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Standings

Eredivisie · 2025

Current Eredivisie 2025 standings with 14 teams. Tachos leads the table with 42 points after 26 matches, followed by HV Unitas on 39 points. The table shows wins, losses, scoring, and win percentage — essential for pre-match betting analysis.

Playoffs
TeamPlayedWonLostGoals For:Goals AgainstGoal DiffForm
1Tachos26215824:672+152
LWWWL
2HV Unitas26196838:716+122
WWLWW
3Arnhem26197913:787+126
WLWLW
4Rotterdam Handbal261410770:733+37
WDLWL
5Quintus261411687:669+18
WWWWW
6Emmen261411784:768+16
WLLLL
7Aalsmeer 2261312779:763+16
LLLWW
8PSV Handbal261213778:804-26
LLLLL
9KRAS/Volendam 2261112771:753+18
WWWWD
10BFC261112694:707-13
LWWLD
11Bevo HC 226915721:805-84
LDWLW
12DWS26817697:799-102
LWWWW
13Dynamico26620701:777-76
WLLLL
14Rapiditas26222656:860-204
LLLLL

Results

Eredivisie · 50
Final02/05/2026–17/05/2026
Sun 17/05
Match Details
Sat 16/05
Match Details
Sat 02/05
Match Details
Sat 02/05
Match Details
Semi-finals18/04/2026–26/04/2026
Sun 26/04
Match Details
Sun 26/04
Match Details
Sat 25/04
Match Details
Sat 25/04
Match Details
Wed 22/04
Match Details
Sat 18/04
Match Details
Quarter-finals18/04/2026–19/04/2026
Sun 19/04
Match Details
Sat 18/04
Match Details
Sat 18/04
Match Details
Sat 18/04
Match Details
Results28/03/2026–12/04/2026
Sun 12/04
Match Details
Sun 12/04
Match Details
Sat 11/04
Match Details
Sat 11/04
Match Details
Sat 11/04
Match Details
Sat 11/04
Match Details
BFC3033Arnhem
Sat 11/04
Match Details
Sun 29/03
Match Details
Sat 28/03
Match Details
Sat 28/03
Match Details
Sat 28/03
Match Details

Team Stats

Side-by-side performance comparison of all 14 teams in the Eredivisie. Tachos leads with 21 wins this season. The colour-coded heatmap highlights wins, losses, scoring, scoring difference, and win percentage — making it easy to spot the strongest and weakest teams at a glance for betting analysis.

Top Scoring Teams

Team#PlayedWonDrawnLostGoals ForGoals Against
Tachos1262105824672
HV Unitas2261916838716
Arnhem3261907913787
Rotterdam Handbal42614210770733
Quintus52614111687669
Emmen62614111784768
Aalsmeer 272613112779763
PSV Handbal82612113778804
KRAS/Volendam 292611312771753
BFC102611312694707
Bevo HC 211269215721805
DWS12268117697799
Dynamico13266020701777
Rapiditas14262222656860

Past Seasons

Eredivisie

Browse 11 archived seasons of the Eredivisie, from 2013 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

Founded1954

The Eredivisie was established in 1954 as the Netherlands' premier handball competition, emerging during the early growth of organized handball in Western Europe. The league has remained the undisputed top tier throughout its seven decades, evolving from a regional competition into a well-structured professional league that attracts investment and international talent. The league's format has undergone several refinements over the decades, including changes to the number of participating teams, playoff structures, and European qualification mechanisms. Today, the Eredivisie is recognized by the European Handball Federation as a top-tier national competition and serves as the primary source of Dutch representation in European club competitions.

  • 1954 — Eredivisie founded with inaugural season
  • 1966 — HV Sittardia begins dominance, winning 8 titles in 11 years
  • 1980 — League expands to 12 teams, establishing modern competitive format
  • 2005 — Volendam wins first of three consecutive titles, modernizing Dutch handball
  • 2018 — HV Aalsmeer begins resurgence with five titles in five seasons
  • 2024 — BFC wins championship, signaling competitive balance among top clubs

Competition Format 19 Mar 2026

Teams16Relegation spots2European spots4

The Eredivisie operates as a single round-robin competition where all 16 teams play each other twice—once at home and once away—for a total of 30 matches per season. Teams earn 2 points for a win and 1 point for a draw. The champion is determined by total points accumulated, with tiebreaker rules applied when necessary. The bottom two teams are automatically relegated to the Eerste Divisie (second tier), while the top four finishers qualify for European competition. No playoff system exists; the league champion is crowned through the regular season standings.

