine pathway for youth development, with reserve teams from La Liga and Segunda División clubs competing alongside semi-professional outfits. The regionalised format ensures sustainable travel distances and maintains the competitive balance necessary for clubs to develop players for higher levels.

  • 2021 — Segunda Federación created to replace Segunda División B as the fourth tier of Spanish football
  • 2021/22 — First season of Segunda Federación Group 3 with 18 teams from northeastern Spain
  • 2023/24 — Barcelona B emerges as a consistent top-four finisher, leveraging La Masia academy resources
  • 2024/25 — Sant Andreu leads Group 3 with 48 points, demonstrating sustained competitive excellence

Competition Format 19 Mar 2026

Teams18Relegation spots2

The Segunda Federación Group 3 operates as a 18-team, single round-robin league where each club plays every other club twice (home and away) over a 34-match season. The champion is crowned based on total points accumulated, with three points awarded for a win and one for a draw. The top two teams gain direct promotion to the Primera Federación, while the third-place team enters a promotion playoff competing against the third-placed teams from the other four regional groups. The bottom two teams face automatic relegation to the Tercera Federación. This format balances competitive ambition with regional practicality, allowing clubs across Catalonia, the Balearic Islands, and parts of Aragon and Valencia to compete at a sustainable level while maintaining pathways for both advancement and development.

Records 19 Mar 2026

Most titlesUE Sant Andreu (1)

The Segunda Federación Group 3 is a relatively new competition (founded 2021), so comprehensive all-time records are still being accumulated; historical records from the predecessor Segunda División B Group 3 are not directly comparable due to format changes.

Analysis 19 Mar 2026

Current Season Analysis

Sant Andreu dominates the 2024/25 Segunda Federación Group 3 season, sitting atop the standings with 48 points from 25 matches and a commanding +15 goal difference. The northeastern club has established themselves as the clear favourite for promotion, maintaining a 56% win rate with 14 victories, 6 draws, and only 5 defeats. Their attacking prowess is evident with 39 goals scored—the second-highest in the division—while their defensive solidity (24 goals conceded) provides the foundation for their league leadership.

The promotion race remains competitive in the top three positions, with Poblense holding second place on 45 points from 25 matches and a +13 goal difference. The Balearic club has been remarkably consistent, recording 12 wins, 9 draws, and only 4 defeats, demonstrating resilience and tactical discipline. Atlético Baleares occupies third position with 44 points, maintaining a +9 goal difference with 12 wins and 8 draws, keeping themselves firmly in the promotion conversation. The gap between first and third is just four points, suggesting that the title race could intensify significantly in the remaining matches.

Barcelona B presents a fascinating subplot in the Group 3 narrative, sitting fourth with 41 points but boasting the division's most prolific attack with 49 goals scored. Despite their attacking firepower, defensive vulnerabilities have cost them dearly—29 goals conceded places them outside the automatic promotion spots. This season encapsulates the classic tension within reserve team football: superior technical ability and academy resources (evident in their goal-scoring record) sometimes struggle against the tactical maturity and hunger of established semi-professional outfits. Their remaining fixtures will determine whether they can tighten defensively and force their way back into promotion contention.

The relegation battle at the foot of the table is equally compelling, with Torrent in last place on 17 points from 25 matches, already facing an uphill battle for survival. Porreres (20 points) and Andratx (23 points) occupy the two automatic relegation positions, though both retain mathematical hope of avoiding the drop. Barbastro and Atlètic Lleida, both on 23-24 points, are only marginally safer and could easily be dragged into the relegation zone if form deteriorates. The competitive nature of mid-table clubs—Alcoyano (36 points), Girona II (35 points), and Terrassa (35 points)—demonstrates that Segunda Federación Group 3 remains a genuinely balanced competition where no team can afford complacency.

Castellón II's paradoxical season deserves particular attention: the club has scored 46 goals (third-highest in the division) yet sits 11th with 34 points due to conceding 53 goals—by far the worst defensive record. This extreme imbalance suggests tactical issues or personnel instability that has undermined what might otherwise be a promotion-contending side. Their remaining matches will reveal whether they can implement defensive adjustments or whether their season will ultimately be defined by wasted attacking potential.

The Reserve Team Phenomenon in Spanish Football

The presence of Barcelona B, Espanyol II, Valencia II, and Girona II in Segunda Federación Group 3 represents a distinctive feature of Spanish football's development ecosystem. These reserve teams serve dual purposes: they provide competitive minutes for academy graduates not yet ready for first-team football, and they offer a controlled environment where La Masia and equivalent academy systems can test tactical concepts and player development strategies. Barcelona B's current campaign illustrates both the advantages (technical superiority, goal-scoring prowess) and limitations (consistency, defensive discipline) of reserve team football. Unlike their parent clubs' first teams, these reserve sides cannot call upon experienced internationals or proven leaders to steady the ship during difficult periods, making their league performances genuinely unpredictable and occasionally frustrating for academy directors. The competitive success of semi-professional clubs like Sant Andreu against these better-resourced reserve teams suggests that experience, hunger, and organisational stability remain crucial factors in Spanish football, even at the fourth tier.

Regional Structure and Competitive Balance

Segunda Federación Group 3's coverage of northeastern Spain—encompassing Catalonia, the Balearic Islands, and parts of Aragon—creates a distinct competitive identity. Clubs like Sant Andreu and Poblense draw strength from regional pride and established local support networks, while the Balearic contingent (Poblense, Atlético Baleares, Ibiza Islas Pitiusas, Andratx, Porreres) brings island football traditions into the mainland competition. This geographical diversity enriches the league's character while creating genuine travel challenges that can impact fixture scheduling and player fatigue. The regionalised format ensures that clubs remain competitive within their local markets while still participating in a nationally recognised tier, striking a balance that has proven effective since 2021.

Promotion Pathways and Ambitions

The two-tier promotion system—direct promotion for first and second place, playoff access for third—creates multiple viable routes to advancement. Sant Andreu and Poblense appear destined for direct promotion based on current form, but Atlético Baleares, Barcelona B, and Reddis (39 points) remain within striking distance of the playoff positions. The playoff structure introduces jeopardy into the season's conclusion, preventing any sense of inevitability and maintaining engagement across all 18 clubs. For ambitious semi-professional outfits, a playoff berth represents a genuine opportunity to test themselves against the other regional groups' third-placed teams, with promotion to Primera Federación offering a significant step up in profile and resources.

Frequently Asked Questions

How many teams compete in Segunda Federación Group 3?

Eighteen teams compete in the Segunda Federación Group 3 season, each playing 34 matches (home and away against every opponent). The league covers northeastern Spain including Catalonia, the Balearic Islands, and parts of Aragon.

What is the promotion structure from Segunda Federación Group 3?

The top two teams are directly promoted to the Primera Federación. The third-placed team enters a promotion playoff against the third-placed teams from the other four regional groups, with one playoff winner earning promotion.

How many teams are relegated from Segunda Federación Group 3?

Two teams are relegated at the end of each season to the Tercera Federación, the fifth tier of Spanish football. This maintains competitive balance and provides a clear pathway for clubs seeking to climb the pyramid.

What is the difference between Segunda Federación and Segunda División?

The Segunda División is the second tier of Spanish football with 22 professional teams, while Segunda Federación is the fourth tier with 90 teams across five regional groups. Segunda Federación serves as a semi-professional development league.

Do reserve teams compete in Segunda Federación Group 3?

Yes, reserve teams from major clubs including Barcelona B, Espanyol II, Valencia II, and Girona II compete in Group 3 alongside semi-professional and independent clubs. These reserve teams serve as development pathways for young academy players.

What is the playoff system in Segunda Federación Group 3?

The third-placed team in Group 3 competes in a promotion playoff against the third-placed teams from Groups 1, 2, 4, and 5. One team emerges as the playoff champion and gains promotion to the Primera Federación.

API data: 14 May 2026 · Content updated: 19 Mar 2026