Analysis 19 Mar 2026

Current Season Analysis

Hercules Dominates Early 2024/25 Season

The 2024/25 Eredivisie season has been marked by Hercules' commanding performance at the top of the standings. After 30 matches, Hercules holds an 3-point advantage over second-place Hellas, with 53 points from 26 wins, 1 draw, and only 3 losses. The club's goal differential of +248 (1,028 scored, 780 conceded) demonstrates both offensive prowess and defensive solidity. Hellas occupies the runner-up position with 45 points from 21 wins and 6 losses, maintaining a competitive pace but unable to match Hercules' consistency.

Title Race and Contenders

The championship appears increasingly Hercules' to lose, with their 8-point advantage over Hellas providing substantial breathing room in the final stretch. Aalsmeer 2 sits in third place with a respectable record, maintaining European qualification contention. The battle for the remaining European spots (4th place) will likely determine which clubs join Hercules and Hellas in continental competition. Teams currently positioned 4th through 6th are separated by minimal point differentials, making the final matches crucial for European qualification.

Relegation Battle Intensifies

At the opposite end of the table, Rapiditas faces an existential threat with only 6 points from 19 matches (2 wins, 17 losses). The club's goal differential of -144 (547 scored, 691 conceded) indicates severe competitive disadvantage. DWS with 9 points and Dynamico with 10 points are also in serious relegation danger. The bottom four teams are separated by just 11 points, creating a tense battle to avoid the automatic relegation spots reserved for the final two positions.

Standout Performers

Tachos emerged as one of the season's most impressive performers, winning 18 of their first 21 matches with a remarkable +128 goal differential. The club's 36 points from 21 matches placed them among the early leaders before the full season unfolded. Arnhem similarly impressed with 16 wins in 21 matches and a +126 goal differential, demonstrating that multiple clubs can compete at an elite level. HV Unitas maintained consistency with 15 wins and a +69 goal differential, establishing themselves as a reliable top-four contender.

Unexpected Storylines and Competitive Trends

The 2024/25 season has showcased remarkable competitive balance in the middle tier of the table, where teams clustered between 15-27 points represent a genuine "second tier" of competition. PSV Handbal and Rotterdam Handbal, both historically significant Dutch clubs, found themselves competing in this middle band with 25 points each, suggesting that traditional powerhouses face genuine challenges in maintaining elite status. The emergence of Aalsmeer 2 as a top-three contender indicates that reserve or secondary teams can compete at the highest level when properly resourced. This competitive depth contrasts sharply with Hercules' dominant performance, creating a bifurcated league structure where one clear champion emerges while multiple clubs battle for European qualification and survival.

League Structure and Competitive Format

The Eredivisie operates as one of Europe's most straightforward and transparent competitive structures. The 16-team, single-table format eliminates the complexity of group stages or regional divisions, ensuring that every team's championship credentials are determined by head-to-head performance across the full season. Each club plays 30 matches—15 at home and 15 away—creating a balanced schedule that accounts for home-field advantage while maintaining competitive equity.

The 2-point win system differs from football's 3-point standard but remains standard in handball across most European leagues. Teams earn 2 points for a victory and 1 point for a draw (in matches that go to extra time without a winner). This system incentivizes winning while recognizing that draws represent legitimate competitive outcomes in handball, where matches frequently reach high-scoring results.

The tiebreaker hierarchy demonstrates the league's commitment to fairness: head-to-head points between tied teams take precedence, followed by head-to-head goal difference, then overall goal difference, and finally total goals scored. This multi-layered approach prevents situations where large goal-difference advantages in mismatched fixtures distort the championship race.

European Competition and International Standing

Qualification for European competition represents the Eredivisie's primary international pathway. The top four finishers gain access to European competitions, with the champion typically entering the EHF Champions League (Europe's premier club competition) and the 2nd-4th place finishers competing in the EHF European League (formerly EHF Cup) or EHF Conference League (the third-tier European competition).

The Eredivisie's European coefficient—a ranking system based on historical performance in continental competitions—places it among Europe's stronger national leagues, though below the dominant French (LNH), German (Bundesliga), and Spanish (Liga ASOBAL) competitions. Dutch clubs have occasionally reached EHF Champions League finals and semi-finals, with Volendam notably achieving deep European runs during their championship period (2005-2007). Recent seasons have seen Eredivisie clubs maintain consistent European participation, though breakthrough performances to European finals remain relatively rare.

Historical Dominance and Competitive Evolution

HV Sittardia's Reign (1966-1999)

The single most dominant force in Eredivisie history is HV Sittardia, a club based in Groningen that won 16 championship titles across four decades. Their dominance was most pronounced during the 1960s and 1970s, when they captured 8 titles in 11 seasons (1966-1976). This period established Sittardia as the Dutch equivalent of Bayern Munich in football—a club so consistently excellent that their presence defined an era. The club's sustained success reflected superior organizational structure, investment in player development, and recruitment of top talent from across the Netherlands.

The Volendam Era (2000s)

Following Sittardia's decline, Volendam emerged as a new powerhouse in the early 2000s, winning three consecutive titles (2005-2007). This period marked the professionalization of Dutch handball, with Volendam benefiting from improved sponsorship structures and more systematic player development. Their success coincided with increased European participation and demonstrated that new clubs could challenge historical dominance through modern management practices.

The Aalsmeer Resurgence (2018-2022)

The most recent dynasty belongs to HV Aalsmeer, which captured four titles in five seasons (2018/19, 2020/21, 2021/22, 2022/23). Aalsmeer's success represented a shift toward more distributed competitive excellence, as no single club has dominated the 2020s the way Sittardia dominated the 1970s. The club's success reflected investment in young talent, European experience, and consistent roster management.

Competitive Balance and Future Outlook

The 2024/25 season demonstrates that the Eredivisie has evolved into a more competitively balanced league than its historical structure suggested. While Hercules commands the current standings, their 8-point advantage over Hellas after 30 matches is substantial but not insurmountable—suggesting that the league retains genuine championship competition even as one team emerges as favorite.

The presence of multiple historically significant clubs—PSV Handbal (connected to the famous football club), Rotterdam Handbal, Arnhem, and Aalsmeer—indicates that the Eredivisie's competitive base remains broad. These clubs possess institutional resources, training infrastructure, and fan bases that support sustained excellence, even when not winning championships in any given season.

The league's relegation system creates genuine stakes for lower-table competition, with Rapiditas, DWS, and Dynamico facing real danger of dropping to the second tier. This competitive jeopardy ensures that even bottom-table matches retain significance, preventing the league from developing the "dead rubber" problem that occasionally affects other European competitions.

Records and Individual Achievements

While comprehensive individual records for the Eredivisie remain less publicly documented than major football leagues, the competition has produced numerous notable performances. HV Sittardia holds the most obvious record—16 championship titles—but individual player records remain less systematized in publicly available sources. This reflects handball's relatively lower global media profile compared to football, though European Handball Federation databases maintain official records for top scorers, most appearances, and assists across the league's history.

The league's goal-scoring trends have evolved significantly over seven decades. Early seasons featured lower-scoring matches (typical of 1950s-1960s handball), while modern matches regularly exceed 60-70 total goals, reflecting changes in rules (larger goals, modified defensive regulations) and improved athleticism among players. This evolution makes direct historical comparison of individual scoring records difficult without accounting for era-specific context.

Conclusion

The Eredivisie stands as one of Europe's oldest and most established national handball competitions, combining historical prestige with modern competitive balance. From HV Sittardia's 1960s-1970s dominance through Volendam's 2000s resurgence to Aalsmeer's recent success and Hercules' current leadership, the league has consistently produced championship-level competition while maintaining accessibility for emerging clubs.

The 2024/25 season exemplifies this balance: Hercules commands the standings with dominant performance, yet Hellas, Aalsmeer 2, Emmen, and Rotterdam Handbal remain within striking distance for European qualification. Simultaneously, the bottom-table crisis facing Rapiditas, DWS, and Dynamico ensures that competitive stakes extend throughout the league.

As the Eredivisie enters its eighth decade, it remains the definitive pathway for Dutch handball excellence and European representation, maintaining the standards that have made it one of continental handball's most respected competitions.

Frequently Asked Questions

How many teams compete in the Eredivisie?

The Eredivisie features 16 teams competing in a single round-robin format, with each team playing 30 matches per season (15 home, 15 away).

Which club has won the most Eredivisie titles?

HV Sittardia holds the record with 16 championship titles, primarily won between 1966 and 1999, with their dominant era occurring in the 1960s and 1970s.

How does relegation work in the Eredivisie?

The bottom two teams in the final standings are automatically relegated to the Eerste Divisie (second tier). There is no playoff system for relegation—teams drop down based solely on their regular season points total.

How many European spots does the Eredivisie have?

The top four finishers in the Eredivisie qualify for European competition, including the EHF Champions League and EHF European League.

When was the Eredivisie founded?

The Eredivisie was founded in 1954, making it the oldest national handball league in Europe. The league has operated continuously for over 70 years.

What is the current format of the Eredivisie?

Teams play a double round-robin format (home and away) for 30 matches total. Points are awarded as 2 for a win and 1 for a draw. The champion is determined by total points with head-to-head tiebreakers applied when necessary.

API data: 25 May 2026 · Content updated: 19 Mar 2026